Aracberry

From Fables and Fantasy Wiki
Revision as of 15:34, 5 March 2022 by Foodrig (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{| class="{{{class}}}" style="width: 20%; margin: auto; border: 1px solid #AAA; background-color: #fac097; float: right;" | {| style="width: 99.75%; border: 1px solid #AAA; fo...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Aracberry
Missing.png
Division Angiosperm
Dicot
Family Berry Bushes
Habitat Light Woods, Forest Edges, Forest Clearings
Class Banal

Appearance

Aracberries tend to be orange in color, ranging from light orange, to dark orange, and have a raspberry like shape. They grow on taller bushes, which have star shaped leaves. The berries have a bitter-sweet taste, and the leaves a slightly sugary taste.

Habitat

Aracberries like to grow in light forests, or on the edges and clearings in dark forests. They are quite sensitive to the light, and are also often found near springs and other small bodies of water, due to their extreme water consumption.

Usage

The Berries

The Aracberry is, among herbalists and medics, often used as an extremely mild antidepressant due to the fruit containing minor amounts of Fluvoxamine and Paroxetine. By others, it's far more commonly used as a general painkiller. The containing of slightly larger amounts of Diclofenac enables the berry to be used as the latter. While all these have a quite useful effect, the fruit also triggers the release of dopamine into the eating one's bloodstream. This causes most consumers to feel light-headed and giggle uncontrollably, though everyone will react slightly differently upon consumption.

The Leaves

The star-shaped leaves of the Aracberry are sweet, and are mostly used for a de-stressing tea to lift moods, with a somewhat similar taste to black tea.

The Roots

The roots of the Aracberry have similar effects on targets as the other parts of the plant. Only few herbalists actually know of the usefulness of the plant's roots: When crushed into powder and mixed into the above-mentioned tea, the roots will amplify the effect of the leaves. The consumer starts to feel anxiety and stress easing away far more quickly.