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Showing posts with label BLOOD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BLOOD. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Wild SHEPHERD'S PURSE (Stops Bleeding)




Stop-Bleeding-Fast-With-This-Wild-Basic-Weed; "Shepherds-Purse." Don't confuse the name of Purslane, not the same. I use to make sure when taking friends on herbal walks they knew the differences along with their medical properties. See: Making anti bacterial bandages.
Stop Bleeding Fast With This Weed- Shepherd's Purse
Check your yard for this beautiful tall, scraggly plant towering a good foot and a half above the other weeds scattering our overgrown yard. I crouched down to get a closer look and immediately noticed the heart shaped pods growing along the lanky stem– I’d recognize them anywhere.
 It was Shepherd’s Purse! I have attempted to grow it from seed in the past without luck, so I was thrilled to find it thriving wild all over our lawn. The more I looked, the more Shepherd’s Purse plants I discovered around our home.
What was so exciting about discovering this “weed” in my yard is that not only is it edible and delicious, it also has medicinal properties as well. We’ll delve into that more in a moment.

Identifying Shepherd’s Purse

Stop Bleeding Fast With This Weed
Would you be able to pick out the Shepherd’s Purse from among these common weeds?
There are several hints to look for when identifying Shepherd’s Purse:
1. The plants will typically grow anywhere from 3 inches tall to 1 1/2 feet.
2. The deeply lobed rosette of leaves resemble dandelion, with symmetrical leaves spreading flat on the ground.
3. A long, slender stem grows from the middle of the rosette with heart shaped seed pods growing along the length of it. (The heart shaped pods are a dead giveaway that it’s Shepherd’s Purse.)
4. When in bloom, you will notice small, white, tightly shaped flowers at the top of the stem.
5. It’s an annual herb. Although it may self-sow, don’t expect to find it growing in the same place the following year. However, the seeds remain viable for up to 20 years, so there’s a good chance you’ll find Shepherd’s Purse growing again at some point if you allowed the plant to go to seed.
6. Shepherd’s Purse grows all across the United States and in many other countries. It can be found from Spring through Winter.
I apologize for not having more photos to help you identify this plant. Hopefully I’ll find some more Shepherd’s Purse growing this year and I can update this article with up-close shots to help you with proper identification. If you’re interested in learning more there are tons of photos you can find online. Here’s a good article to read with lots of information and a few more photos to check out.

Stop Bleeding Fast With This Weed

A Useful Weed

Shepherd’s Purse has many interesting uses. It is enjoyed in culinary dishes in many cultures around the world. It’s also prized for its medicinal qualities. A few of my favorite uses include:
  • Eat it- fresh or cooked. The leaves can be eaten straight off the plant or added to sandwiches, salads, and soups; fresh or cooked. The stalk can be stir-fried, or eaten raw. The flowers can be eaten raw. The seeds can be stir-fried and used as a peppery seasoning. The roots can be used fresh or dried as a substitute for ginger or candied in syrup. (Source: Linda Runyon’s Essential Wild Food Survival Guide)
Personally, I enjoy picking the flowers and seed pods off the plant and eating them fresh.
  • Quickly stop bleeding. Shepherd’s Purse is high in Vit. K, vegetable protein, potassium, calcium, beta-carotene and minerals. It has been used for centuries to stop bleeding internally and externally. For a quick field application, make a poultice by crushing up fresh or dried leaves to apply to a bleeding wound. An herbal tea can also be made to ease internal bleeding. Shepherd’s Purse tincture is often used by midwives to stop excessive bleeding after giving birth. (I actually took two droppersful of an alcohol tincture of Shepherd’s Purse after giving birth to help control the bleeding, per my midwife’s instructions, and can attest to its effectiveness.) Take it orally to treat internal bleeding.
Warnings: Avoid the herb during pregnancy, except during labor because it stimulates uterine contractions.
I’ll give you a little personal story. My youngest daughter… she’s five… she has always had a problem with nose bleeds. If she gets bumped on the nose playing, or falls and hits her nose, it immediately begins to gush blood. I mean more than a steady drip. The flow of blood is constant… and it’s scary! I keep cotton nose plugs on hand (you know, the kind for sports injuries) specifically for her nose bleeds, but she usually soaks through a handful of them before the bleeding stops.
When I found Shepherd’s Purse growing wild in our yard, I took advantage of the opportunity to do an experiment to see just how well it actually works. Using all of the aerial parts, I made a tincture to try on my daughter. I used glycerin as the base instead of alcohol so that it would be safe to put in her nose.
Several weeks later, my daughter was supposed to be in bed sleeping, but instead was fooling around and fell off the bed, hitting her nose on the wall. I heard her screams from across the house, and ran to see what was wrong. She stood in her bedroom doorway, blood dripping all down her shirt and puddles on the carpet at her feet. I whisked her off to the bathroom and gathered my supplies– nose plugs, a pack of ice, and that Shepherd’s Purse tincture.
I dipped the first nose plug into the infused glycerin tincture, and stuck it into the bleeding nostril. I placed the bag of ice on the bridge of her nose, and had her lean over the bathroom sink. I waited for the blood to fill the plug as it usually does almost immediately, but the blood had stopped soaking through. I wondered if the glycerin was preventing the cotton from absorbing blood, so I pulled the plug out with a new one ready in hand to quickly replace the first. But when I pulled that first plug out we were both astonished to discover that the bleeding had completely stopped. It was amazing! Never in her life has her nose stopped bleeding so quickly. I was flooded with relief, and she was thrilled that it was over.
I’ve had more times than I can count over the past year to use this Shepherd’s Purse tincture, and the results have always been consistent and immediate. It will forever have a place in my medicine cabinet.
Stop Bleeding Fast With This Weed

