natural living | Incidental Farm Girl
  • Blog
  • About
    • Contact
    • A Mom's Life
  • Homesteading
    • Videos
    • Organic Gardening
    • Chickens on the farm
    • Rabbits on the Farm
  • Homemaking
    • In the Home
    • Home Birth
    • Parenting
    • Recipes
    • Do It Yourself (DIY)
  • Home School
  • Natural Living
    • Homeopathy
  • Cedar's Story
    • Our Story
    • Facts
  • Opinions/Editorials
  • 30 days to Natural Living
  • The Way Grandma Used To...

Medicinal Weeds (totally legal backyard medicine)

5/6/2016

16 Comments

 
This one appeared on Grit magazine's website.  Look around your yard and see what you have available.
There was a time, not even 100 years ago, where most people could remedy common problems with the knowledge they had and some weeds they foraged. Grandma's medicine cabinet was much simpler than ours today, and with far fewer side effects too. My grandmother tells stories of the fern-like plants that flowered tiny white flowers with yellow centers growing by the outhouse in her childhood, when there was a stomach issue she was to eat 4 yellow centers of the flowers, not more than that, and the stomach and bowel issues would be put at bay.
​
This knowledge seems to have been lost in the proverbial cracks of time as we have moved forward, industrialized, and become far removed from not only our food sources but also our ancestors’ ways of living and caring for our bodies. This is knowledge we should seek and hold tight too, there was a reason that grandparents and parents taught it to their children, we just have to look a little harder these days as many of those readily knowledgeable sources didn’t impart the knowledge because they saw that people afforded little value to it in modern times. It's time to get back to knowing our weeds.
Picture
Picture
​PLANTAIN (Plantago major)
​

If you subscribe to avoiding Monsanto’s Roundup and all other chemical treatments, you likely can find this in your backyard or growing in the cracks of your walkway or driveway. Usually considered a nuisance plant, it wasn’t until I saw firsthand what a poultice of this plant can do for wasp stings to a 3-year-old that I was SOLD! This weed can be used successfully for scrapes, cuts, burns, stings and even for relief of poison ivy. It works as a drawing agent and is fantastic for skin. In a pinch, since it is edible, you can chew it up and apply the chewed leaves to a sting for fast relief (as in the case of my son and the attack of the wasps).
​LAMBSQUARTER (Chenopodium album L.)
​

Another pretty easy one to locate, this one aids significantly with inflammation and can be used similarly to the Plantain, or even in conjunction with it for added relief.
Another one to chew, totally edible and compared and likened to spinach in its edibility department. Made into a poultice and applied to the body, it also aids in insect bites, minor scrapes, inflammation reduction, and even sunburn. Used as a tea, it is reported to be beneficial for diarrhea, stomach upset and even the occasional loss of appetite. (Just be sure to strain the leaves as they can irritate the throat)
Picture
​YARROW (Achillea millefolium)
​

This fernlike perennial weed is what I think may have grown by grandma’s outhouse growing up. Many use the flowering tops (use only white-flowering yarrow) with strong alcohol to make a tincture that you can take internally to prevent colds and the flu. (A dose is 10-20 drops, or up to 1 ml). This is also purported to be a HUGELY beneficial natural insect repellent, even studied by the United States Army where it was shown that a yarrow tincture was more effective (and safer) than DEET at repelling ticks, mosquitoes, and sand flies. You can also make a healing ointment with yarrow flower tops and your oil or fat. Yarrow oil is antibacterial, pain-relieving, and incredibly helpful in healing all types of wounds.
 MULLEIN (Verbascum Thapsus Linnaeus)
Mullein, a tall formidable, flowering fuzzy plant that can often be found growing in fields. It is often touted for its antibiotic-like properties; even WebMD posts the following:
“Mullein is used for cough, whooping cough, tuberculosis, bronchitis, hoarseness,pneumonia, earaches, colds, chills, flu, swine flu, fever, allergies, tonsillitis, and sore throat. Other uses include asthma, diarrhea, colic, gastrointestinal bleeding,migraines, joint pain, and gout. It is also used as a sedative and as a diuretic to increase urine output. Mullein is applied to the skin for wounds, burns, hemorrhoids, bruises, frostbite, and skin infections (cellulitis). The leaves are used topically to soften and protect the skin.”
When mullein flowers are infused into an oil base this is what many an old timer used as a treatment for ear infections. The leaves are often used in strongly brewed teas for coughs and congestion.

Picture
​MALLOW (Malva parviflora)
Another one that favors cracks in walkways and gardens, all Mallow species (over 3,000) are edible, medicinal and totally devoid of any harmful properties one is rich in a sticky mucilage often extracted from the flowers, leaves, stalks, seeds, and roots. This can often be made into a medicinal vinegar to sooth sore throats, constipation, food poisoning and all around stomach upset. This is another one that is also useful for stings, bug bites and skin irritations.
Picture
DANDELION (Taraxacum)
A diuretic that is often used in treating liver disorders the common dandelion can be eaten in salad greens, cooked with and even made into wine. This common weed can also be used to treat mild constipation.



​With any luck, your interest should be at least slightly piqued. When we look to the old ways of doing things, it is often so very simple that we feel slighted that we didn’t see some of the ease of information available to us. Your yard is likely a plethora of medicinal value, as long as you aren’t killing off all that free medicine with synthetic weed killers. Go outside and see what you have on the shelves of your medicine cabinet!


