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#Ontario Hair Transplant
smithjohn10 · 2 months
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Top 10 Places for Hair Transplant in Canada
It’s not too easy to find a clinic for hair transplants in Gatineau or Ontario, because of certain correlated reasons. Let us present a fact here. In Canada, almost 149,254 people have undergone hair transplants in past years. That means, if you’re calculating from 2010 to 2021, almost 36% of extra people have done hair transplants.
Read more : https://gossips.blog/top-10-places-for-hair-transplant-in-canada/
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antechhairq · 7 months
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Revitalize Your Locks: Exploring Effective Hair Loss Treatments
Hair loss can be a distressing experience, impacting not just our physical appearance but also our self-esteem. If you're a resident of Mississauga grappling with hair loss, you're not alone. Fortunately, there are numerous effective treatments available in the area to help you combat this issue and restore your confidence.
Mississauga, a vibrant city nestled in the heart of Ontario, offers a plethora of options for individuals seeking hair loss treatment. From advanced medical procedures to natural remedies, there's something for everyone. Let's delve into some of the benefits of seeking hair loss treatment in Mississauga:
Cutting-Edge Technology: Mississauga boasts state-of-the-art clinics equipped with cutting-edge technology for diagnosing and treating hair loss. These facilities offer advanced treatments such as laser therapy, follicular unit extraction (FUE), and platelet-rich plasma (PRP) therapy, providing patients with effective solutions tailored to their needs.
Expertise of Specialists: One of the key benefits of seeking Hair Loss Treatment Mississauga is access to experienced specialists in the field. These professionals possess the knowledge and expertise to accurately diagnose the underlying causes of hair loss and recommend personalized treatment plans. Whether it's a dermatologist, trichologist, or hair transplant surgeon, you can find the right specialist to address your concerns.
Comprehensive Approach: Many hair loss clinics in Mississauga adopt a comprehensive approach to treatment, addressing not just the symptoms but also the root cause of hair loss. Through a combination of medical intervention, dietary adjustments, and lifestyle modifications, patients can achieve long-lasting results and maintain healthy hair growth.
Convenience and Accessibility: With numerous clinics located across Mississauga, accessing hair loss treatment has never been more convenient. Whether you reside in the bustling city center or the suburban outskirts, you're likely to find a reputable clinic nearby, saving you time and travel expenses.
Community Support: Seeking hair loss treatment in Mississauga also means becoming part of a supportive community of individuals sharing similar experiences. Many clinics offer support groups, educational resources, and networking opportunities, allowing patients to connect with others on their journey to regaining confidence and self-assurance.
Customized Treatment Plans: Hair loss treatment in Mississauga often involves personalized approaches tailored to each individual's unique needs and preferences. Clinics prioritize understanding the specific concerns and goals of their patients, resulting in customized treatment plans that optimize effectiveness and satisfaction.
Holistic Wellness: Many hair loss treatment centers in Mississauga recognize the interconnectedness of hair health with overall wellness. They offer complementary therapies such as scalp massages, nutritional counseling, and stress management techniques to promote holistic well-being and enhance the results of conventional treatments.
Enhanced Confidence and Quality of Life: Beyond just addressing physical symptoms, hair loss treatment in Mississauga aims to boost confidence and improve overall quality of life. By restoring natural-looking hair growth and alleviating the emotional distress associated with hair loss,Acne Treatment Mississauga individuals can experience a significant enhancement in their self-image and emotional well-being.
Continued Support and Follow-up: The journey to combating hair loss doesn't end after the initial treatment phase. Mississauga's hair loss clinics provide ongoing support and follow-up care to ensure the long-term success and satisfaction of their patients. Whether it's monitoring progress, adjusting treatment plans, or addressing any concerns that may arise, patients can rely on continued support from their healthcare providers.
Leading Research and Innovation: Mississauga's hair loss treatment centers are at the forefront of research and innovation in the field of trichology and dermatology. By staying abreast of the latest advancements and participating in clinical trials, these clinics offer patients access to cutting-edge treatments and technologies that may not be available elsewhere.
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I just...want to work in the garden and do nothing else. Stop only to eat and pee. I go in when the daylight’s done. And then all I want to do is look at more plants I can order and talk about my garden. All my plants are native to Ontario or nearby. All with edible parts except one. So. Plant species I have/am getting this year are:
001. Achillea millefolium (common yarrow) The red-flowered cultivar seems to have died over the winter, but the non-cultivar is growing strong and is also creeping past the stone border to become one with the grass. lol
002. Actaea racemosa (black snakeroot/black cohosh) Next weekend!
003. Agastache foeniculum (anise hyssop) Literally migrated from the place I planted it to a place it likes better, I guess. As in, there is no plant where I planted, but there is an anise hyssop in another part of that bed. You do you.
004. Allium canadense (meadow garlic/Canada garlic) Spreading slowly but reliably and super tasty.
005. Allium cernuum (nodding onion) It has flowered each year--this is year 4--but hasn’t spread at all. Very tasty, and I’ve bought some friends to help it along.
006. Allium schoenoprasum (chives/wild chives) Absolutely yum and doing very well.
007. Allium stellatum (prairie onion/autumn onion) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
008. Allium tricoccum (ramps/wild leek) It will be quite some time before it even makes flowers which hopefully let it spread, so I won’t be able to reap the benefits for a while. But, both plants did come up this year and have now died back as expected. Hopefully they’ll continue to come up.
009. Amelanchier canadensis (Canadian serviceberry) Caterpillars. Are. EATING IT. Gypsy moth caterpillars. This is going to be a problem for some time until they pupate, I guess. Plant’s generally okay, though. I won’t be getting fruit anytime soon, though.
010. Anaphalis margaritacea (pearly everlasting) Very healthy plants keeping the sunflowers under some control. This spring was my first year eating the shoots. Can’t say anything about the taste specifically, as they went into a pasta sauce, but that sauce was delicious.
011. Andromeda polifolia (bog rosemary) Next weekend!
012. Aquilegia brevistyla (smallflower columbine) Growing very well, more flowers this year. Next year I’ll eat some (flowers, only the flowers are edible).
