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Diaphoretic

White Spruce – Picea Glauca: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Top Tip of Wild Plants

February 27, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods Leave a Comment
White Spruce - Picea Glauca

White spruce (Picea glauca) is one of the first edible and medicinal plants I enjoy come spring. Its new fresh green tips are a popular forage – a top tip! These next two edible and medicinal wild plants are very similar: white spruce and white pine. They’re named for the white crust that often coats … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: American goldfinches, Antiseptic, Black bears, Carminative, Chipping sparrows, Diaphoretic, Dry soil, Dye, Edible parts, Evening grosbeaks, Expectorant, Found in high dry sandy areas, Found in low damp areas, Found in mixed woods, Found in pure stands, Full sun, Grouse, Integumentary, Medicinal parts, Mockingbirds and mimics, Moist soil, Mourning doves, Muscular, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Pinaceae/Pine family, Porcupines, Red squirrels, Red-breasted nuthatches, Respiratory, Skeletal, Snowshoe hares, Well drained soil, Wet soil, White-winged crossbills

Wild Sarsaparilla – Aralia Nudicaulis: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Rootbeer of Wild Plants

February 10, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods 1 Comment
Wild Sarsaparilla - Aralia Nudicaulis

Wild sarsaparilla (Aralia nudicaulis) is a prized edible and medicinal herb. And not just for the rootbeer. (Though that’d be enough for me!) Wild sarsaparilla’s folk names include rabbit foot and wild licorice. In some of my herbal books, it’s called spikenard instead. But there are many plants called spikenard. And confusingly, a more popular … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Alterative, Araliaceae/Sarsaparilla family, Black bears, Clay soil, Diaphoretic, Diuretic, Eastern chipmunks, Edible parts, Found in partly shaded hillsides, Found in sandy disturbed sites, Found in woods, Integumentary, Loamy soil, Medicinal parts, Moist soil, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Perennial, Respiratory, Sandy soil, Shade, Swainson’s thrushes, White flowers, White-throated sparrows, Wood thrushes

Yarrow – Achillea Millefolium: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Woundwort of Wild Plants

February 4, 2020 by Rachel of the Woods 3 Comments
Yarrow - Achillea Millefolium

Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) is a “wounderful” edible and medicinal herb. A yarrow salve for healing cuts and scrapes was my first ever herbal medicine maker’s recipe! Yarrow is another European import. It’s most descriptive folk name is woundwort. It’s not the only “woundwort”, so cheers for Latin names. On the same note, it’s been called … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Anti-Inflammatory, Antiseptic, Antispasmodic, Asteraceae (Compositae)/Aster family, Astringent, Attracts pollinators, Bitters, Cardiovascular, Carminative, Cholagogue, Compost material, Diaphoretic, Digestive, Dry sandy soil, Dual energetics, Eastern cottontails, Edible parts, Found in disturbed sites, Found in old fields and farmlands, Found in roadsides, Full sun, Integumentary, Medicinal parts, Native to Ontario, Naturalized in Ontario, Perennial, Ruffed grouse, Styptic, Urinary, Well drained soil, White flowers, White-tailed deer

Common Milkweed – Asclepias Syriaca: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Monarch of Wild Plants

April 22, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods 1 Comment
Common Milkweed - Asclepias Syriaca

In Chippewa, ini’niwunj meaning “man like”, common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) is a monarch of the edible and medicinal wild plant kingdom. Let’s cultivate this king of herbs for the butterflies more than we eat it, please! Milkweeds folk names are somewhat all over the place, as there are tons of varieties, and many probably don’t … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Apocynaceae (incl. Asclepiadaceae)/Dogbane family, Attracts pollinators, Diaphoretic, Digestive, Diuretic, Edible parts, Emetic, Expectorant, Found in dry or damp roadside ditches, Found in old fields and farmlands, Found in open hillsides, Full sun, Integumentary, Medicinal parts, Native to Ontario, Perennial, Pink flowers, Purple flowers, Respiratory, Urinary

White Birch Syn. Paper Birch – Betula Papyrifera: Edible & Medicinal Uses of the Craftiest of Wild Plants

March 29, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods 2 Comments
White Birch Syn. Paper Birch - Betula Papyrifera

In Chippewa, wi’gwass’tig, white birch (Betula papyrifera) is not only edible and medicinal, but is traditionally used in many other ways from making canoes to baskets to birch bark biting. I think of it as the craftiest tree! White birch is sometimes called paper birch or canoe birch after two of its many utilizations. Edible … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Astringent, Attracts birds, Betulaceae/Birch family, Cooling, Diaphoretic, Diuretic, Dry soil, Dye, Edible parts, Found in disturbed sites, Found in mixed woods on hummus over granite or sand, Full sun, Integumentary, Medicinal parts, Native to Ontario, Partial shade, Skeletal, Urinary, Well drained soil, Wet soil

Burdocks Ft. Greater Burdock – Arctium Spp.: An Edible & Medicinal Wild Plant That’ll Stick With You

March 28, 2019 by Rachel of the Woods 3 Comments
Burdocks Ft. Greater Burdock - Arctium Spp.

In Chippewa, wiisagibag meaning bitter leaf, also wiisagijiibik meaning bitter taproot and gi’ masan meaning big stickers. Common burdock is an edible and medicinal wild plant that will stick with you. It’s a favorite of mine! Burdock’s (Arctium spp.) folk names are predominately along the lines of burr-this or that-burr, like burrseed for instance. Which … [Read more…]

Posted in: Edible & Medicinal Wild Plants Tagged: Alterative, Antimicrobial, Antipyretic, Asteraceae (Compositae)/Aster family, Astringent, Biennial, Cholagogue, Choleretic, Circulatory, Cool and Dry, Diaphoretic, Digestive, Diuretic, Edible parts, Expectorant, Found in open banks, Found in roadsides, Found in trailsides, Integumentary, Laxative, Lymphatic, Medicinal parts, Naturalized in Ontario, Pink flowers, Respiratory, Urinary
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    Hi, have you successfully made flour from the seeds of Phragmites?

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