The first-aid flower
Last weekend, my son had his first run-in with stinging nettle.
I heard “Dad! Dad! Dad!” and he then came running to me with tears in
his eyes, not knowing what was happening to him as welts popped up on his legs
and he began to itch. If you’ve never experienced nettle, the first time is
unexpected and shocking.
Rather than racing back to the cabin to get him into the shower and
cleaned up with soap and water, I told him and his siblings that were sticking
it out and continuing to play and explore in the wilds.
Does that mean I’m a bad father?
Nope.
It means that I know Mother Nature provides.
I quickly found some jewelweed, smashed the stalks of the plant and
spread the watery juices all over where the nettle’s hairs were bothering him. Within
minutes, the pain and itch were gone. Within the hour, the welts completely
disappeared.
Jewelweed is a magical plant – the first aid of the forest -- that you
need to familiarize yourself with. Now, the plant is just sprouting or
developing in cool, shaded
woods or around ponds and streams, showing its blue-green leaves with a
whitish understand and its watery, rather weak stems. Over the next couple of
weeks it will quickly grow to two to four feet in height. During July and
August those plants will sport their tell-tale flowers (at which time you can
memorize what the leaves look like). The
flowers are unmistakable -- brilliant orange, shaped like a bugle or
cornucopia. A closer examination will show reddish-brown speckles all over
them.
If you squeeze the flower at the height of its ripeness, its seeds will explode
out of it. The small green seeds can fly up to five feet, courtesy of the
built-in coils or springs. When that happens, you can even hear a loud “snap”
come from the flower. That explosive nature is why the jewelweed goes by
another name of touch-me-not. Despite that moniker, it’s not dangerous and the
trick is something neat to show young kids.
The plant gets the name of jewelweed because of its somewhat waterproof leaves.
They have on them minute hairs that trap air and cause water to bead up –
looking like jewels.
You might also consider the plant to be a jewel because of its magical powers.
Beyond offering
relief from nettles, it is widely known to be a cure for poison ivy. One can
take its succulent stems and crush them, using the watery juices to wash their
hands and legs after being exposed to poison ivy. Somehow, those juices will
neutralize the ivy’s poison (known as urushiol). This has to be done relatively
immediately, within a few hours of being exposed to the plants.
Urushiol can hold for a long time -- even
months -- on tents, tarps, toys, and your pets’ fur, so you can use crushed
touch-me-not to wash those items to make sure they are good for handling once
again by your family.
Jewelweed juice can
be used to calm itching that occurs from mosquito bites. It has also been used
to treat razor burn, acne, and heat rash. It is also one of the best natural
remedies for Athlete’s Foot, as it at once calms the troublesome itch and kills
the fungus that causes it. It has that same effect in the fight against
dandruff.
Its powers don’t end there. It can tame an itch elsewhere on your body. In the
1800s some folks used it to fight hemorrhoids, making an ointment by boiling
the plant with pig lard. Jewelweed contains 2-methoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone, an
anti-inflammatory agent and fungicide. It’s the same substance that is an
active ingredient in Preparation H.
Jewelweed really is a jewel. With some plants, their curative powers are more
anecdotal and mythical than they are realistic and effective. That’s not the
case with this one, which has scientifically-proven abilities.
Nature heals…in many
ways.

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