How To Make A Shepherd’s Purse Tincture

A tincture is a very concentrated liquid extract of herbs, and is an effective way to take herbal medicine internally. You can take a dropperful or two straight from the bottle, but if the strong flavor is offensive you may also add the drops to a warm drink and take it that way as well.
Tinctures are usually made by infusing an herb in a strong alcohol base. However, for more sensitive people, especially children, you can choose to use glycerin or apple cider vinegar instead of alcohol. The latter options won’t be as strong medicinally as the former, but they are a good alternative and still work well.
Preserving Shepherd’s Purse in a tincture is a great way to capture the medicinal properties of the plant at the peak of harvest and enables you to reap its medicinal benefits year-round. Prepared tinctures are a quick and effective way to get an application immediately– as opposed to a tea which requires time to steep and cool.
For this particular herb, fresh plants are better than dried. Dried Shepherd’s Purse loses its potency rapidly. Some herbs must be dried before using in a tincture, but not in this case.
Stop Bleeding Fast With This Weed
You’ll Need:
  • Fresh Shepherd’s Purse stalks, seed pods, and flowers. (The dried herb can be used if fresh isn’t an option.)
  • 80-100 proof alcohol (vodka, gin, brandy, rum); vegetable glycerine, or apple cider vinegar
First, gather a bunch of fresh stalks. Instead of uprooting an entire plant, cut the stalks off a couple of inches from ground level.
Chop up all of the aerial parts (stalks, pods, flowers).
Fill a glass container, such as a pint sized mason jar, with the fresh, chopped herbs.
Pour enough alcohol, glycerin, or apple cider vinegar into the jar to completely cover the herbs. Screw on an airtight lid.
Place the jar out of direct sunlight. Allow the herbs to infuse for 4-6 weeks before straining off. Store in a dark place, or in a tinted glass bottle.
The tincture will be good for one year, after which you’ll need to replace it with a fresh batch.
For more information regarding usage and dosage amounts, here is a great article to check out. It’s definitely an interesting herb, and a useful one to be able to identify in the wild.
If you found this article on Shepherd’s Purse interesting, you might also enjoy reading about another edible and medicinal plant: Lamb’s Ear. Don’t forget to check out the Herbal Medic Class Sam Coffman recently taught as well.

Have you ever used Shepherd’s Purse to stop bleeding?

Disclaimer: None of the information in this article is intended to constitute medical advice or treatment. For development of individual health issue treatments, it is advised that any person first consult a qualified health care provider. It is advised that he or she remain under the doctor’s supervision throughout any major health issues.
The author/owner of this website is not a licensed medical practitioner of any kind, is not providing medical advice and assumes no responsibility for your improper use of this information.
The statements in this article have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Information contained within this site is for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.


