Category Archives: Weekly Weeder

Weekly Weeder #20 – Winter Cress + Wildcrafting Wednesday

Winter Cress flower

Today’s featured plant is Winter Cress, Barbarea vulgaris.

Winter Cress is also known as Bittercress, Common cress, Indian posey, Land cress, St. Barbara herb, Scurvy cress, Upland cress, Yellow rocket.

Range and Identification of Winter Cress

Although native to Asia and Europe, winter cress is now naturalized in much of North America. It can be found throughout most of the United States and Canada (see map).

It can grow in sandy or loamy soil, and prefers full sun and moist ground.  It appears in most spots other weeds might appear in, such as open fields or along roads or railroad tracks.

The plant grows from 1 to 2 feet tall.  Leaves alternate along the stalk, and are coarsely toothed and roughly club-shaped.  Leaves are 3-5 inches long, and the higher ones tend to attach to the stem. (Wildflowers of Wisconsin)

Winter Cress leaves

The flowers are yellow (like buttercup or dandelions), and are regular in shape.  They grow in clusters near the top of the plant.  The plant is biennial (it requires two growing seasons to complete its life cycle). During the first growing season it produces mainly foliage. In its second year it will flower and set seed.  It is often one of the first plants to flower in spring.

When I was a little girl, I remember certain fields being full of this plant, especially low lying ones.  Sometimes there would be another sea of yellow right on the heels of the dandelion blossoms.

Winter Cress as Food for Wildlife and People

Winter Cress flowers is important as an early season source of nectar and pollen for bees and some butterflies.  Its seeds are eaten by some birds such as doves and grosbeaks.

Before the plant blossoms (for second year plants) or after the first fall frosts (for first year plants), the leaves are edible as salad greens, although bitter.  Once it has blossomed, the leaves become so bitter as to be inedible.  Caution is advised in eating the raw plant, only small amounts 1 tbls. chopped leaves or less. (source)  Unopened blossoms (buds) are edible if cooked lightly in a manner similar to broccoli. The plant is rich in vitamins C and A.  Check out a recipe for stir fried winter cress here.

Medicinal Uses of Winter Cress

The plant is said to possess anti-carcinogenic (anti-cancer) properties. Cherokee Indians used a tea brewed from the aerial parts as a blood purifier. It is also used as an appetite stimulator (bitter greens). Europeans used poulticed leaves to treat wounds.

Winter Cress also works as a mild antitussive (cough suppressor), a bitter (aids digestion), and may have a slight diuretic effect (helps get rid of excess water).

As always, any medical information is for informational purposes only. Always exercise caution when using any wild plants, as allergic reactions and drug interactions are rare but may happen.  Always make sure to clearly identify your plants and harvest from a clean area.  Visit this post to see my favorite wildcrafting books.

If you’ve enjoyed this post and would like to see more, please take a moment to share, Like or Pin It.  I know a number of readers enjoy these posts, but they do tend to get less traffic than many other types of posts, so it really helps if you take a moment to share.

Mountain Rose Herbs stocks many of the herbs and plants featured on Wildcrafting Wednesday. They also carry an assortment of bottles, droppers and other supplies.

Mountain Rose Herbs. A Herbs, Health & Harmony Com

Wildcrafting Wednesday #38

Once again, I’m joining up with Kathy at Mind, Body and Sole and Sharon at Wood Wife’s Journal to host Wildcrafting Wednesday.  Please share your stories on how you incorporate herbs into day-to-day life. We welcome anything and everything herbal – from crafts to cleaning to tinctures to cooking. Home remedies for common ailments are especially appreciated.

Self-sufficient living and back-to-basics tips to save food, money, and resources are great, too – if it involves traditional methods of homemaking and home healing then we want to read about it! Maybe you’ve got a sweet stillroom, a beautiful herb garden or a handy cold frame – tell us about it.

Just link up your post using the linky widget, add a link back here, and leave a comment below telling a bit about your post. Return links benefit everyone, so please don’t skip that step. Older posts are welcome, but skip the giveaways, since those links become outdated. (You can leave a link to a giveaway in the comments, that’s fine.)

Top posts from last week’s hop were:

Lotion Bar Recipes from Natural Mothers Network

10 Homemade Mother’s Day Gifts from Revitalise Your Health

Using Vinegar as Fabric Softener Review by Green Idea Reviews

Thanks so much to everyone who joined in.  We’d love to see you again!

Weekly Weeder is Dormant for the Season, but Wildcrafting Wednesday is Still Live

The garden and weeds are going to sleep for the winter, so my Weekly Weeder posts are going dormant for a while, too.  I may add one here and there if I dig up some late roots or experiment with dried materials I’ve already gathered, but regular posts won’t be back full time until next spring.

That said, I’ll still be joining up with Kathy at Mind, Body and Sole and Sharon at Wood Wife’s Journal to host Wildcrafting Wednesday, a link up for all things wildcrafting.  To view the complete guidelines, see the mullein post.  Please add your wildcrafting link below, and then link your post back to one of the hosts sites for the hop.

