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Each week we will have information on how the herb is used, how to cook with herbs, how to make teas, tonics and recipes. We will never give or sell your email address to anyone. |
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Yarrow Flowers |
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Yarrow sings of fevers, of cold sores, and of flus, And to intestinal pain he certainly rues. Songs of rashes and scratches, clean blood and short fasting, For help with all these, Yarow tea is quite lasting. PERSONALITY PROFILE - YARROW Yarrow is a medicinal herb with a strong mystical history. The stems of the yarrow plant have been used for thousands of years, starting in the Orient, for the divination of fortunes through the use of the I Ching. Forty Yarrow stalks would be gathered, cut to the proper length, and dried. Then the process of "throwing the stalks" would be used to determine which hexagram (explanation of forces at play in a situation) should be applied to the user's question. The use of plants for physical healing often has an esoteric counterpart. In any case, it is good to remember that "A Yarrow in the hand is worth two in the bush", or "Some Yarrow, each day keeps the doctor away", or "Here today, gone with Yarrow"... or however those old sayings are supposed to go (my friends say I often get them a little mixed up). The point of all this is that in addition to its mystical roots, Yarrow is so effective in practical, everyday matters that it has a permanent place on my Ten Essentials list! Yarrow is often put in the category of "bitter herbs" because of the powerful, volatile oil it contains. This oil, called Achillein, together with tannin (tannic acid), gives a stimulating, astringent, and bitter edge to the flavor and action. These properties, along with many others, act on the liver to strengthen its efficiency and stimulate bile production. Yarrow also functions as a strong antiseptic and viral inhibitor. Yarrow's action as an astringent means that it firms and tones tissues, including the tissues of internal organs that might have become flaccid, inefficient, or tired out by abuse from unhealthy habits and/or a toxic environment. While Yarrow tones the tissues, its stimulating property also rehabilitates the body's systems into renewed alertness and immunity. As an antiseptic and antiviral agent, Yarrow kills many harmful microorganisms upon contact. Its volatile oil collects and absorbs many impurities (I think of it as gathering the toxins into little packets) and then, somewhat like a detergent, breaks down these "corralled" toxins into forms much easier for the body to eliminate without the usual illness symptoms. In many ways, Yarrow's inhibiting action is similar to an oil spill cleanup job. The best way to activate the healing properties of Yarrow is to make a water extract, otherwise known as tea. If you want the most potent results from any bitter herb, including Yarrow, it is best not to add any sweetener to it. But, if you have not yet developed a taste for Yarrow and feel you need to sweeten it, please use a little raw honey and forego the use of any other type of sweetener. When you are steeping the Yarrow to make tea, be sure to do this in a covered pot to preserve the volatile oils and protect them from evaporating. If you start with freshly gathered undried Yarrow blossoms or leaves, you must simmer them (rather than steeping them) as slowly as possible, covered, to make the tea. The active properties in Yarrow, can also be extracted in an alcohol-based tincture (a way of making a concentrate) that may be convenient for use with children, while traveling, or for immediate use when making tea is not possible. If you want to experiment with a Yarrow tincture to see the pros and cons of these different forms, see the basic formula under the Yarrow Tincture application in the list below. I have always gathered and dried the Yarrow blossoms for my own use and this is the part of the herb that is commonly found in an herb store. However, the leaves and stems are also potent and could be used medicinally if you gathered your own. Since I am able to gather my own Yarrow easily here in Arizona, 1 use the steins and lease, for making a wondertul Yarrow bath and I save the blossoms for internal use because of their flavor and action. In New England and Arizona I find and gather white blossoms. In Colorado, Yarrow blossoms are often yellow, and there is even a pink blossom that I have only seen growing cultivated. Yarrow grows all over the United States and in many parts of the world. A friend of mine who went mountain climbing in Austria told me that even at timberline he found tiny Yarrow plants growing close to the ground - a little sideways because of the winds, yet strong and lovely with their perky white flower tops. Some people find that there is an herb that is "their" herb - the one they immediately reach for to rebalance the whole system if anything feels as if it might be going wrong. Yarrow, works like that for me, and many of my students have also found this to be the case. I use one cup of Yarrow tea a day as a tonic.
I began to drink a cup of Yarrow tea at night, the last thing before going to bed. The Yarrow strengthened my body's ability to maintain a balanced blood sugar level throughout the night, and I would wake up alert and clear-headed in the morning. Yarrow strenthens and encourages the natural action of important internal organs, including the liver and pancreas, which in turn leads to more optimal functioning, alertness, and available energy in a body that is otherwise in generally good health. So give this Yarrow tea a try if you have any trouble waking up alert in the morning. Struggling with a caffeine addiction? Use Yarrow tea at night and Cayenne herb in the morning. Look in the Cayenne chapter (Chapter II) under the application "Caffeine Withdrawal," and add this use of Yarrow to those instructions.
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Also as Years to Your Health
Green Pharmaceuticals SnoreStop
SnoreStop has a dual therapeutic action. It shrinks swollen soft tissues in the throat where 90% of non-apneic snoring symptoms occur, and it dries built-up mucous in the sinus passages. SnoreStop's mode of action is decongestive, anti-inflammatory, anti-histaminic and mucolytic. Most other formulas just use various oils blended into water for a lubricating action. |