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misc. notes/extracts
Topic Started: Jan 1 2013, 11:53 AM (803 Views)
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Yellow Bedstraw. Lady's Bedstraw. Cheese-Rennet. Bedflower. Fleawort. Galium Verum. Madder Family

Quote:
 
Wort reference

According to the Oxford English Dictionary's Ask Oxford site, "A word with the suffix -wort is often very old. The Old English word was wyrt, from German origins that connect it to root. It was often used in the names of herbs and plants that had medicinal uses, the first part of the word denoting the complaint against which it might be specially efficacious...By the middle of the 17th-century -wort was beginning to fade from everyday use.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wort_plants


Hence, fleawort might be effective against fleas. Will look into it more.


Here we go:

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extract:

The scent of other herbs lasts much longer than a week; foliage of the bedstraw family, such as Lady’s bedstraw (Galium verum, also known as fleaweed), and woodruff (Asperula oderata) contain asperuloside which produces coumarin; the leaves when freshly gathered have little scent at all, but when dried give out a sweet smell of newly-mown hay that can last for years.

Fleas do not, apparently, like coumarin at all, which is also in the pretty melilot (Melilotus altissima) another strewing herb. Mrs Grieve tells us that, in June, on St Barnabas day, bunches of box, woodruff, lavender and roses were traditionally put inside churches; fleas were clearly a problem in the house of God too. There are so many other kinds of potent, aromatic herbs used for strewing that I haven’t time to go into here, but a fleeting mention is due for meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria), well-known for being the favourite strewing herb of Queen Elizabeth the first.

Recommend reading. Lists several herbs for strewing or stuffing in mattresses that repel fleas:

http://the-history-girls.blogspot.com/2012/10/fleas-by-jane-borodale.html

Edited by yass, Jan 1 2013, 03:12 PM.
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Comfrey root - reference

This is an herb of Saturn, and I suppose under the sign Capricorn, cold, dry, and earthy in quality... the root boiled in water or wine, and the decoction drunk, helpeth all inward hurts, bruises, and wounds, and the ulcers of the lungs, causing the phlegm that oppresseth them to be easily spit forth
Nicholas Culpeper


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Pęgnumi in the sense of congealing is even more evident in Hippocratic writings. Phlegm, for example, is described as a congealed 'cool' substance, which if not sufficiently dispersed on entering the 'warm' bloodstream will thicken the blood as well. When such thickening prevents pneuma, the very breath of life, from getting through to the body, the result is the convulsions of epilepsy or even death, if the blockage is severe enough. Hippocrates depended upon psuchô and pęgnumi, the very same verbs employed by Plato, to describe 'cold' and 'congealing.' (Hippocrates, 'The Sacred Disease' 10.30-11.26, Loeb 1998 edn. vol. 2, pp. 154-7.) He certainly did not mean to imply that phlegm is solid or that blood becomes rigid, just that both may thicken. Had any of these writers wished to describe something that felt hard to the touch, or to specify the rigidity of muscular contractions, they could have called upon other far more suitable words, such as sklęros and spasma.

http://nd.edu/~plato/bloch.htm
Edited by yass, Jan 2 2013, 08:16 AM.
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Scabious Field Biennial/Perennial
Knautia arvensis - Field Scabious
Hgt 30 - 100cm Flowers July to October
A biennial plant or short lived perennial. Flowers Bluish lilac. Old herbal remedy to treat scabies. Habitat grassland, open woods and hedge-banks.



Just went looking for this herb info/name. Was just reading in a discussion:

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Q. And what is happening in Palestine? What happened in the refugee camps in Gaza, Lebanon and the West Bank?
A. Typhus, head lice, food shortage.


I looked up Typhus:

Quote:
 
ty·phus (tfs)
n.
Any of several forms of infectious disease caused by rickettsia, especially those transmitted by fleas, lice, or mites, and characterized generally by severe headache, sustained high fever, depression, delirium, and the eruption of red rashes on the skin. Also called prison fever, ship fever, typhus fever.
[New Latin tphus, from Greek tphos, stupor arising from a fever, vapor, from tphein, to smoke.]


