lunes, 28 de enero de 2019

Poor Eyesight?


If you suffer from blurry vision, nearsightedness, glaucoma, or AMD...

There's a new medical discovery you need to know about right away.

It comes from one of the country's top Medical Doctors...

And it's a simple, but scientifically proven way to strengthen your vision FAST...

Without spending a penny on glasses, contacts, or risky surgery.



The best part is...

This MD's discovery is 100% natural...

Yet it stimulates the cells in your eyes...

Which causes them to immediately self-repair.

=>Some people who use this method see improvements in their vision in just 7 days...

Which is probably why a group of 10 medical doctors were recently quoted...

As saying this is "the most important vision breakthrough of the 21st century."

=>Cl!ck here now to see the DIY vision-repair protocol that's shocking the medical community...

Before the billion-dollar eyecare industry gets it censored from the web.

Sincerely,

Larry Paine
Better Vision Initiative











 

 










 



  Imperator torosus, commonly known as the brawny bolete, is a species of bolete fungus in the family Boletaceae. It is native to southern Europe east to the Caucasus and Israel. It is generally associated with deciduous trees such as hornbeam, oak and beech in warm, dry locales. Although generally rare in Europe, it appears to be relatively common in Hungary. Appearing in summer and autumn on chalky soils, the stocky fruit bodies have an ochre cap up to 20 cm (8 in) across, yellow pores on the cap underside, and a wine-red to brown or blackish stipe up to 6–15 cm (2.4–5.9 in) long by 3–6 cm (1.2–2.4 in) wide. The pale yellow flesh changes to different colours when broken or bruised depending on age; younger mushrooms become reddish, and older ones additionally take on bluish tones. Elias Magnus Fries and Christopher Theodor Hök first described this species as Boletus torosus in 1835, a name by which it came to be known for many years. Modern molecular phylogenetics shows that it is only distantly related to Boletus edulis—the type species of Boletus—and it was duly placed in the new genus Imperator in 2015. Eating raw mushrooms of this species leads to vomiting and diarrhea. Gastrointestinal symptoms have also occurred after eating cooked specimens, though some people have eaten it without ill-effects. Swiss mycologist Louis Secretan described the brawny bolete as Boletus pachypus in his 1833 work Mycographie Suisse. Many of his names have been rejected for nomenclatural purposes because Secretan had a narrow species concept, dividing many taxa into multiple species that were not supported by other authorities, and his works did not use binomial nomenclature consistently. Swedish mycologists Elias Magnus Fries and Christopher Theodor Hök described Boletus torosus in 1835 based on Secretan's B. pachypus—distinct from the B. pachypus described by Fries himself. Fries reported in his 1838 book Epicrisis Systematis Mycologici seu Synopsis Hymenomycetum that he had not actually observed the species, and he did not designate a type specimen or illustration. The specific epithet torosus, which derives from Latin, means "muscular". In the United Kingdom, it is known commonly as the "brawny bolete". The German name Ochsen-Röhrling means "oxen bolete" and the French bolet vigoureux is "strong bolete".

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