013. Aquilegia canadensis (Canada columbine/red columbine) Flower stalk doesn’t seem as tall this year, but it still has a lot of flowers. They’re a lovely refreshing sweet snack (just the flowers).
014. Arabis alpina (alpine rockcress) Next weekend! I had one last year, but it didn’t survive the winter. The poor thing was so root-bound there was no soil in the pot, so I’m not surprised it didn’t make it. Hopefully the new one will be in better condition.
015. Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (bearberry/kinnikinnick/pinemat manzanita) Not doing great and I’m not sure why. That area is reasonably well-drained and it gets part sun, part shade. Oh well. Maybe I’ll move it to the hill in the back. It seemed to like the hill I had it on at my old apartment.
016. Argentina anserina (silverweed cinquefoil) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
017. Arisaema triphyllum (jack-in-the-pulpit) It came up! I was sure it had died last year. But no, it’s fine. Male this year. Hopefully female next year (I’m trying to see if the berries can be dried into edibility like the corms, and if they can I want to make jam or something with them).
018. Armeria maritima (thrift sea-pink) Drooping! It’s a drought-tolerant plant that will die if over-watered so I don’t water it more than once a week and I don’t water deeply, but it’s been hot so maybe it needs more or maybe I managed to overwater it anyway. Frick. Flowering very nicely though.
019. Aronia melanocarpa (black chokeberry) Doing just fine. No flowers and I don’t expect them for another couple of years at least, but it’s growing well.
020. Artemisia frigida (prairie sagewort/fringed sagebrush) Already spreading in the bed. Should look very nice when it fills in.
021. Aruncus dioicus (bride’s feathers/goat’s beard/buck’s beard) Growing more quickly than the internet told me it would! And going to flower this year too, which will be lovely.
022. Asarum canadense (Canada ginger) Doing fine for now, but burnt a lot in the sun last year. Likely to do so again. I’m going to plant something in front of it to shade it better. See, I wouldn’t have put it there if it was full sun because it’s a shade to part sun plant, but that area isn’t full-sun, it’s part sun; however, the sunlight it does get is very strong in the summer and the poor thing gets burnt.
023. Asclepias incarnata (swamp milkweed) Growing like a beast! Flowers were gorgeous last year. I don’t expect this to be any different, and maybe some monarch butterflies will pay it a visit.
024. Asclepias ovalifolia (oval leaf milkweed/dwarf milkweed) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
025. Asclepias syriaca (common milkweed) Mine seemed to come up much more slowly than those I’ve seen elsewhere, but it is a fairly young plant. I expect it will come up earlier next year. And it’s doing fine now.
026. Asclepias tuberosa (butterflyweed) Hasn’t come up yet, but they can take till middle of June to start emerging, so I’m not going to worry about it yet.
027. Asimina triloba (pawpaw) All three trees are alive, though with very different rates of growth. I got them at the same size at the same time, but in trying to figure out what the best thing was for them, I planted one on a hill next to the door of my at-the-time apartment, one by the fence at the opposite side of the yard, and the third I kept in a pot, which I brought in for the winter. That spring, the potted tree leafed out first at the end of April, and the one on the hill in the middle of May. The third didn’t bud at all. I continued to water it, but I was sure it was dead. Then the house my apartment was in caught fire so I had to go to a new place (same landlords, so still allowed to plant on the new property) and didn’t want to leave my plants behind. It was the end of June. All my plants were potted. and I was going to leave the lifeless stick behind AND THEN IT SUDDENLY HAD BUDS. So I potted it and took it too. All three survived the transplant, but the tree I had initially taken inside (but is now outside) is the biggest, and that little stick is still the smallest. lol
028. Asplenium trichomanes (maidenhair spleenwort) Very little still, but seems healthy. I hope for its fronds to spill over my newly constructed garden wall when it’s bigger.
029. Athyrium felix-femina (lady fern) Doing very well, as a fern that can tolerate full sun.
030. Caltha palustris (marsh marigold) It is a marsh plant and there is no pond on the property to plant it, but there is a leaking eavestrough, which I thought would do well enough along with heavy watering. So far I have been correct.
031. Campanula rotundifolia (harebell) Very lush and green. I struggled to keep it alive that first year, but three years later it’s perfect.
032. Cardamine concatenata (cutleaf toothwort) Sometime this summer!
033. Castilleja miniata (paintbrush) Sometime this summer!
034. Ceanothus americanus (New Jersey tea) Not ready to use in tisanes yet, but growing well.
035. Cerastium arvense (field chickweed) The first two years the thing was barely alive, but this year’s it’s moment to shine as it spreads and flowers.
036. Cercis canadensis (redbud) No flowers this spring, but wonderful foliage. Fingers crossed for next year.
037. Comptonia peregrina (sweetfern) Next weekend!
038. Coreopsis lanceolata (lance-leaved tickseed) The first plant I attempted died, but this one’s doing very well.
039. Cornus canadensis (bunchberry) Next weekend! I mean, my plant from last year would likely be fine if the squirrels hadn’t dug it up, as would the one before that (because that one came from the old place and had survived the winter just fine!). So, I’m going to plant the new one in a different spot and hope the fluffy-tailed rodents leave the poor thing alone this time.
040. Cornus florida (flowering dogwood) Just a baby still, but its leaves are nice and green. I had one before it that really liked the hill I had planted it on back at the old place but died in the pot before I could put it in its new home.
041. Cystopteris bulbifera (berry bladder fern) Doing just fine. I love my ferns.
042. Dalea purpurea (purple prairie clover) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
043. Deschampsia caespitosa (tufted hair grass) Not doing too well. Was fine last year, so I’m not sure what’s going on.
044. Echinacea purpurea (purple coneflower) I’ve always loved these. They’re edible, medicinal (with caution), have lovely flowers, and attract lots of pollinators including bees and butterflies. Mine is doing perfectly. No flowers yet this year, but very green healthy foliage.
046 Erythronium americanum (trout lily/dogtooth violet) Still no flowers this spring, but they did come up, so maybe next year.
