Christian Welcome Page

Christian Welcome Page You have stumbled upon or been invited to this website. We share the Truth of God's Word and His En Prophecy!!! Exactly what it is and how to avoid it.

God has always shown us what will be what is to come and what has already happened. We Need to know what the Mark of the beast is you know 666. Who and what the antichrist is.

06/01/2026

El Salitre in Panic !They keep coming ! It started with one and now...

06/01/2026

Music: Imperia (Total War: Rome II OST) - Richard Beddow ...

06/01/2026
06/01/2026

Your backyard in June is running ten storylines at the same time. You're watching one of them.

The cardinal at the feeder is feeding the female beak-to-beak again — not leftover spring romance. She's on her second clutch. He feeds her so she doesn't leave the eggs. Every seed he delivers is a temperature decision.

The wren nesting in the garage is making three to four hundred feeding trips a day. Caterpillar, spider, caterpillar, spider — one beak-load at a time since dawn. She'll stop at dusk and do it again tomorrow.

🌿 The robin fledgling sitting alone on the lawn, hopping awkwardly, looking lost — she's not abandoned. She left the nest on purpose, two to three days before her wings fully work. Both parents are within thirty feet watching you watch her. Keep cats inside. Walk away.

The barn swallow under the porch is still building — a thousand mud pellets carried one beak-load at a time from the puddle in the driveway. The fireflies start flashing this week. The fawn in the tall grass hasn't been abandoned — the doe visits at dawn and dusk.

Ten episodes. Every branch, every bush, every patch of grass. The image maps all of them 🐾

06/01/2026

You walk past a row of marigolds drooping in the August heat, and you think they need water. Maybe they do. But what you can't see is the invisible war they're winning beneath your feet.

While those bright petals soften and the leaves hang low, the roots are wide awake. They're releasing thiophenes into the soil—chemical compounds that sound like something from a laboratory, but they've been flowing through marigold DNA for millennia. These molecules don't just sit there. They travel outward through the dirt, working their way between soil particles, coating them like a protective film that lasts far longer than the flowers themselves.

Root-knot nematodes are tiny worms that tunnel into plant roots and drain them from the inside. Most gardeners never see them, but they'll watch a tomato plant yellow and wonder why nothing they tried seemed to help. The nematodes move through soil moisture, following chemical signals released by roots, and once they find a host, they settle in and feed. That's where the marigold enters the picture.

The thiophenes bind to sunlight in a peculiar way. Once they're activated by UV rays, they become lethal to nematode larvae, interfering with their ability to repair cellular damage. It's not instant. It's patient. The compounds seep into the nematodes' systems and quietly dismantle them at the DNA level, and the population crashes before it ever reaches your vegetables.

A single marigold can protect the soil in a three-foot circle. That's not folklore. That's the measured radius of effective suppression, proven in soil samples where nematode eggs simply stop hatching. The plant doesn't have to stay in the ground forever, either. Once those thiophenes latch onto soil particles, they release slowly, maintaining their effect for a year and a half. You pull the marigold in October, and it's still defending your garden the following spring.

This is why older gardeners plant marigolds along the edges of vegetable beds and don't make a fuss about it. They just do it, the way you'd lock a door at night. It's quiet maintenance. The kind of wisdom that doesn't need a spotlight because it works whether you understand it or not.

The wilting you see on a hot afternoon isn't weakness. It's the plant conserving water while its roots do the heavy lifting. By the time the sun sets and the leaves perk back up, the damage has already been done—to the pests, not the plant. That's the part most people miss. We're conditioned to think plants are fragile, that they need rescuing. But some of them are tougher than the threats they face, and they've been taking care of business long before we showed up with shovels.

Next time you see a marigold looking tired in the heat, let it be. It knows what it's doing. [H4D2U]

06/01/2026

Grilled Watermelon Burger 🍉🍔

06/01/2026

A heated panel discussion erupts as Greg Gutfeld clashes with Jessica Tarlov over reactions to ...

06/01/2026

Pest-repelling plants can help, but they’re not magic 🌿 A few ways I use them:
🌼 Marigolds and nasturtiums are easy to tuck around vegetable beds for extra color and diversity.
🌿 Basil near tomatoes and peppers is one of my favorite kitchen garden pairings.
💜 Lavender and rosemary like sunny, well-drained spots, so I don’t plant them where the soil stays wet.
🌱 Mint is useful, but I always keep it in a pot because it spreads fast.
🧄 Garlic and chives are great around garden edges, especially if you already use them in the kitchen.
I think of these as part of a healthier garden setup, not a guarantee that pests will disappear overnight 🌱

06/01/2026

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

03/17/2026

David Wood EXPOSES The ONE Argument That DESTROYS Islam EVERY TIME Right now, somewhere in the world, someone is hearing about Jesus for the very first time....

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