Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Daucus Carota

AKA: Queen Anne’s Lace, wild carrot, bird's nest, bishop's lace

Planting: Well drained fertile soil in sun or partial shade, self seeding biennial, fully hardy, 1’-2’.

Propagation Zone 6/7: Seed/Self-sowing

Harvest: Whole plant is cut in summer and dried for use in infusions and extracts.

Culinary: Fresh roots are eaten raw in salads, cooked as a vegetable

Medicinal: An aromatic herb that acts as a diuretic, soothes the digestive tract, and stimulates the uterus. A rich source of antioxidants. Used internally for urinary stones, cystitis, gout and much more.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009, 7F

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Daucus Carota Sativus

AKA: Carrot (Scarlet Keeper, Oxheart)

Planting: Well drained fertile soil in sun or partial shade, self seeding biennial, fully hardy, 1’-2’.

Propagation Zone 6/7: Seed/Self-sowing

Harvest: Whole plant is cut in summer and dried for use in infusions and extracts.

Culinary: Fresh roots are eaten raw in salads, cooked as a vegetable

Medicinal: An aromatic herb that acts as a diuretic, soothes the digestive tract, and stimulates the uterus. A rich source of antioxidants. Used internally for urinary stones, cystitis, gout and much more.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009, B6

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Galium Odoratum

AKA: Sweet Woodruff

Planting: Moist well drained neutral to alkaline soil in shade, fully hardy perennial, 4’.

Harvest: Plants are cut when flowering and dried for infusions, extracts, and tablets.

Culinary: Sprigs are soaked in white wine to make Maitrank or Maibowle (Alsace), and added to fruit cups.

Medicinal: An astringent, slightly bitter herb , aromatic when dried, with tonic, diuretic, and sedative effects. It improves liver function, relaxes spasms, strengthens capillaries, and reduces blood clotting. Used internally for thrombo-phlebitis, varicose veins, hepatitis, jaundice.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 Transplanted to North of trash house

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Cymbopogon Citratus

AKA: Lemon Grass

Planting: Well drained soil in sun with humidity, minimum 45 degrees perennial, 5’.

Harvest: Stems are cut at ground level and used fresh for oil extraction, dried for powder, and either fresh or dried for infusions. The leaf blades may be removed and the lower 3-4” used as a fresh herb.

Culinary: Leaves are used as a flavoring herb, and infused for tea.

Medicinal: A bitter, aromatic cooling herb that increases perspiration and relieves spasms. Also has a sedative action and is effective against fungal and bacterial infections. Used internally for digestive problems. used externally for ringworm, lice, athlete’s foot, arthritis, and scabies.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplanted to pot Spring 2009.

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Monday, April 27, 2009

Eleuthero

AKA: Eleuthero, Siberian Ginseng, syn. Acanthopanax Senticosus

Planting: Well drained rich moist soil in sun or partial shade, fully hardy deciduous suckering shrub, 8’-22’.

Harvest: Roots are lifted in autumn and dried whole or decorticated. Both roots and root bark are used in decoctions, powders, tablets, teas, and tinctures.

Culinary: Young leaves are cooked as a pot-herb or dried for making tea.

Medicinal: An adaptogen, belonging to the same family as true ginsengs, but differs in the form of its saponin glycosides, which are eleutherosides, rather than ginsenosides. A pungenta, bitter sweet warming herb that stimulates the immune and circulatory systems, regulates blood pressure, lowers blood sugar, and reduces inflammation. It is adaptogenic, having a tonic effect on all organs. Do not use with caffeine.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: 2008, in B1

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Hippophae Rhamnoides

AKA: Sea Buckthorn, Tsarap

Planting: Well drained sandy soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 4’-5’. Plant one male fore every eight females, spacing 4-6’ apart. A resilient, ornamental, thorny shrub, great for hedging, windbreaks, and soil stabilization especially in coastal areas.

Harvest: Fruits are picked when rip and used whole, juiced, in decoctions, or for oil extraction.

Culinary: Fruits are eaten with cheese in East Europe, and made into marmalade, jelly, syrup and sauces.

Medicinal: A sour astringent herb with a high vitamin A and C content. Used internally as a tonic to increase resistance to infection., Used externally for skin problems.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplant in 2009, SW corner in front of hydrangea

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Ficus

AKA: Fig (Hardy)

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, fully hardy perennial tree. Most figs are self fertile, F. Carica is not. Good container plant as roots spread only about 1 square yard.

