313 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
313 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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NETTLES -- ADVENTURES IN ORGANIC SM
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Northwest Indians used them to keep awake on long canoe voyages.
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English herbwives used them to stimulate prize bulls to do their
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duty. English Mistresses found them equally useful, and nettles are
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almost as common in Victorian erotica as canes and birches.
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Nettles can be the main element of a scene, or just serve to spice
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one up. They can be a threat, a warmup, a tease, a punishment or a
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sensory enhancement. And, like SM itself, they don't feel like what
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people expect.
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Recall that lovely glow that comes just after the sharp pain of a
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whipstroke fades? Nettles are much the same, but the glow can last
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for hours. The first touch is very sharp and hot, fading slowly to
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a hot glow. This glow takes a long time to cool, and can't really
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be ignored because it has microscopic electric tingles in it, just
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often enough to keep you constantly aware. Nettles are perfect for
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anyone who likes overnight bondage, prolonged teasing, or going out
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in public with the scene hidden under street clothes.
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Besides the initial hot sting and later tingling glow, nettles leave
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the skin very sensitive. A feather can feel like a brush, a light
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spanking feels like a strap, a light strap or flogger can blow their
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minds. One lovely nettles fan once asked me if the treatment she
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had just received would affect a spanking much. I gave her a few
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light swats with just my fingertips and after she got her breath
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back she claimed that a "four-year-old could have me in agony."
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Incidentally, blows heavier than a slap are not boosted so
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dramatically; heavy impact still feels like heavy impact. Only
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surface sensitivity goes up.
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Aside from re-sensitizing tough, jaded bottoms, nettles may be used
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on areas that should not receive heavy blows because of underlying
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bones, tendons, or fragile organs. Nettles ability to deliver
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intense stimulation withour corresponding damage opens all kind of
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possibilities.
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Speaking as a man who always thought that condoms and celibacy felt
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a lot alike, I was delighted to find that a good nettle treatment on
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my cock added more sensitivity than a condom could take away! Safe
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sex suddenly became much more appealing.
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USING NETTLES
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If you want to use them on a bull, like the English herbwives, I
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suggest heavy bondage and taping the nettles to a long stick. Given
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consensuality, and a human partner, there are fewer problems.
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Nettles sting with thin, delicate hollow hairs on the stems and
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leaves. Up close, the are just visible, like tiny pale bristles.
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They break open when touched, but nothing is felt unless that touch
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has actually driven them into the skin. Sideways pressure bends
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them over and breaks them, and usually wastes the sting. Each hair
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stings only once. You cannot get nettles by touching nettles skin;
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it is nothing like poison oak or ivy.
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The most efficient way to use nettles is to take one sprig or one
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leaf at a time, get down close to your target, and touch the hairs
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in, with a close enough view that you can watch the hairs go in
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straight. When you can't work in that close, at least make sure
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that the stem or leaf comes down flat--parallel to the skin of the
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target area. Before I learned this, I needed several whole plants
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to do a scene I now do with a dozen leaves.
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This careful, stem-by-stem application is not the only way to use
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nettles, but it's one of the best. It is appropriate for:
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1) Slow, ritualized or "anticipation" scenes
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2) For testing the bottom's response, either in an SM/sensual
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sense, or in a small application to test for allergies (more
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about this later)
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3) to economize on nettles
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4) for precise targeting. A large sprig or stem covers a
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large area, and the top has no idea of where in that area the
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actual stimulation is happening. This is especially true
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when working around erogenous zones.
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Nettles can also be used as a birch. While somewhat wasteful, this
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can be useful too:
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1) as a variation on whipping. Here it functions almost like a
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strap or paddle, sensitizing the skin without bruising. It
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is also silent, though the bottom may not be! As with other
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nettle play, the tingling, glow and sensitivity will last
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hours rather than minutes.
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2) As a good way to use up the tall summer plants, with their
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milder and sparcer stings. To try this, cut stems 18-30"
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long and whip lightly with one or more of them. Do not use
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any "draw" or drag in your strokes. The stem ends can be
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wrapped with tape or cloth to make a handle.
