Friday, October 12, 2012

Herb gardens create remedy


Herb gardens create remedy

Written by Jennifer Forker Associated Press


What if you could soothe a sore throat or a headache with the snip of a scissors? Plant some herbs indoors now, before fall sets in, and you could have a winter’s worth of folksy remedies.

Many medicinal plants, especially herbs, grow well indoors, said Amy Jeanroy, who runs a greenhouse business near her Ravenna, Neb., home and writes and teaches about medicinal herbs. She recommends starting with these five: thyme, chamomile, mint, lemon balm and sage.

Each works well as a tea. Grow, cut and dry them for use throughout the year, or use fresh herbs. To brew a tea, add 1 teaspoon of dried – or 3 teaspoons of fresh – herbs to 1 cup of boiled water, steep several minutes, then remove the herbs.

All five herbs aid digestion, said herbalist Christina Blume, who has taught medicinal and other herb-related classes at the Denver Botanic Gardens.

“A lot of herbs that people already cook with are herbs that have medicinal qualities,” adds Jeanroy. “It doesn’t necessarily mean it’s kicking the flu for you. It helps you.”

Physician Andrew Weil maintains a list of healthful herbs and their uses at his website, DrWeil.com.

Consult a doctor before trying to treat a health problem with herbs, Jeanroy said.

She treats her five children with herbs such as chamomile. “It helps with the crankiness the kids get when they’re feverish,” she said.

Thyme, Jeanroy said, can soothe a throat sore from coughing, and Blume touts its anti-viral properties.

“I always drink thyme tea when I fly,” said Blume, “because you’re re-breathing all that air that everyone’s breathing And (the tea) tastes good.”

Mint – especially peppermint – is a home remedy for an upset stomach. And it can mask the strong or bitter taste of some other herbs, such as sage, which can soothe mouth sores and bleeding gums after dental work, said Jeanroy.

Lemon balm can be drunk as a tea to counter headaches, added to other medicinal teas to mask an unpleasant taste or steeped stronger to make a topical antiseptic cleanser for a skinned knee or itchy bug bite, she said.

“If there’s one herb that does tons of great stuff, lemon balm is it,” said Jeanroy.

Medicinal gardens are centuries old; modern ones date to the apothecary gardens of the Italian Renaissance during the 16th century, said Teresa Mazikowski, a staff gardener who spearheaded the Buffalo and Erie County (N.Y.) Botanical Gardens’ indoor medicinal garden last October.

Botanical gardens grew out of these early medicinal gardens.

The indoor medicinal garden that Mazikowski tends goes beyond common herbs. It was planted with public education in mind, she said, and includes rare and tropical plants, as well.

“The idea is to teach people how to keep themselves healthy so they don’t have to take drugs” when they’re sick, Mazikowski said.

The D’Youville College School of Pharmacy and Mercy Hospital, both in Buffalo, collaborated with the city’s botanical gardens to launch the medicinal garden with plants that show promise in pharmaceutical research, Mazikowski said, including turmeric, Pacific yew, cayenne pepper and ginseng.

Her own indoor garden includes oregano, mint, parsley, sage, lemon balm, lemon verbena, catmint and chives.

Start with a small indoor garden, she suggests, and know that the plants aren’t likely to last longer than 18 months. Use a large, clean pot filled with sterile potting soil. Sow seeds or use small starter plants, which often are inexpensive this time of year.

Unless you have a spot that gets six hours or more of sunlight, you’ll need to invest in grow lights, said Jeanroy. Buy inexpensive, full-spectrum light bulbs, sold at home improvement stores, which you can pop into a table or floor lamp. Your plants will need 14 to 16 hours of this artificial light daily.

Plants grow best if the daytime indoor temperature is between 70 and 75 degrees, Jeanroy said, and the nighttime temperature about 10 degrees cooler.

Make sure there’s a drainage hole in the pot. Soggy soil can lead to mildew, mold and pest problems.

Take care of your herbs, and they’ll return the favor. “I don’t know if it stems from surrounding myself with plants or spending so much time with them, but the whole process – you’re pinching back herbs that smell good and heating the water (for tea) – I think that’s part of the healing,” she said.

http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20121011/LIFE07/310110039/Herb-gardens-create-remedy

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