Harvest: Fruits harvested when ripe. Leaves and sap also used.

Culinary: Fruits eaten raw or stewed.

Medicinal: A sweet laxative herb that soothes irritated tissues. Used internally for constipation, sore throat, cough bronchial infections, and inflammation of the trachea. Used externally for haemorrhoids, sore eyes, corns, and warts.(sap). However, sap is a serious eye irritant.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplant in 2009, to NE corner of pool.

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Primula

AKA: Primrose

Planting: Moist, well drained soil in sun or shade, fully hardy perennial, 10”.

Harvest: Flowers and whole plant picked as needed, roots are lifted in autumn.

Culinary: Flowers and young leaves are added to salads . Flowers are used to make desserts, such as primrose pottage, based on ground rice flavoured with saffron, honey, and almonds.

Medicinal: An expectorant, anti inflammatory herb that relieves pain, relaxes spasms, and promotes healing. Used internally for bronchitis, respiratory tract infections, insomnia, anxiety, and gout.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Live transplant spring 2009, East of mudroom

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Anacyclus Depressus

AKA: Mount Atlas Daisy

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, frost hardy perennial, 3”.

Harvest: Roots are lifted in autumn, then dried and powdered

Medicinal: Used externally for toothache, facial neuralgia, and chronic catarrh.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Live transplant spring 2009, near mailbox

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Solanum Tuberosum

AKA: Potato (All Blue, Yukon Gold, Banana Fingerling, Red Sangre)

Planting: Moist well drained soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 18". Plant in early spring. Dig a trench 3-4" mounding the earth on the sides. Cut tubers so that there is 2-3 eyes in each piece, and place them in the trench about 6" apart. Cover with about 1" of soil. As the greens emerge, continue to cover with soil.

Harvest: Potatoes are ready for harvesting when the green tops die back. They can be left in the ground and dug as needed until before the ground freezes. Store in paper bags in the cellar.

Culinary: Any which way.

Medicinal: See below.

Nutrition: Nutritionally, potatoes are best known for their carbohydrate content (approximately 26 grams in a medium potato). The predominant form of this carbohydrate is starch. A small but significant portion of this starch is resistant to digestion by enzymes in the stomach and small intestine, and so reaches the large intestine essentially intact. This resistant starch is considered to have similar physiological effects and health benefits as fiber: it provides bulk, offers protection against colon cancer, improves glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, lowers plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations, increases satiety, and possibly even reduces fat storage (Cummings et al. 1996; Hylla et al. 1998; Raban et al. 1994). The amount of resistant starch in potatoes depends much on preparation methods. Cooking and then cooling potatoes significantly increases resistant starch. For example, cooked potato starch contains about 7% resistant starch, which increases to about 13% upon cooling (Englyst et al. 1992).

Potatoes contain vitamins and minerals that have been identified as vital to human nutrition. Humans can subsist healthily on a diet of potatoes and milk; the latter supplies Vitamin A and Vitamin D.[22]A medium potato (150g/5.3 oz) with the skin provides 27 mg of vitamin C (45% of the Daily Value (DV)), 620 mg of potassium (18% of DV), 0.2 mg vitamin B6 (10% of DV) and trace amounts of thiamin, riboflavin, folate, niacin, magnesium, phosphorus, iron, and zinc. Moreover, the fiber content of a potato with skin (2 grams) equals that of many whole grain breads, pastas, and cereals. Potatoes also contain an assortment of phytochemicals, such as carotenoids and polyphenols. The notion that "all of the potato's nutrients" are found in the skin is an urban legend. While the skin does contain approximately half of the total dietary fiber, more than 50% of the nutrients are found within the potato itself. The cooking method used can significantly impact the nutrient availability of the potato.

Almost all the protein content of a potato is contained in a thin layer just under its skin.[citation needed] This is evident when the skin of a boiled potato is carefully peeled; it appears as a yellowish film. For maximum utilisation of this small, but valuable dietary source of protein, potatoes should be consumed whole, or peeled after cooking.

