Dog Rose Fruit/Rosa canina fructus HERBEX TRADE GROUP For more than five years we have been collecting, purchasing and wholesale of raw materials of medicinal plants to European countries. We unite more than 15 private entrepreneurs, farmers and collectors from the western, Carpathian regions of Ukraine. This allows us to ensure the best quality of our products.
Dog rose Rosa canina L. belongs to the Rosaceae family, it is commonly found over entire Poland and is a decorative shrub. Herbal material includes rose fruit Rosae pseudo-fructus the source of vitamin C, organic acids, polyphenols, carotenoids, and anthocyanins. Dog rose fruit products present nutritional and strengthening, antiscorbutic, diuretic, and general detoxicating properties. The extracts are safe for children and pregnant women. In addition, dog rose seed oil is remarkably valuable, as it is extensively used in cosmetics.
Not only are these rose buds aesthetically pleasing to the eye before being steeped in water, but they manage to maintain their beauty as they slowly unravel while brewing. When drinking this exceptional herbal tea you can taste the delicate sweetness of the rose buds as well as being able to pick up the gorgeous floral aroma. Packed with Vitamin C, malic acid, pectin, and citric acid, rose tea makes an admirably safe diuretic, which makes it more tempting to be used, especially if you are on a weight loss journey.dness, a cup of rose tea is a favorable way to enjoy the goodness without worrying about your hip size!
Rose hips (lat. Hip rose, fruit) can be used in many different variations. First of all, rosehip is a powerful bactericidal, anti-inflammatory and phytoncidal agent. Thanks to the record content of vitamin C, it gives a boost of immunity and increases the body's resistance to viruses and infections. The picking season is from September to November. Workers pick the berries by hand as they ripen. Raw material is delivered to the company, where it is dried in a heated, temperature-controlled room. Then, berries are cleaned of peduncles and twigs, leaves, defects and unripe berries. - Wild plants. - Humidity (9% -10%). - Maximum amount - Purification method: color-sorting machine - Packaging (weight 25 kg) - Production capacity - from 100000 tons
Rosa centifolia (lit. hundred leaved/petaled rose; syn. R. gallica var. centifolia (L.) Regel), the Provence rose or cabbage rose or Rose de Mai is a hybrid rose developed by Dutch rose breeders in the period between the 17th century and the 19th century, possibly earlier. Its parentage includes Rosa damascena, but it may be a complex hybrid; its exact hereditary history is not well documented or fully investigated, but it now appears that this is not the hundred-leaved (centifolia) rose mentioned by Theophrastus and Pliny: no unmistakable reference can be traced earlier than about 1580. The original plant was sterile, but a sport with single flowers appeared in 1769, from which various cultivars known as centifolia roses were developed, many of which are further hybrids. Other cultivars have appeared as further sports from these roses. Rosa centifolia Muscosa is a sport with a thick covering of resinous hairs on the flower buds, from which most (but not all) moss roses are derived. Dwarf or miniature sports have been known for almost as long as the larger forms, including a miniature moss ross Moss de Meaux
Rosa centifolia (lit. hundred leaved/petaled rose; syn. R. gallica var. centifolia (L.) Regel), the Provence rose or cabbage rose or Rose de Mai is a hybrid rose developed by Dutch rose breeders in the period between the 17th century and the 19th century, possibly earlier. Its parentage includes Rosa damascena, but it may be a complex hybrid; its exact hereditary history is not well documented or fully investigated, but it now appears that this is not the hundred-leaved(centifolia) rose mentioned by Theophrastus and Pliny: no unmistakable reference can be traced earlier than about 1580. The original plant was sterile, but a sport with single flowers appeared in 1769, from which various cultivars known as centifolia roses were developed, many of which are further hybrids. Other cultivars have appeared as further sports from these roses. Rosa centifolia Muscosa is a sport with a thick covering of resinous hairs on the flower buds, from which most (but not all) moss roses are derived. Dwarf or miniature sports have been known for almost as long as the larger forms, including a miniature moss ross Moss de Meauxâ??.
Rosa centifolia (lit. hundred leaved/petaled rose; syn. R. gallica var. centifolia (L.) Regel), the Provence rose or cabbage rose or Rose de Mai is a hybrid rose developed by Dutch rose breeders in the period between the 17th century and the 19th century, possibly earlier. Its parentage includes Rosa damascena, but it may be a complex hybrid; its exact hereditary history is not well documented or fully investigated, but it now appears that this is not the hundred-leaved (centifolia) rose mentioned by Theophrastus and Pliny: no unmistakable reference can be traced earlier than about 1580â??. The original plant was sterile, but a sport with single flowers appeared in 1769, from which various cultivars known as centifolia roses were developed, many of which are further hybrids. Other cultivars have appeared as further sports from these roses. Rosa centifolia Muscosa is a sport with a thick covering of resinous hairs on the flower buds, from which most (but not all) moss roses are derived. Dwarf or miniature sports have been known for almost as long as the larger forms, including a miniature moss ross Moss de Meaux.