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Nettles can be used under things. They can be put inot bras, pants,
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tights, or other close-fitting gear. They can be added to body
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suits or mummification wraps. A nettle skirt can be made by tying
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short stems every few inches along a cord, and then tying the cord
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around your subjects waist. An ordinary skirt over that, and your
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partner is all ready for a night on the town. Any of these uses are
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psychologically severe, because no one can possibly believe that
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GETTING THEM OFF ME! wouldn't really help. The stings will mostly
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have done their worst at first contact, but the sensations go on and
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on.
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Nettles can be used for control. This is a refinement of bondage,
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where the nettles are placed so that they are difficult, but not
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impossible to avoid. This has something in common with scenes where
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the bottom is bound by tender parts like hair, balls, or piercings
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to punish excess motion.
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1) Nettles can provide motivation for holding military braces
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or other strenuous positions.
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2) A bunch can be placed almost touching the subject to limit
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motion during whipping or any other play. Try taping
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nettles to a whipping post, and then secuting your partner's
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wrists above them with just a little slack...
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3) For male bottoms, there is always erection control. A vase
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of nettles just in front of a tightly bound male, who is
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then teased by whatever sort of person turns him on...can be
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really inspiring to watch. If the guy already has a hardon,
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the vase can be set a little lower to stimulate him every
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time his interest -- sags.
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In any of these games, the bottom will not always react at once. It
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takes a moment for the contents of a stinging hair to diffuse
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throught the upper layer of the skin and find a nerve. The bottom
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will let you know. The intensity builds for a little while after
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that, so when you get a reaction, wait a bit before adding to it.
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Everything happens slower than with a whipstroke or a piercing
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needle, so take your time.
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Within a few minutes, the stings will usually be visible.
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Reactions vary, but most people show at least a reddining of the
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skin, and a series of little lumps, like small mosquito bites is
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common. On callused or wrinkled skin, such as around a nipple, they
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may not be visible at all.
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There is also a seasonal difference. The first young shoots that
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come up in spring are very hot, sometimes shockingly so. The tall
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summer plants have fewer and milder stinging hairs. Springtime
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nettle scenes are also lively because regular use of nettles for
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many people seems to lead to a partial immunity, which goes away if
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your winters are frosty enough to leave you nettle-less for a few
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months. After a cold winter even a dedicated nettle fan may need a
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gradual re-introduction to the game!
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SAFETY ISSUES
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Since the stinging hairs on a nettle are so fragile, each will
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normally sting just once. The hairs do not draw blood, or even
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lymph, as far as I have seen. I would consider nettle play (the
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ten-dollar word is "urtication" from the Latin for nettle) to be a
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low-risk activity, but would still recommend:
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Use a given leaf, sprig or stem on only person. The end you
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hold can be kept away from the subject, or taped.
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Don't allow your own or any other person's body fluids to
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contaminate your main bouquet of nettles. Tiny as the hairs
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are, viruses are smaller yet; the idea here is to prevent
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viruses from hitching a ride on the hairs.
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Incedentally, thin latex surgical gloves will not protect
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you from the nettle stings! Even four or five thick! The
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stings also go through condoms, so never trust a condom
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that's been netteled. Your aim will be better on bare skin
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anyway--put the condom on later.
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Besides these safe-sex issues, any top should be aware of the
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possibility of allergy problems. I've never seen a bad reaction
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myself, but this means little; there is nothing in the world that
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someon, somewhere isn't allergic to. Four precautions are in order:
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1) Ask your bottom if they have ever been stung by nettles,
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whether in play or by accident outdorrs, and did they have
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any reaction beyond the area of skin that was stung?
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Redness, itching, tingling or small swellings like mosquito
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bites are normal; your concern here is for systemic reactions
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affecting other parts of the body. Anyone with a history of
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systemic reaction to nettles should avoid them in play.
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2) Test your subject with a small dose first! Don't do a
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severe, large scale application until you know that a person
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can tolerate samll doses safely. The lower arm or leg is a
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good place for such a test, and allow at least two hours
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before using more nettles. While waiting, you can explore
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the new sensitivities, or do other kinds of play.
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3) Because nettles can cause local swelling even in ordinary,
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non-allergic people, don't use them on the head or neck.
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Swelling here might interfere with breathing. Back, breasts
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and shoulders are fine.