Potatoes are often broadly classified as high on the glycemic index (GI) and so are often excluded from the diets of individuals trying to follow a "low GI" eating regimen. In fact, the GI of potatoes can vary considerably depending on type (such as red, russet, white, or Prince Edward), origin (where it was grown), preparation methods (i.e., cooking method, whether it is eaten hot or cold, whether it is mashed or cubed or consumed whole, etc), and with what it is consumed (i.e., the addition of various high fat or high protein toppings) (Fernandes et al. 2006). (Source: Wiki)

Toxicity: Potatoes contain glycoalkaloids, toxic compounds, of which the most prevalent are solanine and chaconine. Solanine is also found in other plants, mainly in the mostly deadly nightshade family, which includes a minority of edible plants including the potato and the tomato, and other typically more dangerous plants like tobacco. This poison affects the nervous system causing weakness and confusion.

These compounds, which protect the plant from its predators, are generally concentrated in its leaves, stems, sprouts, and fruits.[31] Exposure to light, physical damage, and age increase glycoalkaloid content within the tuber;[32] the highest concentrations occur just underneath the skin. Cooking at high temperatures (over 170 °C or 340 °F) partly destroys these. The concentration of glycoalkaloid in wild potatoes suffices to produce toxic effects in humans. Glycoalkaloids may cause headaches, diarrhea, cramps and in severe cases coma and death; however, poisoning from potatoes occurs very rarely. Light exposure causes greening(chlorophyll synthesis), thus giving a visual clue as to areas of the tuber that may have become more toxic; however, this does not provide a definitive guide, as greening and glycoalkaloid accumulation can occur independently of each other. Some varieties of potato contain greater glycoalkaloid concentrations than others; breeders developing new varieties test for this, and sometimes have to discard an otherwise promising cultivar.
The toxic fruits produced by mature potato plants

Breeders try to keep solanine levels below 200 mg/kg (200 ppmw). However, when these commercial varieties turn green, even they can approach concentrations of solanine of 1000 mg/kg (1000 ppmw). In normal potatoes, analysis has shown solanine levels may be as little as 3.5% of the breeders' maximum, with 7–187 mg/kg being found.[33]

The US National Toxicology Program suggests that the average American consumes at most 12.5 mg/day of solanine from potatoes (the toxic dose is actually several times this, depending on body weight). Dr. Douglas L. Holt, the State Extension Specialist for Food Safety at the University of Missouri, notes that no reported cases of potato-source solanine poisoning have occurred in the U.S. in the last 50 years and most cases involved eating green potatoes or drinking potato-leaf tea. (Source:Wiki)

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Tubers planted Spring 2009, 3 patches in garden

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)
AKA: Milk Thistle, Blessed Thistle

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, fully hardy annual or biennial, 4-5’.

Harvest: As a vegetable, young leaves, flower buds, and roots are harvested when tender and used fresh. For medicinal use, plants are cut when flowering and seeds are collected when ripe. All parts are dried for use in infusions and tinctures, or for extraction of silymarin.

Culinary: Young leaves, with spines removed, are eaten raw or cooked as a spinach like vegetable. Flower buds can be eaten like mini artichokes. Tender roots of first year plants are similar to salsify.

Medicinal: A bitter, diuretic, tonic herb that regenerates liver cels, stimulates bile flow, increases milk production, and relaxes spasm. Used internally for liver and gall bladder diseases, jaundice, hepatitis, liver damage, cirrhosis, and poisoning (especially by alcohol, drugs, and chemicals), It also minimizes side effects from cancer chemotherapy.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Fall 2008 in A2, E6; transplanted spring 2009 in B6

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)
AKA: Myrtle

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, hardy perennial, 5’ bush.

Harvest: Plants are cut with or without flowers and distilled for oil. Leaves are picked as required and used fresh, or dried for us in infusions. Flower buds are picked before opening and dried. Fruits are collected when ripe and dried for use whole or ground.

Culinary: Leaves, flowers, buds, and fruits are used to flavor dishes of port, lamb, and small birds, sauces, and liqueurs. Oil is used in soups, skin care products, and perfumery, and as a food flavoring.

Medicinal: An aromatic astringent herb that is antiseptic and an effective decongestant. Used internally for UTIs bronchial congestion, sinusitis, and dry coughs. Used externally for acne, gum infections, and hemorrhoids.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplanted Spring 2009


Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Leuzea Rhapontica

AKA: Maral Root, Leuzea Carthamoides, Rhaponticum Carthamoides

Planting: Rich moist soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 2’-3’.

Harvest:

Medicinal: An adaptogen which has traditionally used for fatigue, impotence, and recovery from long illness.

