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Hands-on healing remedies: 150 recipes for herbal balms, salves, oils, liniments & other topical therapies PDF

321 Pages·2012·29.974 MB·English
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Recipes for Herbal Balms, Salves, Oils, Liniments & Other Topical Therapies Stephanie L. Tourles Illustrations by Samantha Hahn ß Storey Publishing The mission of Storey Publishing is to serve our customers by publishing practical information that encourages personal independence in harmony with the environment. Edited by Deborah Balmuth and Lisa H. Hiley Art direction and book design by Mary Winkelman Velgos Text production by Liseann Karandisecky Illustrations by © Samantha Hahn, except for page 17 by Alison Kolesar Author’s photograph by © Debra Bell Indexed by Andrea Chesman © 2012 by Stephanie L. Tourles All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages or reproduce illustrations in a review with appropriate credits; nor may any part of this book be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmit- ted in any form or by any means — electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other — without written permission from the publisher. The information in this book is true and complete to the best of our knowledge. All recommendations are made without guarantee on the part of the author or Storey Publishing. The author and publisher dis- claim any liability in connection with the use of this information. Storey books are available for special premium and promotional uses and for customized editions. For further information, please call 1-800-793-9396. Storey Publishing 210 MASS MoCA Way North Adams, MA 01247 www.storey.com Printed in the United States by R.R. Donnelley 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Tourles, Stephanie L., 1962– Hands-on healing remedies / by Stephanie L. Tourles. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-61212-006-5 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN 978-1-60342-877-4 (e-book) 1. Materia medica, Vegetable. 2. Naturopathy. I. Title. RS164.T684 2012 615.5’35—dc23 2012027705 3 To my dearest Bill — m y husband, partner, and best friend. Your never-ending energy, independent spirit, support, and encouragement uplift me in all that I do. I treasure the boulder-lined garden you created for me, filled with incredibly deep, dark, fertile, crumbly soil. It’s a garden beyond my wildest dreams. My culinary and healing herbs thrive, the vegetable plants strain under their heavy yields, and the flowers explode with vibrant colors . . . eliciting curiosity from the neighbors, causing them to wonder if I have magical, quick-fingered plant fairies who work in and maintain my massive “jungle of a garden” under the cloak of darkness. It makes me chuckle. I cherish every moment we have together on this incredible journey we call life, my dear Willy. And in memory of “Mainie,” my 20-pound, middle-aged, semi-wild Maine Coon cat who loved to sleep in my chamomile patch on warm late-spring afternoons. When sick or injured, he’d let me feed him dropper after dropper of chamomile tea, which zonked him right out and usually had him feeling better within a matter of days. “Mainie” definitely chose German chamomile as his herbal ally; unfortunately, it couldn’t protect him from cars. acknowledgments In writing this book, I’m indebted to the great herbal teachers and elders who have shaped my “green educa- tion” over the years: Mrs. Ottie Faye Ashe and Mrs. Eveline Pilkington, for sharing their handwritten herbal formulas with me, many of which date back to the mid-nineteenth century; my grandfather Earl C. Ashe, who initiated me into this healing world of herbalism; and my grandmother Phenie S. Ashe, the possessor of the greenest thumb on earth. Much gratitude goes out to Candis Cantin, Anne McIntyre, Rosemary Gladstar, Deb Soule, and Michael Tierra, teachers with whom I’ve had a chance to study varying traditions of herbal wisdom, namely Ayurvedic, Western, and Chinese. I’ve been researching and formulating topical, plant-based healing recipes for the past three decades, and I am indeed grateful to all of you who have volunteered to be my “guinea pigs,” my live subjects on whom I was allowed to test my herbal formulations and receive much valued feedback. And lastly, thanks to Deborah Balmuth, my longtime, beloved editor, for giving me the opportunity to share these healing rem- edies with you, my dear readers. 4 Introduction...............................................................6 Part 1 ...............8 Making Your Own Healing Formulas Chapter 1 An Introduction to Traditional Healing ........................ 10 Chapter 2 The Herbal Home Apothecary ...................................20 Chapter 3 Tools of the Trade...............................................40 Part 2 ....................48 A Collection of Herbal Remedies Alopecia (Balding)............................................................50 Anxiety (Nervous Tension) ....................................................54 Arthritis (Osteoarthritis)......................................................60 Athlete’s Foot ................................................................66 Backache....................................................................69 Bedsores and Pressure Sores (Skin Ulcers)....................................... 73 Blemishes ................................................................... 77 Blisters (Friction).............................................................82 Body Odor...................................................................85 Boils (Furuncles) .............................................................88 Bruises (Contusions).......................................................... 91 Burns (Minor) ...............................................................96 Children’s Illnesses and Discomforts ..........................................100 Cold and Flu Symptoms.......................................................118 Cold Hands and Feet......................................................... 125 Cold Sores and Genital Sores (Herpes Simplex) ................................. 129 Cracked Skin (Severely Dry Hands and Feet).................................... 133 Cuts and Scrapes.............................................................137 Dandruff (Seborrheic Dermatitis) ............................................. 142 Dermatitis, Contact (Rashes).................................................. 144 Dry Skin ................................................................... 147 Eczema .................................................................... 154 Elder Care Concerns (70+ Years)............................................... 158 5 Environmentally Damaged Skin .............................................. 166 Fatigue..................................................................... 170 Foot Therapy ............................................................... 175 Gout....................................................................... 179 Hand and Nail Therapy ...................................................... 