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typhus [ˈtaɪfəs]
n
(Medicine / Pathology) any one of a group of acute infectious rickettsial diseases characterized by high fever, skin rash, and severe headache Also called typhus fever
[from New Latin tȳphus, from Greek tuphos fever; related to tuphein to smoke]
typhous adj


Quote:
 
typhus (tfs)
Any of several forms of an infectious disease caused by bacteria of the genus Rickettsia transmitted by fleas, mites, or especially lice, and characterized by severe headache, high fever, and skin rash. Louse-born bacteria that cause typhus are especially virulent and can cause epidemics of the disease, which may be fatal in people with weakened immune systems.



Thesaurus

Quote:
 
Noun1.typhus - rickettsial disease transmitted by body lice and characterized by skin rash and high fevertyphus - rickettsial disease transmitted by body lice and characterized by skin rash and high fever
typhus fever
rickettsial disease, rickettsiosis - infectious disease caused by ticks or mites or body lice infected with rickettsial bacteria
endemic typhus, murine typhus, rat typhus, urban typhus - acute infection caused by rickettsia and transmitted by the bite of an infected flea; characterized by fever and chills and muscle aches and a rash

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Labrador Tea ~ Ledum groenlandicum

The one shrub which may be expected first in muskeg is this common and widely distributed evergreen. The leathery leaves, dark green on the upper side and a rusty color on the lower, are used to make a pungent tea. It was a common beverage among all the tribes in Canada ~ and this use in the north gave the plant its name. Guillet described the settlers' preparation of the 'New-Jersey-tea' (probably L. groenlandicum), "cured by drying in the sun or an oven, after which they were rolled" which, when steeped, ". . . produced a liquid of strong resinous flavour" ~ the addition of a few drops of lemon improves the taste.
The tea, high in vitamin C, is said to have a narcotic effect, so care should be taken by those unaccustomed to it. It is a stimulant especially useful in chest complaints. The leaves are used as a flavouring, as a bayleaf substitute.
The strong decoction, as a wash, is said to kill lice and soothe the skin. The leaves are hung in the clothes cupboard in order to repel insects. The branches are also placed among grain in order to keep mice away. A strong decoction of the leaves, or a tincture, is used to kill lice, mosquitoes, fleas and other insects.
Labrador tea was employed medicinally by several native North American Indian tribes who used it to treat a variety of complaints. In modern herbalism it is occasionally used externally to treat a range of skin problems. The leaves are analgesic, blood purifier, diaphoretic, diuretic, pectoral and tonic. A tea is taken internally in the treatment of headaches, asthma, colds, stomach aches, kidney ailments etc. Externally, it is used as a wash for burns, ulcers, itches, chapped skin, stings, dandruff etc. An ointment made from the powdered leaves or roots has been used to treat ulcers, cracked nipples, burns and scalds. In all it has been used as a birthing aid; blood purifier; diaphoretic; diuretic. It was taken by Indian women three times daily shortly before giving birth. The leaves contain tannin, and brown dye is obtained from the plant.

Interesting page:
www.albertburger.com/wild plants.htm
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Etymology - origin of cold feet

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There is an older reference, though I don't believe it is actually the origin of the English phrase. In ancient Athens, the death penalty was enforced by making the victim drink hemlock, which apparently numbs the extremities gradually, giving you literally cold feet before death. This was a commonplace political reference : where an American comedian might say 'holding political views like that would give you a shock', referring to the electric chair, an Athenian comedy-writer might put 'those views would give you cold feet'.

Unfortunately, the only reference I can find immediately is from Aristophanes' 'Frogs' and is only marginally relevant; when the hero refers to the quickest way down to Hades,

     "The pestle and mortar, then,--the beaten road?"--"No; that gives one cold feet."-

I'll try and improve the references: meanwhile, feel free to riff on this.

http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/19260/why-do-we-get-cold-feet


Quote:
 

This seems like it could be more significant than you give it credit. I'm looking forward to any references you can find. Do you have a link to the Aristophanes quote? Why do you think it may not be related? – Callithumpian Jun 25 '11 at 0:26