Research indicates that maral root may have a beneficial effect on impotence, memory and learning, increasing working capacity of tired skeletal muscles, as well as anabolic and adaptogenic processes.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in A5

Links: Wiki

Sources:

Coriandrus

AKA: Coriander, Cilantro, Chinese Parsley

Planting: Well drained fertile soil in sun, hardy annual, 1’-2’. Plants grown for leaves are more productive if grown in partial shade, as it tends to bolt if too dry or overcrowded.

Harvest: Leaves are gathered when young and used fresh. Seeds are harvested when ripe and are used whole or ground for culinary purposes. Roots, leaves, seeds and oil are used.

Culinary: Roots are used in Thai cuisine. Leaves and leafstalks are used to flavour soups, salads, beans, and curries.

Medicinal: . Leaves and seeds are rich in volatile oils that act mainly on the digestive system, stimulating the appetites, and relieving irritation. They are also expectorant. Oil is fungicidal and bactericidal. Used internally for minor digestive problems. Used externally for hemorrhoids and painful joints (seeds).

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in E3

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Abelmoschus Esculentus

AKA: Okra (Star of David)

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, 40 degree annual, 3’-6”. In the Hibiscus family. Save seed.

Harvest: Fruits are harvested when immature and eaten as a vegetable. Leaves eaten raw or cooked.

Culinary: Fruits are harvested when immature and eaten as a vegetable. Leaves eaten raw or cooked. The products of the plant are mucilaginous, resulting in the characteristic "goo" when the seed pods are cooked. In order to avoid this effect, okra pods are often stir fried, so the moisture is cooked away, or paired with slightly acidic ingredients, such as citrus or tomatoes. The cooked leaves are also a powerful soup thickener. To retain most of okra's nutrients and self-digesting enzymes, it should be cooked as little as possible, e.g. with low heat or lightly steamed. Some eat it raw.

Medicinal: The superior fiber found in okra helps to stabilize blood sugar by curbing the rate at which sugar is absorbed from the intestinal tract. Okra's mucilage binds cholesterol and bile acid carrying toxins dumped into it by the filtering liver. Okra helps lubricate the large intestines due to its bulk laxative qualities. The okra fiber absorbs water and ensures bulk in stools. This helps prevent and improve constipation. Unlike harsh wheat bran, which can irritate or injure the intestinal tract, okra's mucilage soothes, and okra facilitates elimination more comfortably by its slippery characteristic. Okra binds excess cholesterol and toxins (in bile acids). These, if not evacuated, will cause numerous health problems. Okra also assures easy passage out of waste from the body. Okra is completely non-toxic, non-habit forming, has no adverse side effects, is full of nutrients, and is economically within reach of most unlike the OTC drugs. Okra fiber is excellent for feeding the good bacteria (probiotics). This contributes to the health of the intestinal tract.

Okra is a supreme vegetable for those feeling weak, exhausted, and suffering from depression.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in B6

Links: Wiki

Sources:
Holisticonline.com

Satureja Montana

AKA: Savory, Winter

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 9” high, spreads wide.

Harvest: Leaves and shoots as needed.

Culinary: Leaves are used as seasoning. Used to flavor legumes, sausages, meat stuffings, and marinades (especially for olives). An ingredient in “Herbes de Provence”. Has a more pungent flavor than S. Hortensis (summer savory)

Medicinal: An antiseptic , astringent, warming, expectorant herb with a peppery flavor and high carvacrol content. It improves digestion, increases perspiration, stimulates the uterus and nervous system, and is reputedly aphrodisiac. Used internally for indigestion, nausea, colic and more.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Live transplant Spring 2009

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Satureja Hortensis

AKA: Savory, Summer

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 9” high, spreads wide.

Harvest: Leaves and flowering tops as needed.

Culinary: Leaves are used as seasoning. Used to flavor legumes, sausages, meat stuffings, and marinades (especially for olives). An ingredient in “Herbes de Provence”. Has a less pungent flavor than S. Montana (winter savory)

Medicinal: An antiseptic , astringent, warming, expectorant herb with a peppery flavor and high carvacrol content. It improves digestion, increases perspiration, stimulates the uterus and nervous system, and is reputedly aphrodisiac. Used internally for indigestion, nausea, colic and more.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Summer 2008 in E6, Spring 2009 in B7

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Fagopyrum Esculentum

AKA: Buckwheat, Soba

Planting: Well drained sandy soil in sun, hardy annual, 3’

Harvest: Leaves and flowers are collected as flowering begins and dried for infusions and tablets. Seeds are harvested when ripe and dried for use whole or ground.

