Heather winter-flowering plant. Photo Credit: wikipedia
London, Apr 3 (ANI): Now, men need not look to Viagra to enhance their virility, for a plant widely available in garden centers has the same effect on men as the potency enhancing drug.
The plant is winter-flowering heather, and botanists at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh, many of them heather experts who have recognized the source of its active ingredient, now expect it to be the next must-have plant in British gardens.
Demand is already high. Nurseries and garden centers in some areas are having trouble finding sufficient supplies as word spreads of the plant's unexpected properties.
"At first, it was just a trickle of inquiries, but now stores are virtually being besieged each weekend. We have had men buying dozens of the plants and, at one store in Croydon, there were men old enough to know better fighting over the last remaining trays," a spokesman for Wyevale Garden Centers, which has 106 UK branches, said:
The latest gardening craze was triggered by a discovery by a 55-year-old furniture restorer, Michael Ford, on his allotment. He was always experimenting with drinks made from different plants and one day he tried an infusion from his winter-flowering heather. He said: "The effect was almost immediate. I had to stay in my potting shed for an hour or so before I could decently walk down the street."
He then contacted the Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh, famous for their work with the heather family, to see if they could offer an explanation. They could. Botanist Alan Bennell said: "This first surfaced when East European chemists reported finding a Viagra-type chemical in the floral tissues of winter-flowering heaths. They were able to isolate measurable amounts of material that is an analogue of the active principle in Viagra."
Winter-flowering heather, he explained, belongs to the genus Erica, a close relative of our own native heather. He said: "As yet, the active ingredient has not been found in these British forms, but it is proving to be most concentrated in many of the widely available hybrids sold as winter-flowering heather in garden centers. Particularly potent are forms of Erica carnea, the Alpine heather, whose range extends into the Balkans.
"The work of these biochemists and physiologists - much of it disrupted and lost during the ravages of war - is now coming to light." (ANI)
Careful.I have spent many years looking for new herbal medicines and I believed this report . then a friend pointed out that it appeared on April 1st. in case this is not a British site you may not know we call this April fools day when everyone plays practical jokes on one another.this includes newspapers. I think we have both been April fooled.
Anonymous, 03 Apr 2007