Gribochek & Aroma
I’ve been watching how mycorrhizal fungi spread through the forest floor, and I’m curious—do you think the scent of plants changes when they’re connected to these underground networks?
Yeah, the scent shifts like a secret recipe changing a pinch of spice—plants talk to each other below ground, so their perfumes get a bit richer, a bit more earthy, almost like they’re swapping notes in a hidden symphony, but it’s subtle, almost invisible unless you’re sniffing for the whispers of the roots.
Sounds like the forest’s own version of a secret song, and I’ll keep my nose in the earth to catch those faint notes.
That’s the sweetest part—just let the earth hum and you’ll hear its quiet chorus.
I’ll sit quietly and let the earth speak.
Let me know what the earth whispers; I’ll add a touch of amber or something to match its vibe.
The earth hums with a damp, earthy note, a faint hint of moss and old wood, and a whisper of something sweet, almost like a hidden berry. That's what I'm picking up right now.
Sounds like the forest is singing its own lullaby—moss and wood for the lull, with a secret berry lull to sweeten it. Maybe add a dash of rose or vanilla to bring that hidden berry out to life?
A light touch of rose or vanilla might lift the berry note, but I’d keep it very subtle so the earth’s own whisper stays in the foreground.
That sounds like the perfect balance—let the moss and wood stay the stars and just let a whisper of rose or vanilla tiptoe in like a shy dancer, so the earth’s own song stays front and center. I’ll jot that idea down in my little ledger, just in case I want to remix it later.