047. Eupatorium purpureum (sweet-scented Joe Pye weed/gravel root/purple Joe Pye weed) Soon! Also, do you know how this is eaten? Its root is literally burnt and then you use the ashes to flavour your food. The plant is otherwise poisonous, so how it was found out that it could be used this way conjures up amusing scenarios for me.
048. Fragaria vesca (woodland strawberry/wild strawberry/alpine strawberry) I have strawberries! They’re far from ripe yet, but developing well. They’re also spreading over the hill I planted them on and will hopefully give the garlic mustard and dog-strangling vine a run for their money.
049. Fragaria virginiana (wild strawberry/Virginia strawberry/common strawberry/mountain strawberry) Because one native species of strawberry isn’t enough, I have both. This one is also making strawberries and nicely filling out the area I put it in.
050. Galium boreale (northern bedstraw) Newly planted! The first one of these I planted didn’t survive the winter, but I hadn’t been able to plant it until autumn (because I hadn’t yet been told where I could plant). This one has the rest of spring, the whole summer, and fall until frost to establish itself, and I’ve seen a number of them growing wild at the edge of the ravines, so it should be fine.
051. Gaultheria procumbens (American wintergreen/eastern teaberry/boxberry/checkerberry) Next weekend! I actually already have one and have had it for a couple years, but it’s another that came so root-bound there wasn’t any soil in the pot. I planted it hoping for the best, but it seems to be in a very slow decline. So I’m going to plant another one, hopefully not so root-bound and that will maybe either give it a boost (plants of the same species will often help each other when sick by transferring nutrients) or else take over when the first one dies.
052. Geum aleppicum (yellow avens) I didn’t plant this, and I can’t find it for sale anywhere anyway, but it’s a common plant that shows up as a weed. Being native as well as edible, it’s allowed to stay wherever it isn’t directly in my way.
053. Geum canadense (white avens) Same as above. lol Anyway, both species have attractive foliage. They’re likely not used as garden plants because of how common they are as weeds and because their flower stalks are long and leggy. But I’m happy to have them.
054. Geum rivale (purple avens) Newly planted! This one is offered as a garden plant, though fairly rare, and I’ve finally got my hands on one! All of the Geum species in my garden seem to be doing just fine, so I expect this will fine too. It’s the first plant I’ve put in a new area that doesn’t drain very well which makes it perfect for plants like this one that grow in clay on stream banks.
055. Geum triflorum (prairie smoke) Green leaves. Flower stalks up. This is a pretty reliable plant because it doesn’t die back in the winter, it just sort of sits there waiting for spring and then resumes growth like nothing happened. The first year it drooped a lot but once it established itself there was no stopping it and the transplant went smoothly too.
056. Grindelia squarrosa (gumweed) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
057. Helianthus divaricatus (woodland sunflower) This is a sunflower that can actually stand a fair bit of shade. I thought mine had died last year due to the foliage and stemming dying back after a squirrel broke it and it and it was still summer. But it’s come up this year and I’m starting to think nothing short of cooking a sunflower’s roots will actually kill it.
058 and 059. Helianthus nuttalli (Nuttall’s sunflower/common tall sunflower) and Helianthus pauciflorus (stiff sunflower/beautiful sunflower) All I know is, I ordered both, I received two small plants, by the time I got them in the ground they were barely alive, that area is now being overtaken by sunflowers, and it could be one species, or it could be both, I don’t know. I did thin out some shoots this spring and add them to a very flavourful pasta sauce. I also thinned out a bunch of their roots last fall. To look at them, you wouldn’t know that either of these had happened, and I’m going to have to thin out more. They’re also putting up shoots between the stones of the cement path. There will be sunflowers here until the end of time.
060. Helianthus tuberosus (sunchoke/Jerusalem artichoke/suntato) Because I don’t learn, I planted yet another sunflower species last year, in a different area, because dammit I want my suntatoes that taste like artichokes. I planted one last year. I took and ate a bunch of tubers in the fall. There are currently five plants. This should be interesting.
061. Heliopsis helianthoides (false sunflower/sweet oxeye) After getting off to a rocky start last year, this one’s doing just fine, and also looks to be living up to its resemblance to sunflowers in more than just appearance.
062. Hibiscus moscheutos (swamp rose mallow) One of them appears to have died so I hope the other isn’t headed the same direction. Seems to be coming up normally though. Also I learned the flowers can change colour from year to year which was a huge surprise to me from the first year to the second. No idea what it will be like this year.
063. Hierochloe odorata (sweet grass/vanilla grass) It flowered last year, which was lovely. I hope it does so again this year. Foliage is nice and green anyhow.
064. Humulus lupulus (common hop) Growing nicely now, though its first several shoots died this year. It seems to just be a very impatient plant in the springtime despite not being very frost hardy. So it put out shoots, which died in the frost, and then put out more, which also died, etc. until finally there was no more frost so it just kept growing. That’s one way to do it, I guess. lol Most other frost-tender plants tend to be more cautious about when they put out new growth.  had a hop plant at my old apartment, which really liked the place I put I put it in, but it died when I potted it to try and take with me.
065. Impatiens capensis (jewelweed/spotted touch-me-not) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
066. Juglans nigra (black walnut) This tree has likely been on this property since before I was born. I tapped it spring before last. I’ll tap it next spring too. Seems to be a healthy tree.
067. Kalmia latifolia (mountain laurel) They’re not native to Ontario but they are native to eastern North America, in the Appalachian mountains. I figured if they could survive mountain weather they could handle south Ontario winters, and so far it has. It’s not edible but I fell in love with them a long time ago when reading David Attenborough’s The Secret Life of Plants. And they’re making buds this year!
068. Lactuca canadensis (Canadian lettuce) Yes! We have a native lettuce. Most people will pull it up as a weed along with dandelions and thistles, though. I let it stay wherever possible. It’s not like I can just buy a new one, so I count myself lucky when they come up in my garden.
069. Lilium michiganense (Michigan lily) It made smaller ones, but they don’t seem to have survived for whatever reason. The older ones are very robust this year, though, and are budding with what looks like will be many flowers.