Picture
Follow me on Facebook
Follow me on Pinterest
16 Comments
Gary Baker
5/7/2016 02:11:47 pm

Hi Dawn, I liked the blog. There are several other medicinal plants that grow down here, I would think grow there too. One is Pipsissewa. It's a small low growing plant with serrated leaves. You pick the leaves, let them dry if you have time, then make a tea out of it. It breaks up kidney stones. You can steep it immediately if you don't have time. The word is Indian(Cherokee)for "breaks stones".

Reply
incidentalfarmgirl link
5/7/2016 03:29:18 pm

Thanks so much Gary! I looked up images for the pipsissewa but I have never seen that one before, I wonder if maybe it only grows in the south?

Reply
Gary Baker
5/8/2016 10:41:54 am

Dawn, I did some more research on pipsissewa and found the name is Cree, not Cherokee as I was told. It grows in dry woodlands and sandy soil. We literally live in the Chattahoochee Nation Forest, so we have nothing but trees around us, some as close as ten feet, so it is very abundant here. You have to look hard because it is small and leaves tend to cover it. The name means "breaks into small pieces". Another medicinal plant is Creeping Jenny, used as a poultice to stop bleeding. The Weeping Willow, bark, I believe can be used to stop headaches. Mayweed is another one and American Pennyroyal. Hope this helps, and Happy Mother's Day!

Reply
Robert link
5/9/2016 10:27:29 am

Great article. Someone should start a business in which you send the seeds for a set of plants along with instructions. Then you could call it something like herbal first aid kit. I would buy it if it were easy to do and priced right.

Also Happy Mother's day.

Reply
incidentalfarmgirl link
5/9/2016 02:24:01 pm

What a brilliant idea for a small business! I have to say that some of the medicinal herbs I have tried to grow from seed are terribly tempermental, however, the plants themselves are very hearty! (Lemon Balm for example, I can't grow that stuff from seed if my life depended on it, but it spreads like crazy once you get some established!)

Reply
Jennifer A link
6/2/2016 12:07:40 am

Great post! I really wish I had someone to walk with me through the fields and forests to show me the plants. I always second guess myself. (Except for plantain, I have that one figured out!) I feel the same way about mushrooms. It's so terrible all the knowledge we've lost in the past couple of generations. Thanks for trying to bring it back, keep it up! Thanks for sharing on the Homestead Blog Hop! I'm pinning.

Reply
incidentalfarmgirl link
6/4/2016 09:08:26 am

Jennifer, you are so right, I also feel the same about mushrooms, I am terrified of making a mistake and wish I had some old timer to take a long walk with!

Reply
Gary Baker
6/4/2016 09:23:16 am

Dawn, you can eat any mushroom........ONCE:) A friend of mine made that remark once when we were talking about survival food you could forage for.

Reply
incidentalfarmgirl link
6/4/2016 09:24:46 am

You are a funny guy Gary, true, once, but you might just have a seriously halllucinagenic death! lol

Reply
Gary
6/4/2016 10:36:25 am

I guess the Native Americans used the process of elimination, human that is, to know which mushrooms were edible. I have also long wondered who was the first person to see something come out of a chicken's rear end and say "Hey, I think I'll eat that!" You gotta wonder.

daisy link
9/27/2016 09:12:13 pm

You're so right that the old remedies are so much better and usually have no side effects, like modern medicine. Seeing every other commercial on tv spouting the benefits of some new pill is annoying.
You and Kathie from Oak Hill Homestead are so great at sharing information about these medicinal weeds and herbs. You would probably love her blog.
Thanks for joining us on The Maple Hill Hop today!

Reply
incidentalfarmgirl link
9/27/2016 10:14:17 pm

Daisy,
Thanks so much for checking out my post, I have collaborated with and spoken to Kathi a few times, she is awesome and I learn from her as well!

Reply
Deborah link
9/28/2016 02:34:09 pm

We have these growing in our yard, but I've never used them at all!

Reply
incidentalfarmgirl link
9/29/2016 10:25:18 pm

Deborah, now is the time to collect them when you see them. I know for us the Plantain was sparse during the sweltering heat but now that it is cooling off it is back in full force so I will be making some salves very soon!

Reply
bettyl - NZ link
9/30/2016 01:46:14 am

I have no doubt that nature has much medicine that we don't know about. Great post with a lot of awesome information.

Reply
Arnold link
10/19/2021 01:29:57 am

I like to take care of my health, both physical and mental. To avoid deficiencies, I had to adopt a balanced diet and above all use a specific food supplement. It is on this article that I found the product that allowed me to relive and enjoy optimal well-being without health concerns.

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Want to be "In the Know?"

    * indicates required
    Great selection of bulk herbs, books, and remedies. Articles, Research Aids and much more.
    Picture
    Picture

    Author

    Wife to a wonderful husband, Daughter of the King, Mother of 6 (one with an xtra chromosome), and an incidental farm girl.

    Categories

    All
    30 Days To Natural Living
    A More Natural Way 30 Days To Natural Living
    BIG Family Living
    Chickens
    DIY
    Down Syndrome
    Essential Oils
    Farm Fresh Recipes
    Gardening
    Homeopathy
    Homeschooling
    Homesteading
    Life On The Farm
    Opinions/Editorials
    Our Homebirth Story
    Parenting
    PIgs On The Farm
    Raising Rabbits
    The Way Grandma Used To...

    Archives

    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014

Proudly powered by Weebly