Commercial Uses of Magic Plants

 Commercial Uses of Magic Plants


 Bat Thorne


Oil from the leaves if consumed can cure blood infections.

Requires a press to extract the oil, this is Common equipment (no charge) but takes 24-48 hours.


One dose of an elixir made from the oil is worth 50 GP


Ink Vine


Sap from this vine is highly prized by Magicians for use in magical inks, 50-70 GP per ounce

Requires a silver tap and special canvas bags to collect, then an alchemical lab to distill. 10 GP for tap/bags. Sap accumulates at one ounce per day, and it takes 6 ounces of sap to make one ounce of ink.


Red Seren Fern


The leaves of this fern are covered with tiny hairs that are extremely sharp, they get into any exposed skin and cause a horrible, itching rash.

The roots are dried and ground into powder which is mixed with vinegar to become a poison antidote.

Essentially free, takes one week to dry the roots, one hour to grind the powder. For the antidote to work the vinegar must be mixed in just before application.


One portion of the antidote is worth 50 GP


Snake Vine


A carnivorous vine, related to Sleepflower that attacks its prey with two sharp thorns on the end of its tendrils. The thorns are poisoned causing paralysis.

The thorns can be kept for 3-6 days before they lose potency. they can be pressed (see above) and the poison collected. Using an alchemical lab allows for the poison to be refined into a form that will last (d8 + 20) days.


Raw thorns are worth 25-40 GP

Refined poison is worth 100—200 GP/vial (3 doses)


Sleepflower


In its flowering phase, the otherwise deadly shoots are weakened, but sprout a large yellow flower. These produce blood-like nectar that attracts stirges. In this form, the plant spreads its pollen. If approached, the flower opens and sends out a puff of pollen that causes a narcotic asleep.


Sleepflower blossoms are worth 50-70 GP

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