070. Lilium philadelphicum (wood lily) Newly planted! I have not had much luck with these, but hopefully this year’s the year. I have two plants, so maybe they’ll help each other.
071. Lindera benzoin (spicebush) No flowers or butterflies yet, but it’s a healthy bush and lives up to its name.
072. Linum lewisii (blue flax) Newly planted! I’ve wanted these for a long time but the places that carried them either wouldn’t deliver or didn’t have them as plugs or potted stock (I find seeds too unreliable). But now I have a couple in the large stone garden pot that I specifically filled with dirt that would allow for good drainage, for those plants that can survive the cold but not sitting in water.
073. Lupinus perennis (sundial lupine) Soon! Or I already have it. Not sure. See, I was sent an email by the company saying I’d probably accidentally gotten a bigleaf lupine instead and they gave me a coupon for the following spring to get a confirmed sundial lupine, but there is a chance I already have it. Either way it’s a nice plant, so whether I have two plants of the same species or two different species is fine.
074. Lupinus polyphyllus (bigleaf lupine/common lupine) I actually haven’t been able to find this species available for delivery anywhere, so if that is what I currently have, then I’m delighted and this is the best plant mixup that could possibly happen (there have been a number). Whatever it is is a very attractive plant even with just the foliage. I hope it makes flowers this year.
075. Mahonia repens (creeping Oregon grape) Speaking of plant mixups! The first time I ordered this I got a Potentilla nepalensis instead. I didn’t know it at the time, as it had a tag saying “Mahonia repens”, but then it flowered...I wouldn’t have minded terribly much if it had been a native Potentilla species, but “nepalensis” is definitely not that. Well, I emailed the company with a photo and they promptly delivered not one, but two creeping Oregon grape plants, and both seem to be doing okay, making new growth, survived the winter, which the potentilla did not.
076. Maianthemum stellatum (starry false Solomon’s seal) They seem to be doing well! They flowered, but I don’t know if there will be berries. Next year maybe, but then you don’t really see Maianthemum berries until late summer, so maybe there will be a couple this year.
077. Mentha arvensis (wild mint) It’s doing exactly what mint does. Tastes wonderful, which is a great reason for thinning it out and pulling it out from between the sidewalk stones.
078. Mertensia paniculata (tall bluebells) Currently flowering. Despite the name, though they do grow taller than their cousin the Virginia bluebells, I wouldn’t say they’re a bigger plant overall. Very nice though. The flowers are a delicate light blue.
079. Mertensia virginica (Virginia bluebells) When I planted the rootstock in the early summer and nothing came up at all, I thought they had died. But nope! They came up vigorously this spring, with huge leaves and incredibly blue flowers. The flowers are don and it’s starting to die back now, but what a gorgeous springtime plant it is.
080. Monarda didyma (scarlet beebalm) My theory is if you put two members of the mint family next to each other, they’ll keep each other at bay. I’m probably wrong. Anyway, this is already spreading in two directions. Last year caterpillars at a lot of its flowers. I hope that won’t happen this year.
081. Monarda fistulosa (wild bergamot) Has become a very big plant, but politely hasn’t really left it’s immediate area. They make great dried flowers after the winter, by the way, as the seedheads retain the scent. Especially if you squeeze them.
082. Monarda punctata (horsemint) This is starting to fill out now, but compared to the other members of its genus took a very long time to go past a teeny tiny little growth. Last year it got huge shortly after I planted it, so we’ll see if it does that this year. I hope so. The bees, wasps, and other pollinators absolutely loved it.
083. Myosotis laxa (smallflower forget-me-not) I didn’t plant it, I can’t even find it available for sale. It just grows as a weed. It’s just as blue as other forget-me-nots, but with stems that are very leggy and even smaller flowers than the popular garden species. But it’s native so it stays where it’s not directly in my way. It’s very prolific, lots of plants in the garden.
084. Myrica gale (sweet gale/bog myrtle) Only just started making new growth. It seems to be on its way out and I’m not sure why, but it makes me sad. I think last year was really hard on it being so hot so early and I didn’t have a hose then, so I was stuck carrying buckets of water up from my apartment in the basement. But I have a hose this year and I’ve been watering regularly, so maybe, just maybe, it will spring back into action this year. It’s such a pretty bush when in full foliage and the leaves taste like green tea.
085. Oenothera fruticosa (narrow-leaved sundrops) Next weekend! I’ve grown another species which has finished its lifecycle (they’re biennial) and sadly doesn’t seem to have successfully reseeded itself. But maybe this one will.
086. Onoclea sensibilis (sensitive fern) This poor thing struggled hard last year. I planted it between a tree and the house, but it still got a lot of sunlight. Still, it came up this year, and in my experience, second year plants tend to be much more hardy, so we’ll see. It’s doing fine for now.
087. Opuntia fragilis (fragile prickly pear) I did put it in a fairly dry area that gets full sun, but it does struggle in the winter and spring. It is starting to bounce back, though, just like it did last year, and the pieces it scattered are making roots of their own. All of whom are spiky bastards.
088. Opuntia humifusa (eastern prickly pear/devil’s tongue) This did just fine. I had it in a big stone pot which I moved to an area that gets no rain or snow on it, and it’s making new growth now that I’ve moved the pot back into the full sun. It like to spike me whenever I move the pot.
089. Osmundastrum cinnamomeum (cinnamon fern) Next weekend!
090. Oxalis stricta (yellow woodsorrel/sourgrass) It’s not technically native to Ontario, but it is native to Michigan and moved up here decades or possibly centuries ago. I didn’t plant it and you can’t find it in stores because it’s considered a weed, but it is coming up in my garden, it doesn’t hurt anything, and it is a delicious little plant, so it stays.
091. Parthenocissus quinquefolia (Virginia creeper) I didn’t have to buy this because it was already in the yard (it’s common in the ravines), but if it wasn’t I would have, because it’s gorgeous and I like the taste of the berries. It’s a native relative of Boston ivy, so if you’re wanting a wall climber, please get Virginia creeper instead. They’re available at a lot of garden centres and online.
