Subject: Chestnut powder
Reni Teygeler <rene.teygeler [at] wxs__nl> writes > >However, I do know that an extract of the green pulp of the chestnut >was in use in Persia since the 11th century to make the papers >insect repellent, >... >If I remember correctly the same procedure has been applied >in Japan as well and for the same reasons. Ah! This reminds me of the great Conker (a.k.a. Horse Chestnut, or inedible chestnut) debate of 1995. Presumably the active ingredient is similar. I always meant to do some head-space GC-MS of the off-gassing of conkers--I wish somebody would. I asked: >I have known several people who place conkers in with textiles, to >serve as odourless mothballs. (Renewing them each autumn.) Does >anyone know if they really work? and Dominique Rogers replied: >When I was little, my mother used conkers in the wardrobe, I do not >know how efficient it was, but we did not have moths. Mark Clarke +31 0 20 620 9168 (home) +31 0 20 608 1234 (office) Fax: +31 0 20 668 4106 Home: Nieuwmarkt 207, 1011 MB Amsterdam Office: FOM-AMOLF, Kruislaan 407, 1098 SJ Amsterdam Please send all post to my office address. *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:39 Distributed: Tuesday, December 10, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-39-004 ***Received on Friday, 6 December, 2002