(WHTM) – If you’re looking to extend your St. Patrick’s Day celebration beyond March 17 consider growing a shamrock plant. The “shamrock plant” that grows indoors is not the original Irish shamrock.
March 17 is Saint Patrick’s Day. We Americans traditionally celebrate with two symbols of this special day with the wearing of the color green and enjoying the beauty of the “lucky clover” Shamrock or ...
St. Patrick is believed to have used a three-leaf clover to explain the complexity of the Trinity to nonbelievers in 5th century Ireland. Ever since, the shamrock has been revered by the Irish and ...
St. Patrick is believed to have used a three-leaf clover to explain the complexity of the Trinity to nonbelievers in 5th century Ireland. Ever since, the shamrock has been revered by the Irish and ...
No sooner do we turn the calendar page to March than we begin to see hints that St. Patrick’s Day is approaching. Corned beef is featured at grocery stores and sandwich shops, green beer gets a ...
Leading Irish botanist warns people will be fooled on Saint Patrick’s Day and that the real Irish shamrock is dying out. Leading botanist Dr. Declan Doogue of the Royal Irish Academy warned that the ...
For those of you who enjoy inside plants as much as outdoor ones, I thought I'd share a humorous little story. I have a shamrock plant that, OK, I talk to. Hey, it's a very sensative plant. On the ...
The best part about St. Patrick's day has to be all the green treats lining the supermarket shelves. Think: Irish soda bread, green bagels, and shamrock shaped cookies. This year, Trader Joe's also ...
As the sun rises on St. Patrick’s Day, shamrock plants puff up and spread their leaflets wide. By the end of the day, they fold back up to relax through the dark night. It’s the same dance on this ...
The shamrock plant is Ireland's national symbol. The Irish and lots of people all over the world elect to celebrate St. Patrick's Day by wearing a shamrock facsimile of cardstock or paper, felt, foil, ...
FALLBROOKFALLBROOK — St. Patrick, legend has it, used the three-leafed shamrock in the 5th century to illustrate the doctrine of the Holy Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost as he introduced ...