092. Phlox divaricata (woodland phlox/blue phlox) It’s growing, but I think one of the white avens is overcrowding it, so I’ll probably dig that one up and eat it so the phlox can have more space.
093. Podophyllum peltatum (mayapple) Three plants in last year. One plant up this year. Oh well. It’s growing nicely, so hopefully it will spread.
094. Polygonatum biflorum (smooth Solomon’s seal) Hopefully coming by the end of this month!
095. Polystichum achrosticoides (Christmas fern) It doesn’t die back in the winter! I mean, the leaves get kind of yellowed, but otherwise just hangs out and makes new growth in spring. My first attempt with ferns (ostrich ferns) was a failure, but so far all my other fern species have been successful and are currently thriving.
096. Prunus americana (American plum) It’s very top heavy when leafed so it flops over whenever it rains which is kind of funny, but it seems to be doing fine.
097. Prunus nigra (black plum/Canada plum) My first black plum died, but this one seems fine.
098. Prunus pumila (sand cherry) Soon! And it better bloody be a sand cherry and not a purple-leaf sandcherry, which is a hybrid, like the last company I ordered one from sent me. But that company didn’t specialize in native plants and carried both plants, whereas this company does specialize in native plants and does not advertise the hybrid at all.
099. Prunus serotina (black cherry) This is the very cherry that is used to flavour black cherry ice cream! But my little tree (not that little anymore lmao) hasn’t made flowers yet. It has nice foliage though it keeps trying to grow into the neighbour’s fence. Don’t know why. The sun doesn’t come from there. Maybe it will flower next spring.
100. Pycnanthemum tenufolium (slender mountain mint) Despite being part of the mint family, this is actually a very polite plant so far that stays in its immediate area.
101. Pycnanthemum virginiana (Virginia mountain mint) Just as polite as its cousin. My first died and I blame the person who lived in another unit who decided that garden bed was an ash tray. I managed to put a stop to that, got all the cigarettes out, dug out a stump, added new dirt, and planted a new Virginia mountain mint as well as bride’s feathers. That particular tenant isn’t there anymore and nobody else does anything with the outside, except to put a garden hyacinth there, which I’ve left in its pot and been watering. I’m not just going to leave the poor thing to die. Anyway, the Virginia mountain mint flowered last year and I hope it does so again this year.
102. Ratibida columnifera (yellow coneflower/upright prairie coneflower) Newly planted! I don’t like to get the cultivar versions if I can avoid it, but I will if that’s all that’s available, or in this case, to get the plants I really wanted, I needed to get something that would put me over the minimum cost. But I didn’t want to leave it at that, so I bought a non-cultivar this year so they can be friends.
103. Ratibida pinnata (gray-headed coneflower/yellow coneflower/pinnate prairie coneflower) This almost flowered last year and the I accidentally broke it with the hose. That will not happen this year. I don’t see a flower stalk yet, but the leaves look healthy.
104. Rhus aromatica (fragrant sumac) It’s putting out flowers, but it did so last year and nothing happened, so I guess we’ll see this year.
105. Rosa blanda (smooth rose) A rose without thorns! Or almost. It’s got leaves out, but it’s a slow grower for a rose and hasn’t flowered yet.
106. Rubus occidentalis (black raspberry) This was supposed to be a red raspberry because black raspberries are easy to find in the ravines, but that’s okay, and I did order a new red raspberry which will hopefully actually be red. lol
107. Rubus strigosus (American red raspberry) Soon! Sometimes considered a variety of Rubus idaeus, which is the one you find in grocery stores. There is one patch I’ve found of them in the ravines, but they’re not nearly as common here as the black raspberry. Hopefully this new plant I get will actually be the red raspberry.
108. Rudbeckia laciniata (cutleaf coneflower/green-headed coneflower) There are two plants with very different leaves growing there. One of them I hope is the plant I intended, but won’t know until they flowers. They’re both doing well, whatever they are.
109. Sambucus canadensis (common elderberry) It’s making flowers this year! I learned the hard way that this species does NOT like being transplanted to a pot, which I had to do to take with me to my current apartment. However, it did eventually bounce back and didn’t mind being transplanted to its current location, which it likes just fine.
110. Shepherdia canadensis (Canada buffaloberry) Next weekend!
111. Solidago canadensis (Canadian goldenrod) I tried to buy this plant but they accidentally sent me an aster species instead. However, there are a bunch of goldenrods growing a different area that I didn’t plant and I believe to be this species.
112. Solidago nemoralis (gray goldenrod) Droops a lot but bounces back quickly.
113. Solidago simplex (spike goldenrod/sticky goldenrod/Mt. Albert Goldenrod) I’ve tried this once before and it died, possibly from being small enough that the ledge it was next to prevented it from getting enough sunlight. I’ve planted the new one far enough from the ledge that it does not get shaded by it, so hopefully that will do the trick.
114. Spiraea alba (meadowsweet) The first year in the new place it struggled a bit, but it’s fine now and it flowered last year.
115. Symphoricarpos orbiculatus (coralberry) Next weekend! It’s also the first time I’ve seen it available anywhere.
116. Symphyotrichum ciliolatum (fringed blue aster/Lindley’s aster/northern heart-leaved aster) A very polite aster, or maybe it’s just being kept under control by the sweet grass (055). Its foliage is that lovely gray-green colour often referred to as “blue” when people talk about holly, spruce, and hosta leaves, and its flowers are that pale blue people often think of as purple or periwinkle but shows up digitally as light blue.
117. Symphyotrichum cordifolium (heart-leaved aster) Doing fine where I planted it.
118. Symphyotrichum laeve (smooth aster) I didn’t have the tag and thought this was a violet when I planted it. It now thinks it owns the space, but looks very nice when it’s in bloom.
119. Symphyotrichum lanceolatum (panicled aster/lance-leaf aster/willow aster/tall white aster/eastern line aster/white-panicle aster/narrow-leaf Michaelmas daisy) Lots of common names. It decided it belonged on the sidewalk last year, but surprisingly agreed when I placed its branches behind the stone line of the garden. We’ll see if we can come to the same agreement this year.
