Difference between revisions of "Healing"
(Created page with "{| class="wikitable" style=" margin-left: 10px; width: 1100px" |- style="background:#DAA520; height:10px; text-align:center; text-size:large" |colspan="2"|'''List of Medicinal...") |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 06:37, 4 June 2018
List of Medicinal plants |
Forest | |
Blissfoil | A plant with blue flowers that numbs a part of the body when in contact with the skin. |
Night Sap | A honey like substance that causes a sense of calmness and sleepiness but is highly addictive. |
Serpents Stalk | An emerald hued stalk that grows on the side of water in forests which great properties to heal burn wounds. |
Shadeleaf | A small, short plant; causes hallucinations, used as a drug. |
Tippens Root | A purple flower which grows next to dead trees in the forest; its roots smell horrible but stop bleeding in a wound near instantly. |
Swamp | |
Aqua Nymph | A small chain of blue baubles that grow under the water; used as a remedy for burns, not to be consumed. |
Jungle | |
Atheros | A white with brown and grey spotted root, found under trees, which is commonly used to reduce pain. |
Tundra and Snow Lands | |
Frost Vine | A small blue plant which grows in the freezing environments, used to numb pain and loosen stiff muscles. |
Desert | |
Blood Lotus | A small rust colored plant that grows in hot climates in which is used as a dietary supplement, providing several vitamins and nutrients to the consumer. |
Gijaklul | A rare desert flower that has an odor compared to that of rotting flesh; used with the potential of healing alongside maintaining an obscure, faint glow. |
Javens | A large sand spur with green colored stripes going along the plant, commonly utilized by field-doctors to reduce their patients' pain. |
Zawabate | A plant with prominent hues of green and yellow, its petals short and curvy, and its stalk tall and proud; used for minor healing, though if consumed too heavily can cause severe and brutal delusions and mental illness, working as a mind-altering poison. |