Weekly Weeder #15 – Shepherd’s Purse

Shepherd’s Purse Flowers and Seed Capsules

Today’s featured plant is Shepherd’s Purse, Capsella bursa-pastoris, also known as Blind Weed, Bolsa del Pastor, Bolsa-de-Pastor, Bourse a Pasteur, Bourse-à-Pasteur, Bursae Pastoris Herba, Capsella, Capselle a Pasteur, Capsella bursa-pastoris, Caseweed, Cocowort, Erva-Do-Bom-Pastor, Hirtentaschel, Lady’s Purse, Mother’s-Heart, Naeng-i, Pepper-And-Salt, Pick-Pocket, Poor Man’s Parmacettie, Rattle Pouches, Sanguinary, Shepherd’s Heart, Shepherd’s Scrip, Shepherd’s Sprout, Shovelweed, St. James’ Weed, Thlaspi bursa-pastoris, Toywort, Witches’ Pouches, and Zurron de Pastor.

Range and Identification of Shepherd’s Purse

Shepherd’s Purse is native to Europe, but is found throughout the world, especially in cool climates. The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service range map shows it throughout the United States and Canada.   In The Gardner’s Weed Book, Barbara Pleasant refers to it as a “hardly annual”, stating that “seedlings that sprout in fall sit through winter as small rosettes less than 2 inches across and easily survive temperatures to 0 degrees F.”

This initial rosette gives way to a larger rosette a few inches across, followed by 4 to 20 inch flower spikes.  As these spikes grow, purse-shaped (I think they look more heart shaped) seed capsules form along the flower stems.  These are the most easily identified feature of the plant. The flowers are small and white, with four petals.  It flowers year round, as temperatures allow.  A single plant can produce from 500 to 90,000 seeds.  If you wish to keep them from randomly seeding out, pull them when the soil is moist (they have a fine tap root).  I personally don’t find them to be overly invasive, but they are considered as such in some areas.

The photo below shows the entire plant.  Note the small rosette at the base and the long, spindly flower stalks.

Shepherd’s Purse as Food for Wildlife (and Humans)

The leaves serve as food for grazing animals, and many small mammals and birds eat the seeds of shepherd’s purse.  Bees, flies, wasps, butterflies and skippers feed on the small flowers. (For a detailed list of nectar feeder who use this plant, visit Illinois Wildflowers.info.

The greens of shepherd’s purse are fairly mild (it’s in the mustard family, which tends to have rather bitter greens).  They can be eaten raw or cooked, but thus far I’m only sampled as I’ve been working in the garden.

Medicinal Uses of Shepherd’s Purse

Live and Feel describes the properties and benefits of shepherd’s purse (please visit their site to read the article in its entirety):

This herb contains alkaloids, substances like thiamine, histamine, histidine, flavonoids, phenolic compounds, organic acids, tannins, lectins, bitter compounds, volatile oil, mineral salts, and vitamins. Shepherd’s purse has analeptic properties, can adjust blood pressure, and is also a haemostatic herb, an astringent vasoconstrictor able to stimulate leucocytosis.

Treatments

It has haemostatic and vasoconstrictor effects and it can be used to treat all types of bleedings: nosebleeds, stomach bleeds, and menorrhagia.

It has a considerable effect over the uterus, adjusting the menstrual cycle and putting a stop to the abundant uterine bleeding.

In affections such as atherosclerosis, angina pectoris, it is recommended to drink tea from shepherd’s purse because it can adjust blood pressure.

Prolonged treatments with tea or tincture prevent nasal hemorrhoids and abundant menstrual cycles, especially in the cases of hypertensive women or those suffering from obesity.

In cases of stress or anxiety, the use of mixtures made from shepherd’s purse, is recommended. Also, in case of bug bites, the wounds are massaged with mashed herb.

In case of bleeding haemorrhoids, small intestinal enemas or bath water containing lukewarm infusions of shepherd’s purse are an effective treatment. Also, women who have swollen breasts during breastfeeding should heat up water containing shepherd’s purse and apply it on their breasts in small amounts.

This medicinal herb has good results in dealing with muscle-related illnesses. In case of muscle atrophy it is recommended to rub the spots with shepherd’s purse tincture and to drink four cups of tea made of lady’s mantle herb. This treatment can also be applied in cases of hernias.

If you can’t find shepherd’s purse in your garden, it is available dried online at Mountain Rose Herbs.

Mountain Rose Herbs. A herbs, health and harmony c

I hope you’ve enjoyed this post.  If so, please pass it along.

This week I’m joining up with Kathy at Mind, Body and Sole and Sharon at Wood Wife’s Journal to host Wildcrafting Wednesday, a link up for all things wildcrafting.  To view the complete guidelines, see the mullein post.  Please add your wildcrafting link below, and then link your post back to one of the hosts sites for the hop.

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