120. Symphyotrichum novae-angliae (New England aster) Not flowering yet this year, but looks it’s getting ready. They’re such a lovely rich violet to purple and I love that they flower so late into autumn too.
121. Taraxacum officinale ceratophorum (fleshy dandelion/horned dandelion/rough dandelion) Obviously didn’t buy it. lol But it is in my garden along with non-native subspecies. Since they don’t harm the plants they grow among, they can stay as long as they’re not in my way.
122. Trillium erectum (red trillium) Next weekend! And I possibly already have one. See, I ordered three trillium species last year as bulbs and planted them, but lost two of the tags. Only two species came up and only the one with the tag flowered this year. So I don’t know if the one that didn’t flower was erectum or grandifolium, so I ordered both again.
123. Trillium flexipes (nodding trillium) It came up this year and it was lovely. Died back now though.
124. Trillium grandiflorum (great white trillium) Next weekend! And I might already have one: see 109. Ontario’s provincial flower. I once made a set of coat of arms style designs with each of the provincial flowers and animals.
125. Urtica dioica gracilis (stinging nettle) Planted itself in my garden back at the old place and if I didn’t trust the other plants would be safe after I left (I was right, by the way; the whole backyard has been turned over) I definitely didn’t think this would be either, so I potted it to take with and got stung for my trouble, but it’s happy in its new home. Lives up to its name, of course, but I did eat a few of the tops earlier this year in soup and later in pasta sauce, so I suppose we’re even.
126. Vaccinium angustifolium (lowbush blueberry/wild blueberry) When you see “wild blueberries” in the grocery store in Ontario, it’s this. It always seems to struggle with mould in the spring. Every year I’ve had it. I got it a friend in hopes it would help, but they seem to both be dealing with it now. I’ll have cut back the bad branches and hope that helps. It usually does, but I don’t know why it starts in the first place. None of the neighbouring plants are suffering.
127. Vaccinium corymbosom (highbush blueberry) This is the species you’ll most often see in the grocery store in Ontario as “blueberries”. My bush always makes some flowers and berries, but it’s not doing great right now. Not sure why. It doesn’t get mould the way the lowbush blueberries do. I hope it’s not on its way out. You can get them at a lot of garden centres, but there’s usually a minimum amount of plants or a minimum cost, and garden centres that specialize in native plants don’t often carry these, while garden centres that don’t often don’t have any other native species or at least not any I need or have room for. So for my purposes they’re kind of hard to get.
128. Verbena hastata (blue vervain) Was off to a slow start this year, but it’s doing just fine now.
129. Viburnum acerifolium (mapleleaf viburnum) Next weekend!
130. Viburnum lentago (nannyberry) It’s doing fine, just fine, but I doubt I’ll get any berries for some time yet.
131. Viburnum nudum cassinoides (Witherod viburnum) A lovely little bush so far. Maybe I’ll get flowers next spring.
132. Viola adunca (hookedspur violet/western dog violet/early blue violet) Hopefully coming by the end of this month! My first go with this plant was not successful. Hopefully better luck this time.
133. Viola blanda (sweet white violet) Exactly what it says on the tin. There’s a delicate pink to the centre, and the foliage is nice too.
134. Viola canadensis (Canada violet) It’s tall for a violet, and spreading nicely with lots of flowers.
135. Viola labradorica (purple Labrador violet) Next weekend! Despite it’s name, it is also native to Ontario.
136. Viola sororia (wood violet/blue violet) This is most common violet you see generally, which makes it hard, though not impossible, to find in garden centres. However, they’ve planted themselves in the yard and I’ve successfully transferred one to one of the beds. I have other place I want to put the rest before I dig up that area.
137. Vitis riparia (riverbank grape) I have two plants because I didn’t realize when I bought it that hiding among the weeds in another part of the garden there already was one. Oh well. Guaranteed cross-pollination of two genetically diverse individuals. They’re both doing well.
138. Zizia aurea (golden alexanders) They’re doing well. It looks a lot like wild parsnip, which it is related to, but it’s much more friendly, and I ate some this spring.
I may be able to order more. We’ll see. One of my go-to places says they won’t ship until “opening day”. I guess they mean when their area reopens, but that might not be till next year. Meantime, I will continue to construct my garden wall in the back.
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canadamedlase-blog · 5 years
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denisehil0 · 4 years
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More GTA businesses open up and the Hockey Hall of Fame; In The News for June 24
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In The News is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to kickstart your day. Here is what’s on the radar of our editors for the morning of June 24 …
What we are watching in Canada … 
TORONTO — Ontario’s two most heavily populated regions will see more businesses open their doors today as Toronto and Peel move into the next stage of the province’s COVID-19 recovery plan.
The two regions officially enter Stage 2 of the pandemic reopening framework, joining nearly all the rest of the province that began ramping up activities over the past two weeks.
Windsor-Essex remains the only region not cleared to move to the next phase, due to stubbornly high COVID-19 case numbers on farms in the region.
Businesses given the green light to resume operations in Toronto and Peel today include hair stylists, pools and tour guide services.
Restaurants are also allowed to reopen their patios for dine-in service, though no one is yet allowed to be served indoors.
In all cases, the Ontario government says proper physical distancing measures must be maintained to prevent a spike in COVID-19 cases.
Also this …
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be among some 600 prominent politicians, business leaders and journalists featured at one of the world’s largest tech conferences.
The two-day Collision conference begins today and Trudeau is to take part in a question and answer session with a Financial Times editor on Thursday.
The conference — billed as Collision from Home this year — is taking place virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to the Collision website, more than 32,000 people from 140 countries are expected to join the conference.
Trudeau’s session, which was recorded in advance, focuses on Canada’s response to the pandemic, with particular emphasis on the role of science and innovation in fighting the deadly novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 and attempts to find treatments and an eventual vaccine.
Among the other featured speakers are Microsoft president Brad Smith, World Health Organization director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Netflix chief production officer Greg Peters and Canadian author Margaret Atwood.
Trudeau is taking a break today from his daily pandemic briefing outside Rideau Cottage to quietly celebrate St. Jean Baptiste Day, Quebec’s Fete nationale.
