Plants with healing properties

Yvonne Smith

Greeter
Staff member
This thread is for any plants that we might be growing, or thinking about growing, that also are said to have medicinal properties. We know that many of the plants we think of as weeds were brought over by early settlers to America because they were considered healing medicinal plants.
This included plants like dandelion and Plantago (also called plantain); but there are also plants, shrubs, and trees that are native to an area that have been used for centuries , and some of those were eventually patented into a medicine .

Aspirin is one of the most common medicines that comes from a plant.
It is found in its natural state in willow trees. Some willows have more natural aspirin than others, but all of them have some of it.
Using the natural willow to make aspirin does not have any of the side effects that taking as aspirin tablet has, so it is safer in that respect. This video explains how to take willow bark and steep it for pain relief.

Bobby and I have been talking about having a weeping willow in the back yard, and keeping it pruned so it does not get too large. I ordered cuttings from Amazon for weeping curly willow trees.
I will get two cuttings to root, so we should at lest get one good cutting to plant. We can also use the tree to help root other cuttings since willow is supposed to be great for helping any kind of cuttings to root, as well as trying it out as a pain medicine.

 
I know a few plants that heal, but @Mary Stetler. We grow Arnica montana here, We also have "Toothache plant", and, of course, Aloe vera. I know we grow a lot of things that heal but that is largely my wife's department and she makes tinctures, extracts, and a few salves and such as well. Lemon balm, bee balm, and we have some Balm of Gilead here that is made from local poplar trees, in addition to willow, of which I think Alaska has 26 types of willow.
 
I grow marijuana...... Legally I am allowed to grow 4 plants for my personal use, but only one plant is enough for me.. We don't consume it but I make an ointment for mainly arthritis and pain.. Some years I will grow 2 plants, depending on how many containers I have left over from last year..
One plant yields me about 25 to 30 containers of ointment, mainly depending on how large the plant grows.. Each container is almost a cup.. Just a bit does the trick and it lasts for hours and hours.. There isn't any other ointment on the market that is that potent.. I've been doing this for the past 5 or more years and it is very good..
Easy recipe but time consuming once a year in the fall.. Well worth the effort and very cheap..
 
I grow marijuana...... Legally I am allowed to grow 4 plants for my personal use, but only one plant is enough for me.. We don't consume it but I make an ointment for mainly arthritis and pain.. Some years I will grow 2 plants, depending on how many containers I have left over from last year..
One plant yields me about 25 to 30 containers of ointment, mainly depending on how large the plant grows.. Each container is almost a cup.. Just a bit does the trick and it lasts for hours and hours.. There isn't any other ointment on the market that is that potent.. I've been doing this for the past 5 or more years and it is very good..
Easy recipe but time consuming once a year in the fall.. Well worth the effort and very cheap..
If I had some seeds, I would grow some, too. I am not sure if it is legal to do that yet in Alabama, but I think that it is.
People grew the hemp plant to make ropes, tents and other products with the fiber, and the name cannabis is where we get the word “canvas” from.
Once people started using it as a drug, it became illegal., and was developed for the psychoactive benefits; but there are a lot of varieties which have the same healing properties and not mind-altering.

People add the fresh leaves to smoothies for health benefits, and since it is the flower bud that is used as a drug, the leaves have very little of the THC in them, and can be used for medical and not as a drug.
I remember trying smoking pot, way back in the 70’s, and I hated it, but I do not like anything that messes with my mind. Even so, I would like to grow some and make an ointment like you do, @Steve North .
 
My daughter makes all sorts of ointments. I'm not sure if marijuana is generally legal here but if it is maybe she could try some for me. She makes a jewel weed, plantain etc salve that is fabulous for bites and stings. but it doesn't make it down to the joints.
 
In the marijuana plants, there is a male plant and a female plant.....
The male is mostly CBD which is more for healing but it also has some THC in the buds....
The female plant has mostly THC in the buds which is what I use for my ointment.. The leaves as well.. A more potent plant..
Like i said, i have a formula to make the ointment using both leaves and buds from the female plant....
 
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