What does the flower "Bian Pacers" symbolize in China
Today, the editor introduces what the flower "Bian Pacers" symbolizes in China and the related topics of flower cultivation, such as understanding the true meaning of its flower language. Let's take a look together!
Red Bian Pacers
Also known as "Manjushaka," its flower language is: endless love, a harbinger of death, the call of hell, the beauty of death.
White Bian Pacers
Also known as "Mandala," its flower language is: endless longing, desperate love, a message from heaven, desperate love. The flower language is as tragic as "Manjushaka."
Yellow Bian Pacers
Its real name is "Hu Di Xiao," with the alias "Yellow Stone Garlic." This flower actually just resembles the Bian Pacers. Its flower language is respect; a natural lucky person, with unceasing happiness.
Blue Bian Pacers
Also known as "Klein Blue," it is an ideal blue that does not seem to exist in reality. Its flower language is death and love that wanders. As the Buddhist scriptures record: "Bian Pacers, the flowers bloom for a year, fall for a year, and the leaves never meet. Love is not caused by consequences, and fate determines life and death."
What does the flower "Bian Pacers" symbolize in China
Black Bian Pacers
Said to have been touched by a witch's love, with an evil origin, it is easy to make people contaminated with evil qi... The black variety of Mandala is the noblest and rarest variety, a noble, elegant, and mysterious flower. The black Mandala in the night is a flower that looks like a lily, with a light and elegant fragrance, but the true black Mandala is a fragrance that can cause slight hallucinations if smelled too much. Graceful, with enchanting leaves, highly toxic, incurable, also known as the love flower.
Black Bian Pacers flower language: unpredictable darkness, death, and love that wanders. Love and revenge without boundaries, love and hate without emotion in the world, the resilient and scarred soul that has been hurt, and the path of no return in life.
Note: The original habitat of the Bian Pacers is in Asia, mainly produced in China, Korea, and Japan. It was first seen in the Tang Dynasty. The Bian Pacers in China is called "Tie Se Jian," "Chi Jian," or "Wu Yi Cao," and "Jin Deng."
The above sharing about the symbolism and true flower language of the Bian Pacers in China is the full content. Green plant enthusiasts may refer to this for reference.