ICYMI (In case you missed it) …
Sale of T-shirts on Walmart Canada’s website with the words “All Lives Matter” printed across the front has drawn furor from social media users.
The company is also selling T-shirts with “Blue Lives Matter” and “Irish Lives Matter” printed across them.
In a statement, Walmart Canada says it stands against any form of racism or discrimination and promotes listening, seeking to understand and embracing individual differences.
It says a third-party marketplace has a number of items with variations on the phrase “lives matter,” and it will review those items to ensure compliance with Walmart’s terms and conditions.
But several social media users called out the company, with one Twitter user identified as Farzana Khan asking Walmart to remove the T-shirts, calling them “disgusting.”
Another user, Beth MacDonnell, also called for their removal asking “who approved this?” 
What we are watching in the U.S. …
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Several hundred people gathered in Marion Square, in the historic South Carolina city of Charleston, today to watch the removal of a statue of former vice-president and slavery advocate John C. Calhoun.
Just before 1 a.m. local time, workers using cranes began to bring the statue down from its 30-metre monument in downtown Marion Square.
In the wake of protests and unrest, city council members voted Tuesday to remove the statue and place it permanently at “an appropriate site where it will be protected and preserved.”
The city council voted 13-0 Tuesday evening on a resolution to remove the statue.
What we are watching elsewhere in the world …
BEIJING — China appears to have tamed a new outbreak of the coronavirus in Beijing, once again demonstrating its ability to quickly mobilize vast resources by testing nearly 2.5 million people in 11 days.
But elsewhere in the world, cases were surging. India reported a record daily increase of nearly 16,000 new cases. Mexico also set a record with more than 6,200 new cases.
In the U.S., increases over the past few days have jumped to near the level of the outbreak’s previous peak in April. Several states set single-day records, including Arizona, California, Mississippi, Nevada and Texas.
Worldwide, more than 9.2 million people have contracted the virus, including more than 477,000 who have died.
Today in 1880 … 
“O Canada,” with music by Calixa Lavallee and French lyrics by Judge A.B. Routhier, was performed for the first time at the Skaters’ Pavilion in Quebec City.
In sports …
TORONTO — Former Calgary Flames star Jarome Iginla headlines the list of first-time eligible players for selection to the Hockey Hall of Fame today.
The class of 2020 will be unveiled this afternoon after the selection committee meets.
Iginla had 1,300 points in 1,554 career NHL games and helped Canada win gold at the Olympics in 2002 in Salt Lake City and 2010 in Vancouver.
At the latter Winter Games, Iginla made the pass to Sidney Crosby for the golden goal in overtime against the United States.
Other players eligible for the first time include Marian Hossa and Shane Doan.
Fans of the Senators will be anxious to see if longtime Ottawa captain Daniel Alfredsson gets the nod in his fourth year on the ballot.
Former Canadian women’s team forward Jennifer Botterill and goalie Kim St-Pierre also are eligible this year.
In entertainment …
New seasons of “Transplant” and “Jann” are among the shows bound for CTV as Bell Media navigates COVID-19 pandemic shutdowns and vows to increase representation and diversity in its content.
The company announced its upcoming lineup on Tuesday, including a second season of the hit homegrown medical drama “Transplant,” starring Hamza Haq as a Syrian doctor building a new life in Canada. An air date hasn’t been announced.
And the Canadian comedy “Jann,” from singer-songwriter-actress Jann Arden, will premiere a second season this fall and has been renewed for a third.
New shows on the CTV docket include “Filthy Rich,” starring Kim Cattrall as the wife of a wealthy patriarch, played by Gerald McRaney, whose sudden death reveals his secret life.
There’s also Chuck Lorre’s new comedy “B Positive,” starring Thomas Middleditch and Annaleigh Ashford as an unlikely duo who bond during his search for a kidney donor.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 24, 2020.
The Canadian Press
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smithjohn10 · 3 months
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Top 10 Places for Hair Transplant in Canada
It’s not too easy to find a clinic for hair transplants in Gatineau or Ontario, because of certain correlated reasons. Let us present a fact here. In Canada, almost 149,254 people have undergone hair transplants in past years. That means, if you’re calculating from 2010 to 2021, almost 36% of extra people have done hair transplants.
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antechhairq · 1 year
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Revitalize Your Hair at the Leading Hair Clinic Mississauga - Meet the Expert Hair Doctor Mississaug
Introduction: When it comes to our appearance, there's no denying that hair plays a significant role in defining our overall look and confidence. However, factors such as age, genetics, stress, and lifestyle can lead to hair loss or other hair-related issues, affecting our self-esteem. In such situations, seeking professional assistance from a reputable hair clinic and a skilled hair doctor becomes paramount. Mississauga, a bustling city in Ontario, Canada, is home to one of the finest hair clinics in the region, staffed with a renowned hair doctor dedicated to helping individuals regain their luscious locks and confidence.
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drcolinhong · 5 years
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trendtshirtnewposts · 4 years
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rocyfanandez30 · 2 years
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fuecanada · 3 years
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Hair Transplantation In Toronto
Are you trying to find a superb Cosmetic Surgery clinic in Toronto? FUE CANADA offers robotic hair transplant in Toronto and top-notch customer support. Come and see us at 302-A Sheppard Ave W.,Toronto,Ontario,M2N 1N5
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torontotravelblog · 4 years
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10 of the Prettiest Places in Toronto
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Toronto is filled will certainly pretty areas, both inside your home as well as out. Some are covert away, while others are out in the open and apparent. I've currently discussed the very best places in Toronto to Instagram, however this time around I'm focusing on several of the prettiest areas you can discover in or near the city.
These are areas that make it very easy to leave busy city life if you need a break, or just want a tranquil spot to believe or bliss out in nature for a while. Oh, and also they're all rather Instagram-worthy too should you seem like snapping a couple of photos (and also why not?).
01 of 10 Toronto Music Yard.
ADDRESS. Harbourfront, Toronto, ON M5V, Canada. PHONE +1 416-973-4000.
