Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Great Online Group for Learning about Wild Plants!

Just have to share a link to a group that I am really excited to have found.  It's http://herbwifery.org/forum/.  There are some extremely knowledgeable herbalists among the folks posting.

The extreme heat has really done a number on my little wild St. John's Wort plants.  They are showing their red!  It's been such a hot summer.  Other plant news, the pawpaws are still on the tree, not ripe yet, but I'm hoping I can beat the squirrels to them when they do ripen.  Anyway, happy herbing!!

Friday, June 24, 2011

Found the Golden Eggs!


This was my favorite book to read the kids when they were small.  Anyway, I've been fascinated by the idea of golden bug eggs, and was thrilled to see these on a leaf of arugula:
Unfortunately, I couldn't photograph them so that you could see the golden metallic shine, but you could sure see it in person!  But I'm not going to bother with trying to hatch them.

In other plant news around the homestead, my passion flower vines just started to bloom.  The St. John's wort has been blooming for a few days.  It is very small this year and some has dried to a red crisp.  We had a hot snap a few weeks ago which I believe is probably what affected them in that way.  Anyway, both of these plants are good herbs for the mind.  I am trying tincturing in apple cider vinegar this year.  Have some St. John's wort tincture started and have some passion flower vines drying for the purpose of making tincture.

Generally, tinctures are made with alcohol, such as vodka, but as a recovered problem drinker, I'm not sure I want any vodka in the house.  According to one source, alcohol and vinegar bring out different constituents in the plants, so it's not necessarily true that alcohol tinctures are better than vinegar tinctures.  That would depend on the particular plant.

St. John's Wort is good for lifting mild depression, and passion flower is good for insomnia.  The way I understand it, dosing is the same for vinegar tinctures as it is for alcohol based tinctures, which is a half teaspoon 2 or 3 times a day.

I've been making tea in the evening.  I have lemon balm (another good relaxing tea), as well as applemint, pineapple sage, peppermint, spearmint, and anise hyssop.  I have a few blooms of chamomile, too.  Those are in pots, not wild plants.  I'm amazed at how nice they smell and taste.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Queen Anne's Lace

Queen Anne's Lace is blooming now.  We have a lot of it here, and it's really kind of invasive and ever-present, but it sure is pretty while it's blooming.  It's an umbrell.  An umbrell of umbrells.  Look closely at the bloom and you'll see an umbrella arrangement of little umbrellas.  With one cute little dark maroon flower somewhere near the center.  And each of the little umbrells has larger petals around the outer edge.  Such intricacy of design!  Then when it forms seeds, the umbrells all curl toward the center and make a little nest filled with little sticky-burrs.  Cute, interesting, but not too nice if you happen to be wearing pantyhose and get too close.

Queen Anne's Lace is also known as wild carrot.  If you smell the root, you'll notice it smells kind of like carrots.  I wouldn't try eating one unless I was absolutely starving, though.  The umbrell family of plants contains some of the most poisonous of all--the hemlocks!  Of course it also contains some of our favorite herbs, like dill, chervil, and cilantro, as well as carrots and parsnips.  But there have been cases of people dying because they thought they were eating wild carrot when they really had something else.

I read about someone who dried lots of Queen Anne's Lace for wedding decorations.  That would probably be really pretty.  I have one in a vase in front of me that much be six inches in diameter.  It's huge!

I've been interested in a plant that I have all around the place, and I'm starting to think it's actually in the umbrell family.  A plant called sanicle.  There are several of them in the US, and they sometimes go by the name "black snakeroot."  I think I have several varieties of this plant on the property here.  The funny thing is, the name "sanicle" comes from a Latin word that means, "I heal."  Which means the sanicles have been used as healing herbs in centuries past.  I've googled sanicle, and found that it is a medicinal available from some herb suppliers.  Gotta keep learning!

Have a great day botanizing!

Friday, June 10, 2011

My Yearly Post...Is it the Elusive Agrimony?

Actually, I'm hoping to revive this old blog.  I've been visiting a cool herb site, "Little Herban Homestead."  I got interested in the herb agrimony from them but I haven't identified it yet.  (No, it has nothing to do with aggravation in matrimony!)  All I know is that it has a spike of small yellow flowers.  I've been watching closely for yellow spikes, but all I've seen is an obvious clover that blooms all over the place.  Anyway, I went to a friend's country place today and parked right beside a yellow spike!! Immediately I thought of the elusive but intriguing agrimony.  I brought a sample home to check my books.  While on the way, I thought, wouldn't it be funny if this is moth mullein or something.  Sure enough, that's what it was.  I planted it in one of my pots out front.  We'll see if it grows.  I'm not sure if it has much medicinal value.  The scientific name is Verbascum blattaria, and it's in the snapdragon family.

If you know anything about wildflowers, you know these two plants are really not that similar.  Agrimony is in the rose family.  I think it's a little early for it to bloom.  Moth mullein , on the other hand, has larger blooms.  The leaves are a lot different, too.  Agrimony has composite leaves while moth mullein has wavy-edged lancolate leaves.

Obviously, I'm just a amateur at this whole wild-crafting thing.  I love wild plants, though, and June in the Ozarks is certainly a good time to go out botanizing!  (If you don't mind the occasional tick or chigger.)