Natural Medicinal Plants
Tansy
Tansy is an old-world aster
and remedy, used for flavoring beer and stews as well as repelling insects.
Rubbing the leaves on the skin provides an effective bug repellent, but tansy
can also be used to treat worms. It is said to be poisonous when extracted, but
a few leaves are not harmful if ingested.
Korean Mint (hyssop)
Who
doesn’t want to be minty fresh? Most of the various types of “mint” or methane –
spearmint, Korean mint, apple mint, and regular old mint – offer reported
health benefits and medicinal properties. (Avoid penny-royal, as it’s
poisonous.) Mint is famous for soothing headaches, fighting nausea, calming the
stomach and reducing nervousness and fatigue. Korean mint, also called Indian mint
and hyssop, is a fairly effective antiviral, making it useful for fighting
colds and the flu. Whatever continent you’re on, some type of mint is usually
to be found. Eat whole, garnish food or make tea to get the all-purpose health
benefits.
Alfalfa
Alfalfa is fodder for
livestock for a reason: it’s incredibly rich in minerals and health-promoting
nutrients and compounds. With roots that grow 20 to 30 feet deep, alfalfa is
considered the “father of all plants”. (It also contains a high amount of
protein for a green.) Alfalfa originally grew in the Mediterranean and Middle
East but has now spread to most of Europe and the Americans. It can treat
morning sickness, nausea, kidney stones, kidney pain and urinary discomfort. It
is a powerful diuretic and has a bit of stimulant power, helping to energize
after a bout with illness. It’s a liver and bowel cleanser and long-term can
help reduce cholesterol. You can purchase seeds and sprouts, but it’s fine to
eat the leaves straight from the earth.
Sage
Sage is an incredibly
useful herb, widely considered to be perhaps the most valuable herb. It is
anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, and anti-fungal. In fact, according to the noted
resource World’s Healthiest Foods,
“Its reputation as a panacea is even represented in its scientific name, Salvia official is,
derived from the Latin word, salvere,
which means ‘to be saved’.” It was used as a preservative for meat before the
advent of refrigeration (eminently useful: you never know when you’ll be forced
to hunt in the wild). Sage aids digestion, relieves cramps, reduces diarrhea,
dries up phlegm, fights colds, reduces inflammation and swelling, acts as a
salve for cuts and burns, and kills bacteria. Sage apparently even brings color back
to gray hair. A definite concern when lost in the woods.
Wild Quinine
According to Alternative Nature Online, wild quinine is a
potent herb that “is used as an anti-periodic, demagogue, kidney, lithographic, poultice. It has traditionally been used in alternative medicine
to treat debility, fatigue, respiratory infection, gastrointestinal infection,
and venereal disease.” Whatever the ailment, quinine is famously helpful in
treating it. Only the root and flowers are edible; avoid the plant.
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