A slow-moving stray with the Toronto Music Yard at Harbourfront Centre never ever gets old and also it is indeed a very rather find to uncover on a warm, bright day in the city.
Made by globally popular cellist Yo Ma as well as landscape developer Julie Moir Messervy, the style of the stunning green space was inspirited by Bach, especially, his Suite No. 1 in G Major for unaccompanied cello, BWV 1007 and every section of the garden corresponds to a movement in the piece. So essentially, the garden is designed like a lilting, relocating piece of music. Admission is cost-free and also the garden is open year-round. You can additionally take place a cost-free guided excursion, supplied June with the end of September.
02 of 10 Platform Eco-friendly Roof at City Hall.
ADDRESS. 280 The PATH - Town Hall, Toronto, ON M5H 2N3, Canada.
In can feel hard to run away the bustle of Toronto when you're right downtown, however there is a slice of serenity you can conveniently gain access to. City Hall is residence to Toronto's largest openly available green roof, which opened in the springtime of 2010. What was previously a gigantic spot of concrete is currently a prospering eco-friendly room in the heart of the city and also an excellent area to get some fresh air in beautiful environments. You'll discover designed gardens, twisting walkways, yards, balconies and seating, in addition to some great views of the city below. Access to the roofing system garden is free and it's open Monday to Friday from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. as well as weekends and vacations from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
03 of 10 Edwards Gardens.
ADDRESS. 755 Lawrence Ave E, North York, ON M3C 1P2, Canada. PHONE +1 416-392-8188.
Edwards Gardens offers visitors a double dosage of garden beauty since it also takes place to be the place of the Toronto Botanical Garden. The calm room is house to rock yards, floral gardens, fountains, a water wheel, greenhouses, enchanting wood arc bridges as well as countless walking tracks where to enjoy all of it. If you wish to actually learn more about the attractive plants you're passing, the Toronto Arboretum offers numerous garden scenic tours as well as other instructional programs as well as workshops for both adults and also children.
04 of 10 Allan Gardens Conservatory.
19 Horticultural Ave, Toronto, ON M5A 2P2, Canada. If your suggestion of pretty includes a myriad of tropical plants, you'll definitely wish to make your method to Allan Gardens Sunroom, house to six greenhouse breaking with vibrant plants from all over the world. The conservatory itself is over 100 years of ages as well as an elegance per se. Head here to see gardens having every little thing from hands to bromeliads to cacti. The permanent collection of unique plants covers over 16,000 square feet. Admission is free as well as you can see 356 days a year from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
05 of 10 Cloud Gardens Conservatory.
ADDRESS. 14 Temperance St, Toronto, ON M5H 1Y4, Canada. PHONE +1 416-392-7288.
Sort of a surprise gem within the downtown core, Cloud Gardens Sunroom is a method to seem like you've gone on a miniature trip someplace tropical without every leaving the city. Put in between office towers downtown, the park is residence to a range of plants, however the greenhouse is the real celebrity. With a comforting waterfall and also a host of hands, brushes and other greenery you would certainly or else discover in a rainforest, it's simple to believe you have actually been hair transplanted to the tropics.
The sidewalk in the greenhouse goes from the reduced level entryway to an upper degree departure, something that truly makes you seem like you're walking up into an exotic forest. You can locate the sunroom on the south side of Richmond Street between Yonge Street as well as Bay Road.
06 of 10 Simcoe Wavedeck.
ADDRESS. 243 X Queens Quay W, Toronto, ON M5J 2G8, Canada. PHONE +1 416-214-1344.
Watching out onto the Simcoe Wavedeck can be a trip for the eyes. The undulating wood wavedeck on Toronto's waterside is a whopping 650 square metres with large curves that swell almost three metres above the lake. The wayward style of the deck is what makes it so interesting the eye and also it creates a perfect place to hang around by the water. In the evening the wavedeck is lit from under making it even more gorgeous.
07 of 10 Sherbourne Common.
ADDRESS. 61 Dockside Dr, Toronto, ON M5A 1B6, Canada. PHONE +1 416-338-4386.
This waterfront park is yet one more quite place to check out in the city. The almost four-acre park covers more than 2 city blocks and includes a vast swath of eco-friendly space, an ice rink in the winter months which becomes a dash pad in the summer and water network that's residence to three huge pieces of public art. The three sculptures rise up almost nine metres over the 240-metre water network producing a result that's as significant as it is distinctive. The art piece is entitled "Light Showers" by musician Jill Anholt.
08 of 10 Crothers Woods.
ADDRESS. Crothers Woods Route, East York, ON M4H 1P6, Canada. PHONE +1 416-392-2489.
You'll locate Crothers Woods in the Don River Valley and the 52-hectare woodland places you within easy accessibility to nearly 10 kilometres of routes to discover. The timbers themselves are house to lots of trees that more than a century old. Hiking these routes is an excellent method to shed yourself in nature without needing to leave the city.
09 of 10 Distillery District.
Distillery Area, Toronto, ON M5A, Canada. Toronto's historical Distillery District is a nationwide historical site as well as among the prettiest places to walk in the city. Explore the pedestrian-only patched streets as you stroll amongst Victorian-era Industrial design. The Distillery District is full of a variety of shops, theaters, cafes, restaurants (lots of with extensive patio areas) as well as art galleries so you can quickly spend a whole day right here and not get bored momentarily. There are likewise various occasions organized here throughout the year, from concerts to markets.
10 of 10 Tommy Thompson Park.
ADDRESS. 1 Leslie St, Toronto, ON M4M 3M2, Canada. PHONE +1 416-661-6600.
If you want to be among the biggest existing all-natural habitat on the Toronto beachfront, make your method to Tommy Thompson Park. One of one of the most fascinating things about the city park is that it lies on the Leslie Road Split, a synthetic peninsula that stretches out 5 kilometres right into Lake Ontario. The location is home to whatever from cobble coastlines and also sand dunes, to marshes and wildflower meadows. This is likewise a good spot for bird enjoying in Toronto.
The article “ 10 of the Prettiest Places in Toronto “ was first appeared on tripsavvy.com
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