Monday 29 January 2018
Medicine chest 4(a) - infused oils, two barks and a root
Since the first two items up today are made into "infused oils", I'll start by describing the method for making them in your kitchen. This will be review for some of you but review never hurts!
It's a pretty straightforward process, especially when working with materials that are fairly dry to begin with, like the barks, and they're unlikely to cause you much trouble. But whoa nelly, it can go really wrong, really quickly with other parts of a plant, in which case it's still simple but not necessarily easy. With moisture laden materials like juicy leaves or gooey roots (I'm looking at you, comfrey!) you have to be on the ball or can go all south pretty badly.
But I was thinking about that not long ago and it strikes me that it's kinda cool that an oil can become so riddled, so quickly, with slimy, scary looking mold; I take it as an indication that the stuff we're working with is teeming with life on the microscopic level.
I'm always comforted to know that life on a microscopic level is teeming somewhere nearby. We'd be in a mess of trouble if it wasn't.
Labels:
aspen bark,
aspen oil,
Doctrine of Signatures,
infused oils,
medicine chest,
pain
Saturday 27 January 2018
Tigers don't make good house pets
(Wherein she starts out on a philosophical bent, then gets pretty real about horsetail herb and does a little pep talk at the end)
There's a 'trend', you may have heard of it, known as 'rewilding'. It seemed to come out of something like the same place as the paleo movement; from the idea that we're in an evolutionary mismatch, both with our food and our disconnection from 'nature' (whatever that means) .. and so in one way or another people are reaching for ways to re-establish that connection, or eat and live in ways that are more evolutionarily appropriate. (It's been a 'thing' forever, of course, just by different names.) I'm on the tail end of that hippie, back to the land generation so I've lived that way a bit, and my somewhat older husband, a bit more (he actually lived on a commune in the wilds of British Columbia for a while in the 60's!).
The funny thing is that when people really do put themselves into a position where they are 'living off the land' they discover what humans have known all along; that it's really fucking hard to do. From 'here' it looks noble and romantic, and I suppose we could say it is .. but it's life-threateningly difficult too. Not only that, but when done authentically, it can/will often suck out any and all energy that might have been used for other purposes beyond hardscrabble survival.
There's a 'trend', you may have heard of it, known as 'rewilding'. It seemed to come out of something like the same place as the paleo movement; from the idea that we're in an evolutionary mismatch, both with our food and our disconnection from 'nature' (whatever that means) .. and so in one way or another people are reaching for ways to re-establish that connection, or eat and live in ways that are more evolutionarily appropriate. (It's been a 'thing' forever, of course, just by different names.) I'm on the tail end of that hippie, back to the land generation so I've lived that way a bit, and my somewhat older husband, a bit more (he actually lived on a commune in the wilds of British Columbia for a while in the 60's!).
The funny thing is that when people really do put themselves into a position where they are 'living off the land' they discover what humans have known all along; that it's really fucking hard to do. From 'here' it looks noble and romantic, and I suppose we could say it is .. but it's life-threateningly difficult too. Not only that, but when done authentically, it can/will often suck out any and all energy that might have been used for other purposes beyond hardscrabble survival.
Wednesday 24 January 2018
Medicine chest 3 - Slippery Elm - the safe and the not so safe.
Here's a surprise for you all, I do some of my foraging in the retail environment! Ha!
Slippery Elm Bark - While we do have slippery elm trees in our neck of the woods (and I'm pretty sure I have a couple of weedy youngsters coming up in the wilder edges of our yard) I have yet to experiment with making my own slippery elm bark powder.
Friday 19 January 2018
Medicine chest - 2nd instalment (hair tonics and dizzy spells)
This looks to be turning into a series of posts, and the plant descriptions seem to be getting more rambling as I go .. typical me. Don't take any of this as comprehensive, these are snap shots only. And remember, this 'list' is in no particular order of importance, I'm just writing them as they pop into my head. The idea is to throw a few bits and pieces at you that you might not read in "typical" plant monographs elsewhere, things I've learned by experience.
In fact, just pretend you're sitting at my kitchen table listening to me yabber, rather than reading anything authoritative, okay?
In fact, just pretend you're sitting at my kitchen table listening to me yabber, rather than reading anything authoritative, okay?
Labels:
bergamot,
dandelions,
dizzy spells,
hair hell,
medicine chest,
Meniere's disease,
monarda,
nettle root tincture,
nipping crap in the bud,
sweetleaf,
yellow dock
Tuesday 9 January 2018
Medicine chest - the first 5
Someone was asking me for a list of the herbs I have in my medicine chest .. ho boy.
Seeing as how I've been obsessively collecting and messing about with just about anything that grows in our area for a couple of decades now, there's a lot of stuff in my 'medicine chest'. I've filled the shelves and cupboards of an oversized china cabinet with various sized mason jars, jam jars and tincture bottles and another, the one that officially is supposed to hold the good china, is starting to see more than just my Grandmother's dishes.
Labels:
calendula,
chamomile,
dandelions,
evening primrose,
how to,
medicine chest,
St John'swort,
tinctures
Sunday 7 January 2018
What you'll learn here - and what you won't (plus bonus rant)
I dunno if it's there's something up with the planets these days but I'm feeling particularly unencumbered by the need to treat anyone's feelings delicately right now.
Don't get me wrong, I'm still plenty smiley.
I'm just not in the mood to put up with falsehoods, excuses, wilful blindness or learned helplessness. In other words, the norms of society.
Labels:
clusterfucks,
fucking naturopaths,
learned helplessness,
rant,
respect,
supplements (quit 'em!),
woolly-heads
Wednesday 3 January 2018
10 crazy ideas for better living ..
Here's a post for those who are using the New Year as a launching point for -
A New Way of Doing Things (lol)
It's especially for those who have
Tried Everything
yet can't seem to shed weight or stop snoring or get it up or get things right in the bathroom. Actually, no matter what annoying/scary/disgusting little health issue is driving you to change things up, these are some thoughts that you might just want to consider.
You know what they say, trying the same thing over and over and expecting different results is the definition of insanity (and it doesn't work, either). Why not try something crazy instead?
Labels:
crazy ideas,
essential oils are drugs,
fucking naturopaths,
less=more,
soap box,
supplements (quit 'em!)
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