Culinary: Hulled grain (groats) is eaten in breakfast cereals, made into kasha and polenta, and brewed into beer and spirits. Flour is used to make pancakes, noodles, and bread. Also as a thickener for soups and gravy. Buckwheat honey is a traditional ingredient of Jewish Honey wine, and gingerbread.

Medicinal: A bitter but pleasant tasting herb that controls bleeding, dilates blood vessels, reduces capillary permeability, and lowers blood pressure. Used internally for varicose veins, chilblains, spontaneous bruising, frostbite, retinal hemorrhage, and hypertension.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in C8

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Helianthus Annua

AKA: Sunflower

Planting: Well drained soil in sun, hardy annual, 1’-12’.

Harvest: Whole plants are cut as flowering begins and used fresh for liquid extracts or tinctures. Seeds are collected in autumn and used fresh, pressed for oil, or roasted

Culinary: Seeds are eaten fresh or roasted; Seeds are sprouted and fermented to make seed yogurt and cheese. Seedlings are eaten in salads, Oil is used for cooking and salads.

Medicinal: A nutritious herb that lowers cholesterol levels and soothes irritated tissues. Used internally for bronchial infections, tuberculosis, and malaria. Used externally as a base for massage oils and liniments used for rheumatic complaints and muscular aches.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Fall 2008 in Taijo A2&B7, Teddy Bear in C5&C7, Spring 2009 Taijo in B7, Fall 2008 Ice cream in B8&C7

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Friday, April 24, 2009

Polygonatum Odoratum

AKA: Solomon’s Seal; syn P. Multiflorum

Planting: well drained, moist rich soil in partial shade, fully hardy perennial, 3’.

Harvest: Rhizomes are lifted in autumn and used fresh in tinctures and ointments, or dried for use in decoctions and powders

Culinary: All parts, especially the berries, are harmful if eaten.

Medicinal: A bittersweet, astringent, tonic herb that acts as an expectorant, soothes irritated or damaged tissues, reduces inflammation, and clears toxins. Used in Chinese medicine internally for heart disease, tuberculosis, dry cough, dry throat in diabetics, and to encourage secretion of body fluids. In Ayurvedic medicine, as a rejuvenative and aphrodisiac. Given with warm milk and ghee as a tonic.


Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplanted Spring 2009, A2

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Chaenomeles Contorta

AKA: Flowering Quince, Japonica, Japanese Quince

Planting: Well drained soil in sun or partial shade, fully hardy perennial tree, 3’-8’.

Harvest: Fruits gathered when ripe.

Culinary: May be used as substitute for Cydonia Oblonga (quince) in jams and jellies, and for flavouring apples and other stewed or baked fruit. Unpleasant to eat raw. More vitamin C than lemons.

Medicinal: An anti inflammatory and anti spasmodic herb that acts mainly as a circulatory and digestive stimulant.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplanted spring 2009 driveway left, next to rock pair

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Eletaria Cardamomum

AKA: Cardamom

Planting: Rich moist well drained soil in sun or partial shade, 50 degrees minimum, evergreen perennial, 10’.

Harvest: Fruits are collected during the dry season and dried whole. Seeds are removed for oil extraction or used in infusion, extracts, powders, and tinctures.

Culinary: Seeds are used to flavour baked goods, coffee, curries, pickles, mile-based desserts, fruit compotes, and mulled wine. The essential oil is used in perfumery.

Medicinal: A pungent, warm, aromatic herb that has stimulating tonic effects, especially on the lungs and kidneys. It relaxes spasm, is expectorant, and improves digestion. It also detoxifies caffeine and counteracts mucus-forming foods, such as dairy produce. Used internally for indigestion, nausea and vomiting, enuresis, and pulmonary disease with copious phlegm.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Transplanted to pot, Spring 2009

Experience: I bought a live plant in 2009 and it still lives. It grows very slowly and is a green ornamental that I keep in my house, and thankfully the cat doesn't poop in the pot. It seems relatively healthy and is decent looking. However, based on posts, I now suspect that it may not be a true Elletaria, but instead Cinnomon Ginger, Alpinia nutans. It looks good anyway. So I am going to try from seed, which is difficult to propagate, and there is not much consistent germination information that I can find. My plan: January 15 pot it, keep moist, and look for germination by April 1.