182 Headaches (Tension)......................................................... 189 Hemorrhoids (External) ..................................................... 193 Hives (Urticaria) ............................................................ 198 Infections of the Skin (Minor to Moderate) ..................................... 201 Insect Bites and Stings ...................................................... 209 Insomnia................................................................... 212 Lip Therapy ................................................................ 217 Memory Enhancement ......................................................220 Men’s Concerns .............................................................223 Mental Fatigue..............................................................229 Muscle Stiffness and Soreness ................................................232 Poison Plant Rashes..........................................................235 Psoriasis.................................................................... 237 Respiratory Congestion ...................................................... 241 Scars.......................................................................248 Splinters ...................................................................252 Stress ......................................................................255 Stretch Marks...............................................................260 Sunburn ...................................................................264 Warts (Common)............................................................ 267 Women’s Intimate Concerns..................................................269 Part 3 ................................. 277 The Ingredient Dictionary Resources ............................................................... 306 Recommended Reading ................................................... 309 Metric Conversions....................................................... 311 Index.....................................................................312 6 tea, and real apple cider vinegar. My great- Introduction grandmother, along with her many children, explored the hollows and hills of impoverished Appalachia, learning to identify the local flora and fauna, and collected beneficial herbs to use as healing medicines. Whether intentioned or not, she passed this knowledge down to my grandfather, Earl C. Ashe. I never planned on becoming an herbal- ist, a lover of the plant kingdom, a creator of healing formulas. I think it was — and is — my destiny. I inherited my “I can grow anything” green thumb and green blood from my grand- mother, Phenie Sims Ashe, and my initiation I t was the early 1900s, and like other into herbalism came under the tutelage of my self- reliant folk in the Great Smoky grandfather. Mountains region of North Carolina, my Several times a year, my family would great-g randmother, Maude Ashe, practiced make the two-hour drive north from our sub- the basic yet effective traditional healing urban home in Stone Mountain, Georgia, to arts of her ancestors, supplemented by a few my grandparent’s 20-acre country homestead remedies acquired from the local Cherokee located in Clarkesville. My brother, Shawn, and Indians, in order to care for her family’s ills. I loved to visit the country — so many things She, like so many other housewives of the day, to see and do. Shawn liked to go visit the cows was expected to be the family doctor, if need out in the back pasture and tour the barn, and be. Making effective, gentle medicine gener- I was drawn to the gardens, fields, woods, and ally wasn’t a complicated affair. If an infant streams. We liked to walk and explore with my had colic, you fed him a little warm catnip, grandfather as he did his chores. On one par- chamomile, or calendula tea and bathed him ticular walk, my grandfather and I were hiking in a linden flower or catnip tea bath. If you had through cattle pastures and woods — his big, a bad cough, you could make a fine soothing rough farmer hand holding my soft little girl medicine from honey, strong black cherry bark hand — and I can remember him telling me, 7 “Where we grew up, we didn’t go to doctors of my grandfather’s knowledge and absorbed unless it was a dire emergency. We didn’t have it like a sponge. Unbeknownst to me, I was a the money. Our mother made medicine from budding herbalist. the local herbs and she dosed us with that, Today, as a licensed holistic aesthetician, whether we liked it or not. The stuff you had to certified aromatherapist, and community swallow often didn’t taste good. The medicines herbalist, I devote my career to plant-based that got rubbed into your skin, like the herbal topical remedies and nutritional therapies for salves, thickened with local beeswax, lard, or skin disorders. I write, formulate remedies, lanolin, and the brownish-green colored lini- grow herbs, teach, and work as an herbal ments made with homemade grape wine or practitioner. I feel that my grandfather’s spirit corn whiskey, were used to prevent infections, has literally pushed me into spreading the relieve stuffiness, help you sleep, or make your word about the healing benefits of herbs. This muscles feel better after a long day at work. ancient form of plant medicine, phytotherapy, Those things worked real nice and most times should stay alive and vibrant. smelled pretty good, too.” I was intrigued. This book represents the collection of topi- Thus began my “training.” From then cal herbal healing formulations that, over the on, sensing my interest, my grandfather past 30 years, I’ve developed, experimented turned our walks into “botany and chemistry with, and perfected to the best of my ability. In classes” — so to speak. He taught me the names these pages, I’ll share with you my opinions, of the trees and the green plants, the uses and knowledge, and observations, based upon medicinal properties of tree bark, acorns, pine accumulated wisdom and experience, of how sap, roots, leaves, flowers, and even the gray- our green neighbors, the herbs, can be effec- blue clay in the stream banks. I can remember tive medicine. I hope you find the instructions my fourth-grade science teacher being amazed easy to follow and the remedies useful; com- at how much I knew! I learned that these free- bined with the right lifestyle and diet, they can for-the-taking “medicines of the earth” could bring significant relief to common skin condi- aid the body’s natural processes to heal ill- tions and body ailments, plus enhance your nesses within and without. I fell in love with well-being and comfort. the idea that nature could provide just about May you be happy, healthy, hearty, and anything you needed to naturally care for your whole! health and beauty. I was hooked. I was in awe Part 1 9 the first curious in an amazingly bright red oil that works topically No one knows who human being was who decided to approach a par- to bring relief from muscle soreness, bruises, and ticular plant, pick a handful of leaves, stems, and the pain and inflammation of nerve damage? Who flowers, and brew them into a tea in hopes of sooth- discovered that elderberries and pokeberries could ing indigestion. