Medicinal Garden: Plants You Can Use
By Tina Samuels, published Apr 28, 2005
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For years, plants have been used to treat what ails you. Perhaps your grandmother bestowed the virtues of dandelion tea for a stomachache. Whatever the case, there are certainly flowers that can be grown close to home so that you can have your very own medicine cabinet in your garden. The following seven plants are both pretty and useful and can be grown with ease.
Asclepias tuberosa (Butterfly Milkweed)This perennial herbaceous plant grows up to 2 feet. An original plant with hairy stems, it has milky juice and ½ inch diameter blooms. Expect orange flowers starting in early summer. This is the only milkweed that has alternate leaves.Used as a weak tea this is good for a laxative and a diuretic but be careful as in strong doses it can be toxic.
Achillea (Yarrow) Yarrow, depending on variation, will grow from 6 inches to 4 feet high. It's a full sun, drought resistant, fern-like plant. Blooming in June, if deadheaded it will rebloom in September. Blooms range in the reds, pinks, yellow, or white. You may propagate these in spring by division.A tea is made from yarrow to use as a cold and flu remedy and to promote sweating in certain cases.
Cypripedium acaule (Pink Lady's Slipper)This version is the only Cypripedium to require an acidic soil. Test your soil before planting and make sure it has a range of pH 3.5-4.5. These will bloom 5-6 years after first growth; have light to dark pink flowers from May to June, and reach 8-18 inches. The leaves look like they are coming right out of the ground instead of off the stem. Native Americans used this to invoke spirit dreams just by its presence.A tea is used to alleviate pain, lessen anxiety, and to induce sleep.
Medicinal Garden: Plants You Can Use
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Posted on 04/28/2005 at 11:04:00 PM