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4) If a subject feels faint, shows difficulty breathing, or has
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redness or itching away from the areas you have been
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nettling--stop using nettles, and be ready to get the person
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to help. These symptoms can mean a systemic allergic
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reaction, the kind people sometimes have to bee stings or
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medications. Any emergency room will know what to do, but
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you should be ready to get the person there quickly.
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FINDING NETTLES
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Nettles like to grow in deep rich soil with moist, shady
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conditions. You are more likely to find them on an old farm gone
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back to trees than on the thin soil of a mountainside. In the
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northwest, the like to grow under the hardwood trees on river
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bottomland. In Northern California, the grow among the ferns under
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the redwoods, on flats more than slopes. I don't knoow such details
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about other areas, but the books suggest they go for deep soils and
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moist woods all over the Northern Hemisphere.
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Here in the Northwest, at least, there are some little bramble
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vines, a kind of wild raspberry, whose leaves look a lot nettle
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leaves and whose stems bear tiny thorns. Some Portland nettle
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enthusiasts found them in their back yard and got alll excited, but
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the didn't work right. Remember:
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1) Nettle leaves are oppsoite--back to back on the stem.
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Brambles have leaves in groups of three.
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2) Nettle stems are almost square, and the stand upright.
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Older plants may bend over, but they aren't vines.
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3) Nettle hairs sting, as described. The hairs are pale and
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much thinner than thorns--so thin that they bend or collapse
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when they sting. True thorns, even small ones, either stay
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on the stem or come off visibly in the skin, like a sliver.
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Nettle hairs are so fragile that you may not even feel a sting if
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you touch them with a calluses finger. If in doubt, test with the
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side of a finger, or the inside of your forearm. To gather or
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handle them without getting stung, use gloves. Utility rubber
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gloves or leather gloves will protect you; surgical gloves are too
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thin. If such gloves don't fit into your scene, a bit of tape will
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make a safe handle. You can put on the tape with golves before the
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scene, or have the botton do it.
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Because the hairs are so delicate, be careful how you cut and
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transport the nettles. If you cut a big bouquet of them, and drive
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half an hour with the window down, the stems will thrash around in
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the breeze and lose about nine-tenths of their zap potential before
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you get to the play party. Also, as soon as they are cut, they
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start to wilt, and the stinging hairs wilt too; though like flowerss
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they last longer if cut rather than picked. The best way to carry
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them is in a sealed container with a wet rag, leaves or moss in the
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bottom. The small spring shoots travel well in a coffee can with a
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plastic top; for the larger summer stems try something like a
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five-gallon bucket with a snap-on lid or foil cover. Sealed up like
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this, nettles can last several days if kept cool.
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GROWING YOUR OWN
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As I said before, nettles like deep, rich moist soil. Even in
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Oregon they like partial shade, and Oregon is not notorious for
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sunshine. In California, try the kind of places you would grow
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ferns and deep-forest flowers like violets--deep shade on the north
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side of a building, perhaps with frequent watering. Even in Oregon,
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watering the patch in dry summer weather lets the roots send up new,
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hot shoots all season long.
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Like their cousings the mints, nettles have perennial roots just
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below the surface, and the stems come up from these each spring.
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(Don't panic, they don't spread as fast as mints!)
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If you can find a patch in the woods, or in a friend's garden, you
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can transplant them easily by digging up some roots and keeping them
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damp and shaded on the way home. A piece of root a few inches long
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will make a good plant, so if you get your roots in longer pieces,
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cut them up. Plant the pieces a foot or so apart, a couple of
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inches deep, and keep watered. Naturally, any stems that are cut
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down in the course of digging should not go to waste--take them home
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and play!
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A FINAL WORD
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For some reason, a lot of people seem to think that nettles area a
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very heavy scene. I have seen thest people walk a ten foot circle
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around a little stalk that had fallen on the dungeon floor, like it
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was a rattlesnake or something. The ironic thing is that few of
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these people have actually tried them in a scene. Many people enjoy
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nettle play, some don't, but the real panic all seems to be amont
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the virgins. Urtication is basically light to medium play. The
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final reward of learning about nettles is watching the occasional
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heavy top shy away from the tingly green sprig that you're carrying
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barehanded!
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