About Kendra Lynne the author:
I'm a homeschooling, homesteading mama of four, doing everything I can to help my family live more self-sufficiently on our one country acre here in the Bible Belt South.  I've been sharing about it all on my website, New Life on a Homestead, and am excited to bring the preparedness aspect of this lifestyle to all of you here as well! Be sure to check out my *NEW* Canning DVD: At Home Canning For Beginners and Beyond


Drink a tea made from young, dried Wooly Lamb’s Ear leaves to help with fevers, diarrhea, sore mouth and throat, internal bleeding, and weaknesses of the liver and heart. (~Wikipedia)


http://toughertimestoday.blogspot.com/2016/07/eatable-milkweed-foraging.html





Friday, July 11, 2014

Cleanse the Liver, Blood of Toxins'


The North American Indian's use to chewed on dandelion root right before battles. It was known to made them wild and madder than hell; ready to win any battle. So this remedy of straight strength dandelion root could be problem. If  fresh the root, depending on its age maybe too powerful as it can dump too much toxins into the blood stream too fast and that's what made them mean, angry and wilder. It is an excellent liver herb but, you may want to use a milder herb at first.  It's better in leaf or flower form in teas but watch for aggression symptom changes in personalities. Grapefruit juice is also for the liver as well as lemon juice in morning especially. Their are many more liver herbals not listed here. Do not use if sprayed, even if the grounds been sprayed with weed killer.




Keezhaarnelli---Malayalam
Phyllanthus debilis is a herbaceous plant coming in the Family Phyllanthaceae. It is called Pittawakka in Sanskrit. The plant is a liver toner
and is used in the treatment of Hepatitis in Ayurveda. It has no side effects at all.
Wash out the entire plant with roots and crush it in a mortar. Do not add water. Tie it up into a small bag in a smooth piece of cotton cloth.
Put the bag in pure Goat milk and boil. When the milk cools to luke warm, squeeze the bag well and add into the milk. Discard the residue
with the cloth. Drink this milk early morning in empty stomach. The liver is got enlivened and it is a medicine for Hepatitis. It can be used
even when one is taking allopathy drugs for Hepatitis, for that matter any other diseases.
http://shermsorganicnews.blogspot.com/2009/01/liver-remedies.html
Addendum:
Today, there are many ways to reduce cholesterol and fats in the blood and very often people choose natural ways. Here is a recipe for natural drink that cleanses blood vessels and improves blood circulation:
Ingredients:
  • 3 liters of water
  • 1 kg of lemons
  • 1 packet of baking soda
  • 5-6 parsley bunches
Preparation:
First, wash the lemons in cold water and then soak them in warm water. Pour the packet of baking soda and let it sit for about an hour (this will clean all pesticides from lemon peel). In the meantime, wash the parsley and chop into small pieces. After an hour, put everything in a pot and add three liters of water. Cook it over low heat for 2-3 hours until you get about 1.5 liters of syrup. You should drink it (a small cup) every morning on an empty stomach and thus, the amount of the syrup can last about 15 days.


The Liver:
It's said to take seven genetically altered veg to equal the nutrients of a organically grown vegetable.
If its not GMO your diet can cause liver damage and many drugs on the market. If it even referrers to liver on it's direction, don't use.

The state of the liver—a main detoxifier for the body—and would be another indicator of toxins

* Rats fed the GMO lectin potatoes described above had smaller and partially atrophied livers.
* Rats fed Monsanto’s Mon 863 corn, engineered to produce Bt-toxin, had liver lesions and other indications of toxicity.
* Rabbits fed GMO soy showed altered enzyme production in their livers as well as higher metabolic activity.
* The livers of rats fed Roundup Ready canola were 12%–16% heavier, possibly due to liver disease or inflammation.
* And microscopic analysis of the livers of mice fed Roundup Ready soy beans revealed altered gene expression and structural and functional changes.15 Many of these changes reversed after the mice diet was switched to non-GM soy, indicating that GM soy was the culprit. The findings, according to molecular geneticist Michael Antoniou, PhD, "are not random and must reflect some ‘insult’ on the liver by the GMO soy."
Antoniou, who does human gene therapy research in King’s College London, said that although the long-term consequences of the GMO soy diet are not known, it "could lead to liver damage and consequently general toxemia."



sourcewatch.org

Andrographis
barberry
aloe vera
phyllanthus
fennel
ginger
milk thistle
beets (need to be organic)
turmeric

artichoke
orange, lemons, peels i.e.
red clover blossom
yellow dock
burr dock

parsley, chicory i.e.






http://shermsorganicnews.blogspot.com/2009/01/liver-remedies.html more ideas on liver. Remember, the liver needs to be clean for all disease. Herbs are use in duel actions such as liver, blood, cancer or parasite are some of the same. (...some tent to be milder, slower, gentler  i.e)