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Glycyrrhiza Glabra

AKA: Liquorice

Planting: Deep rich sandy soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 3’-4’.

Harvest: Roots and stolons are lifted in early autumn, 3-4 years after planting, and dried for decoctions extracts, pastilles, and powder, or crushed and boiled to produce juice.

Culinary: Roots are chewed as sweets, used as flavoring. Also used in herb tea.

Medicinal: An adaptogen. A sweet, soothing herb that is anti inflammatory and expectorant, controls coughing, and has hormonal and laxative effects. It detoxifies and protects the liver.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in B6

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Calendula Officinalis

AKA: Calendula, Marigold

Planting: Well drained to poor soil in sun, hardy self-sowing annual, 20”-28”.

Propagation Zone 6/7: Self-sowing

Harvest: Flowers are used, cut in dry conditions and used fresh or dried.

Culinary: Petals are used as a substitute for saffron in rice and soup, and infused to give color to cheese, butter, milk desserts, and cakes. Also added fresh to salads. Used fresh or dried in tea infusions, extracts, tinctures, and for culinary purposes.

Medicinal: A major herb with excellent healing, antiseptic, and detoxifying properties, combined with low toxicity. It stimulates the liver, gall bladder, and uterus, soothes the digestive system, supports the heart, and clears infections. Used internally and externally for many complaints.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in garden; Orange in F7

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Momordica Charantia

AKA: Bitter Melon, Balsam Pear, Karela

Planting: Rich well drained soil in full sun, 60 degrees hardy, by seed in spring, annual tendril climber.

Propagation Zone 6/7: Save seed

Culinary: Unripe green fruits can be added to curries, eaten raw, boiled or fried after parboiling or soaking in saltwater to remove bitterness. Young leaves and shoots are cooked as a vegetable. Cucurbitaceae (cucumber) family.

Medicinal: A Laxative diuretic herb that soothes irritated tissues, lowers fever, kills parasites, and cleanses toxins from the system. Used externally for hemorrhoids, chapped skin, and burns (fruit).

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 in A2

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Santolina Chamaecyparissus

AKA: Cotton Lavender

Planting: Light well drained to dry soil in sun, fully hardy perennial, 24”

Harvest: Leaves are picked as needed, flowering stems in summer.

Culinary: Leaves used to flavour meat and fish dishes, grains, soups, and sauces.

Medicinal: A bitter, stimulant herb with a strong, chamomile like aroma. It reduces inflammation, improves digestion, stimulates the uterus and liver, and expels intestinal parasites. Used internally for digestive and menstrual problems, worms in children, and jaundice. Used externally for stings, bites, minor wounds, and skin inflammations.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Spring 2009 live transplant to SW corner of barn;, and seeded in C5.

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Friday, April 17, 2009

Withania Somnifera

AKA: Ashwagandha, Winter Cherry

Planting: Dry stony soil in sun or partial shade, hardy annual/tender perennial and reseeding, 24”-72”.

Harvest: All parts of the plant are used, but roots are most common.

Medicinal: An Adaptogen. Important in Ayurvedic medicine, similar to Panax Ginseng. Roots, fruits, leaves are used, but toxic if eaten. A bitter-sweet astringent warming herb with a horse-like smell. It acts on the reproductive and nervous systems. In A. medicine given as a milk decoction with sugar, honey, rice. Powdered roots are used as an ingredient in a variety of tonic formulas and Raja’s Cup coffee substitute. Of the nightshade family (solanaceae), Ashwaganda is rich in alkaloids and should be regarded as poisonous. Internally for debility, convalescence, nervous exhaustion, insomnia, geriatric complaints, wasting diseases, impotence, infertility, joint and nerve pains, epilepsy, rheumatic pains, and the roots are used for multiple sclerosis. . Externally as poultice for swellings, wounds, burns, stings and snake bites (leaves).

Third Eye Vision: Plant in front of the beehive. Bees snacking on the flowers receive adaptogenic benefits.

Seeded: 2008-B6, 2009 D6

Links: Wiki

Sources:
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Honey Bee Collapse

In the last two years (2007 and 2008) about two thirds of the world's honeybees have died and nobody knows why.

There have been several books written about it. I ordered a couple books from Amazon and here is a summary.

