Daucus carota | Queen Anne’s Lace | Period




Survival Plants Memory Course show

Summary: MNEMONIC EXPLAINED: You have just found some lace panties (flowers form lace-like clusters) with a red dot (flower clusters usually have reddish purple spot in middle) in the middle. They tell a story about a young woman who was previously there for weeks (she could not shave her legs). She started her minstrel cycle and did not have a tampon so she dug up the carrot (root) of this plant and inserted it to stop the flow but the carrot did not absorb. When she removed it, by pulling on the leaves (leaves of this plant are like those found on carrots in the store [parsley-like]) that were hanging down (bracts are leaf-like and tri-forked; the leaves that were hanging down [beneath the woman like bracts beneath flower cluster] represent leaf-like and the middle prong of tri-fork; the woman’s legs represent the left and right prong of tri-fork), the blood gushed out and ran down her hairy legs (stems and leaf stalks bare white hairs) and onto a white rabbit that was beneath her (it was attracted by the carrot smell [root and leaves smell like carrot when crushed]). The white rabbit opened an umbrella (each small flower radiates from on point atop the stem) and used it, to protect it’s fur (re-enforces stems and leaf stalks bare white hairs), until the flow stopped. When the white rabbit put the umbrella away, to sniff out the carrot (re-enforces root and leaves smell like carrot when crushed); a large bird swooped down, flew between the woman's legs, snatched the rabbit with it’s strong talons and carried it away to it’s nest (as flower cluster ages it folds up and looks like a bird’s nest) where hungry young birds were waiting to feed.