@Callithumpian: it's in the Prologue, line 148. But I didn't put up a link for the same reason I think it's not the source: there are dozens of translations of the Greek, and the two words 'cold feet' are not a necessary part of it. – TimLymington Jun 25 '11 at 17:52

http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/19260/why-do-we-get-cold-feet


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Plato's choice of words was not an unusual one. Indeed, in his comedy Frogs Aristophanes had employed almost identical terms to describe the effects of hemlock poisoning (Aristophanes, Frogs 116-26, Loeb 1989 edn. vol. 2, pp. 306-9). In the play, the protagonist Dionysos has been looking for a way to kill himself in order to visit the underworld. Heracles suggests suicide by hanging, but Dionysos rejects that method as 'too hot.' All Heracles then has to do is hint at a 'beaten path', by mortar and pestle, for Dionysos immediately to respond, 'hemlock, you mean?' (p. 309) But he dismisses that idea as well, declaring it 'too cold and wintry, already the stiffness (congealing) is reaching the shin' (my translation). In Greek Dionysos' words are: psuchran ge kai duscheimeron/ euthus gar apopęgnusi tantiknemia. Psuchran and duscheimeron mean 'cold and wintry,' apopęgnusi, from pęgnumi, connotes something being 'made to congeal,' and tantiknemia refers to 'the shin'.

http://nd.edu/~plato/bloch.htm
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Quote:
 
Her. "Then there is a very short cut by the Pestle and Mortar."

Bac. "Do you mean the hemlock road?"

Her. "Certainly."

Bac. "Too cold and wintry for me. One's hands and feet get so numb."

http://www.mainlesson.com/display.php?author=church&book=comedians&story=frogs




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HER. Then there’s a track, a short and beaten cut,
By pestle and mortar. DIO. Hemlock, do you mean?

HER. Just so. DIO. No, that’s too deathly cold a way; 128
You have hardly started ere your shins get numbed.

http://www.bartleby.com/8/9/1.html



Quote:
 

HERACLES Then there's a track, a short and beaten cut,
By pestle and mortar.

DIONYSUS Hemlock, do you mean?

HERACLES Just so.

DIONYSUS No, that's too deathly cold a way;
You have hardly started ere your shins get numbed.

http://classics.mit.edu/Aristophanes/frogs.pl.txt



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HERCULES
There’s a straight short cut, well traveled, too—
with pestle and mortar . . .

DIONYSUS
You mean hemlock.*

HERCULES
That’s it!

DIONYSUS
Too cold—too much like winter. Right away
the shins get frozen solid.

http://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/aristophanes/frogs.htm

Edited by yass, Jan 2 2013, 04:51 PM.
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The closing pages of Plato's Phaedo provide a stunning picture of the effects of poison upon the body of Socrates. Plato describes a slowly ascending paralysis, beginning in Socrates' feet and creeping steadily up his legs toward his chest, with Socrates' mind remaining clear until the end. Death arrives calmly and peacefully. It is a remarkable account, rich in emotive power and in clinical detail. But is it true?

http://nd.edu/~plato/bloch.htm
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More info on Labrador tea. It's a Rhododendron.

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wiki
 
Labrador tea is a tisane (not a true tea) made from three closely related species:

Rhododendron tomentosum (Northern Labrador Tea, previously Ledum palustre),
Rhododendron groenlandicum, (Bog Labrador Tea, previously Ledum groenlandicum or Ledum latifolium) and
Rhododendron neoglandulosum, (Western Labrador Tea, or Trapper's Tea, previously Ledum glandulosum).

In Labrador itself, Labrador tea is also frequently called Indian tea.

All three are primarily wetland plants in the Heath family (Ericaceae). The tisane has been a favorite beverage among Athabaskan and Inuit people for many years.

Posted Image
Ledum latifolium, an earlier name for
Rhododendron groenlandicum

Description

All three species used to make Labrador tea are low, slow-growing shrubs with evergreen leaves. The leaves are smooth on top with often wrinkled edges, and fuzzy white to red-brown underneath. The tiny white flowers grow in hemispherical clusters and are very fragrant and sticky and highly attractive to bees.

Uses

The Athabaskans brew the leaves as a beverage and some people chew the raw leaves because they enjoy the flavor. Others use Labrador tea to spice meat by boiling the leaves and branches in water and then soaking the meat in the decoction.