"Fruitless Fall" by Rowan Jacobsen

The varroa mite has been plaguing beekeepers for years, and was especially bad in the 1990's. The mite mostly by crawling into the nursery and sucking blood from the baby bees. To control it, beekeepers have been using and ever-increasing amount of poisonous pesticides. It is against the law to use the pesticides while the bees are making honey...but the industry in not regulated very carefully.

In the Fall of 2006 and Spring of 2007, many hives started going quiet. Beekeepers originally thought that the mite was back, but the usual signs (dead bees) were not there. Instead, the hives were simply empty. The bees had enough power to leave the hive and not come back. By dissecting the bees still remaining in the hive, beekepers found that the immune system of the bees had collapsed--they had a bee version of AIDS. Overall in 2007, of the 2.4 million hives in the U.S., about 800,000 had died; 30 billion bees dead with no explanation. In Europe, South America, and China, the situation was the same. During the same period, food prices increased about 37%.

Here are some theories:
--Cellphones. Wireless signals confuse the bees who then can't get home. This theory was picked up by the media but bee researchers tested the theory and found it false.
--Genetically modified crops. GM corn has had the genes of a naturally occurring soil bacteria inserted into its DNA. It now produces this bacteria in all its cells; since the bacteria is toxic to insects, it acts like a natural pesticide. Again, bee researchers tested this theory and could not find a basis for it. There were many instances of bee-collapse in non-GM crops, and many survicing hives amid GM crops.
--Varroa mite chemicals. Use of chemicals to battle the Varroa mite hurt the bees, cut the life of the Queen bee in half. Again, no direct evidence.
--Monoculture (single-crop farming). By exposing the bees to just one large crop, and moving the bees from location to location, they lose the natural diversity that should be in their environment, leading to stress and death. Again, no direct evidence.

There was no direct evidence of these theories affected the bees, but it certainly seems logical that the combination of all these could crush the bees. But the scientists have thought of that too, reasoning that since all of these factors have been around for years without CCD, then that couldn't be the reason either.

After many more tests with high tech equipment, many viruses were found but there was no single virus found in every dead hive. The only commonality among all the hives was the presence of a portfolio of disease.

The next theory is based on a pesticide group introduced about 15 years ago using Neonicotinoids, a nerve poison, which almost overnight replaced the old-school pesticides. This new group, using natural pesticide occurring in nightshade plants like tobacco, tomato, and potato plants, are nerve poisons. The human body can eliminate small amounts of these, but insects cannot, making it a perfect poison (from Monsanto's point of view).

Noenicotinoids are so prevalent now, that they form the basis of most of the pesticides sold to consumers in stores, and to farmers (aka, Imidacloprid, Advantage, Merit, Gaucho). Neonicotinoids disrupt the neural pathways of insects, inducing dementia within an hour, but have virtually no effect on humans. Independant studies done in 2001 showed that bees with moderate exposure to neonicotinoids were able to return to the hive, then leave, and never return--the exact behavior observed in a colony collapse. Bees were also fed neonicontinoids inside the hive, survived completely, then flew out of the hive and never returned, bolstering the chemical companies' contention that the poison does not "kill".



More coming...

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Arctium Lappa

AKA: Burdock, Beggar’s Buttons, Lappa, Gobo

Planting: Moist soil in sun or light shade, robust fully hardy biennial, self-sowing, 5’.

Harvest: Young leaf stalks are cut in spring, roots are lifted in autumn, seeds harvested as needed.

Culinary: Leaf stalks are scraped and cooked like celery. Roots are eaten fresh raw in salads, or cooked like carrots, or added to stir fries. Used extensively in Japanese and Korean cuisine. “This is a burdock root. I prepared it especially for you so you would find it a replacement for tasty bread, potatoes, and carrots. ..Try it, not to worry. In times past people used it to make a great many tasty and healthful dishes. Try just a small bite first. I have been keeping it in milk to soften it”. (Anastasia 4 “Cocreation”, p85.)

Medicinal: An alterative herb, with bitter foloiage and sweet mucilaginous roots, that reduces inflammation and controls bacterial infection. Used internally for skin diseases and inflammatory conditions owing to chronic tosicity, like eczema, psoriasis, rheumatism, gout, boils, and sores. Seeds are used for similar purposes and to treat colds, pheumonia, and throat infections.

Third Eye Vision:

Seeded: Fall 2008, A3, A5

Sources:
Wiki
The Royal Horticultural Society New Encyclopedia of Herbs and Their Uses (RHS)