~~~ has given you a
sunflower plant! Sunflowers are given in recognition of valuable contributions to the
MediaWiki codebase. These plants are easy to grow, requiring only full sun and moist, well-drained,
mulchy soil, and can be processed into delicious
sunbutter! If you forget an important anniversary or birthday, your sunflower can also be hastily plucked and presented as a thoughtful gift. If you run out of food for your pet parrot and don't feel like going to the store, your sunflower's seeds will surely come in handy. If, on the other hand, you presently lack a
pet bird, no doubt the seeds can help you lure one onto your property. Possessing extensive
root systems, sunflowers are able to reach deep into sources of polluted water and extract large amounts of
toxic metals, including
uranium; the roots of floating rafts of sunflowers were able to extract 95% of the radioactivity in the water following the
Chernobyl disaster. Truly it is the plant of 1,000 uses. Little wonder, then, that enclosed in double brackets, it becomes the symbol for the software on which runs our wiki of belovedly versatile usefulness.
This template should always be substituted (i.e., use {{ subst:Sunflower gift}}). |
~~~ has given you a
sunflower plant! Sunflowers are given in recognition of valuable contributions to the
MediaWiki codebase. These plants are easy to grow, requiring only full sun and moist, well-drained,
mulchy soil, and can be processed into delicious
sunbutter! If you forget an important anniversary or birthday, your sunflower can also be hastily plucked and presented as a thoughtful gift. If you run out of food for your pet parrot and don't feel like going to the store, your sunflower's seeds will surely come in handy. If, on the other hand, you presently lack a
pet bird, no doubt the seeds can help you lure one onto your property. Possessing extensive
root systems, sunflowers are able to reach deep into sources of polluted water and extract large amounts of
toxic metals, including
uranium; the roots of floating rafts of sunflowers were able to extract 95% of the radioactivity in the water following the
Chernobyl disaster. Truly it is the plant of 1,000 uses. Little wonder, then, that enclosed in double brackets, it becomes the symbol for the software on which runs our wiki of belovedly versatile usefulness.
This template should always be substituted (i.e., use {{ subst:Sunflower gift}}). |