The Pomo, Kashaya, Tolowa and Yurok of Northern California boiled the leaves of Western Labrador Tea similarly, to make a medicinal tisane.[1] In Greenland, this is still the case. Here it is also used in facial steam bath.

In medieval Northern Europe, R. groenlandicum and R. tomentosum were often brewed in "gruit" ales, prior to the adoption of hops.

Labrador tea contains ledol, a poisonous substance that can cause cramps and paralysis.

Toxicology

Labrador tea has narcotic properties. Evidence suggests that excessive consumption of the plant may cause delirium or poisoning. Toxic terpenes of the essential oils cause symptoms of intoxication, such as slow pulse, lowering of blood pressure, lack of coordination, convulsions, paralysis, and death. It is apparently safe as a weak tisane, but should not be made too strong.[2]

Harvesting

Rhododendron tomentosum, Rhododendron groenlandicum, and Rhododendron neoglandulosum grow slowly, so pick individual leaves rather than whole branches, and harvest from different shrubs. In addition, Labrador tea grows in abundance in large patches so it should not be difficult to move from plant to plant to avoid over-harvesting. Labrador tea is an evergreen plant and will be available all year long.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labrador_tea
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Ledum groenlandicum Oeder
bog Labrador tea

http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=LEGR
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Edited by yass, Feb 3 2013, 10:09 PM.
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Labrador Tea

Common Name: St. Jame's Tea, Marsh Tea, Swamp Tea, Hudson's Bay Tea
Genus: Ledum
Species: groenlandicum
Parts Used: leaves

Posted Image

The Labrador tea plant grows to be 4 to 5 feet. It will grow up straight in the southern latitudes of the tundra, but in the colder northern latitudes it will creep over the ground forming a carpet. It has woolly branches with narrow 1 to 2 inch leaves which are smooth on the upper side, with rusty hairs underneath. They droop slightly and edges are rolled under, and are a leathery green in color. At the ends of the branches are tiny clusters of white flowers with protruding stamen, which bloom in June and July.

The part used from this plant are the leaves, which were brewed for tea by Native Americans. The tea is very rich in vitamin C. They were also scattered among clothes to keep moths away. Branches kept with grain are said to keep mice away.

They are also used for medical purposes. Externally it was used for all kinds of skin problems. Tea was used for stomach and nerve ailments. A syrup was made from the tea to be used for coughs

They usually grow in wet meadows, bogs, and forest areas mostly in the lower latitudes of the tundra biome. Bees are attracted to the flowers, but animals don't eat them because they are said to be slightly poisonous.

Eliot T. 2000

http://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/labrador_tea.htm
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  • Ledum, from the Greek ledon (ledon), the ancient Greek name used by Dioscorides for the Cistus (Rockrose).

http://www.rook.org/earl/bwca/nature/shrubs/ledum.html

(note/compare - Plague Herbs - Featuring Labdanum
Cistus Creticus - Cistus Ladaniferus
)
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  • Form prostrate to erect, generally circular in outline.
  • Leaves 1"-3", edges curled down, with brown hairs on underside. [Photo]
  • Roots in the organic layer. Rhizome depth can reach 6" - 20"
  • Flowers tiny white clusters on slender stalks at the ends of the branches
  • Fruit a dry capsule with many tiny seeds.

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  • Sprouts from rhizomes or the root crown following low to moderate severity fires. One of the first plants to recolonize burned bogs; grows rapidly following fire.
http://www.rook.org/earl/bwca/nature/shrubs/ledum.html



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http://www.voyageurcountry.com/htmls/floweringplants/plants/labradortea.html
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---Description---This evergreen shrub grows to a height of 4 to 5 feet, with irregular, woolly branches. The leaves are alternate, entire, elliptical or oblong, 1 to 2 inches long, the upper side smooth and woolly underneath, with the edges rolled back. The large, white, five-petalled flowers grow in flattened terminal clusters, opening in June and July. The plant grows in cold bogs and mountain woods. It is taller, more regularly formed, and has larger leaves than L. palustre. During the American War of Independence the leaves were much used instead of tea-leaves. They should be collected before flowering time, and the tops when the flowers begin to open.

Bees are much attracted by the flowers, but animals do not browse on the plants, which are said to be slightly poisonous.

Strewed among clothes, the leaves will keep away moths, and in Lapland the branches are placed among grain to keep away mice.

In Russia the leaves are used for tanning leather.

---Constituents---There has been found in the leaves tannin, gallic acid, a bitter substance, wax, resin, and salts.

---Medicinal Action and Uses---The leaves are tonic, diaphoretic, and pectoral, having a pleasant odour and rather spicy taste. They yield their virtues to hot water or to alcohol. It is useful in coughs, dyspepsia, and irritation of the membranes of the chest. An infusion has been used to soothe irritation in infectious, feverish eruptions, in dysentery, leprosy, itch, etc. The strong decoction, as a wash, will kill lice. The leaves are also used in malignant and inflamed sore throat.

---Dosage---Of infusion, 2 to 4 fluid ounces, three to four times a day. Overdoses may cause violent headache and symptoms of in toxication.

http://botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/l/labrad01.html
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Uses of Labrador tea

Labrador tea has been used historically and in folk medicine for a variety of ailments, including skin complaints, colds, and malignancies. However, clinical trials to support uses of Labrador tea are lacking.

Labrador tea Dosing

There is no clinical evidence to support specific dosage recommendations for Labrador tea. It can be made safely into a weak tea, but concentrations should not be too high. A tea for coughs, colds, bronchial infections, and pulmonary infections can be made by adding 1 teaspoonful of dried leaves to 1 cup of boiling water.

History

“Labrador tea” is named after the swamps of Greenland and Labrador, where it grows in profusion. The name is probably derived from the Hudson Bay traders who sold the leaves for tea. Prior to that, the Haida people used it as a medicine. 2

During the American Revolution, it was one of several herbs used as a pleasant-tasting substitute for commercial tea. In Germany, leaves were added to beer to make it more intoxicating.

The Haida people picked the leaves before the shrubs would flower or in late summer, dry them, and boil the leaves for tea. 2

Although the plant is found as far south as Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, it is considered to be rare and could become an endangered species. Labrador tea has been used in folk medicine for coughs, chest and kidney ailments, headache, rheumatism, diarrhea, sore throat, and malignancies. 3 , 4 , 5

Labrador tea Uses and Pharmacology

The leaves of L. groenlandicum have been used as an astringent. They were once used to treat dysentery and diarrhea. 3 They are also said to be very useful in coughs and colds, as well as bronchial and pulmonary infections. The tea is prepared by adding 1 teaspoonful of dried leaves to 1 cup of boiling water.

A stronger decoction has been recommended externally for itching and redness from skin ailments, such as poison ivy. The leaves as a tea have also been used as a heart medicine, and for indigestion, diarrhea, and ease of childbirth. 1 , 4 Homeopathy has used Labrador tea for various ailments, such as insect bites and stings, acne, prickly heat, varicella, and wounds. Homeopathic use also includes asthma, hand and foot pain, gout, rheumatism, ear inflammation, tinnitus, and tuberculosis. 4 Other research discusses use of the leaves in Korea to treat female disorders. 6 It is rarely used today for its historical uses. 3

Dosage

There is no clinical evidence to support specific dosage recommendations for Labrador tea. However, concentrations should not be too high.

Recorded recommendations are 1 teaspoonful of dried leaves for 1 cup of boiling water.

http://www.drugs.com/npp/labrador-tea.html
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Modern Uses of this Plant:
Big mining companies have experimented with finding gold in the stems of the Labrador Tea plant. Labrador Tea is said to concentrate gold in the stems of the plant that it absorbed from the surrounding soil on the Canadian Shield. If there is a quantity of gold in the surrounding area this plant will concentrate the compound. Mining companies concentrate the minerals found in the woody stem of the plant and run a neutron activation analysis looking for concentrations greater than 2.5 part per billion. When this is found they continue further exploration to see if gold deposits exist in a mine-able quantity.

http://www.voyageurcountry.com/htmls/floweringplants/plants/labradortea.html
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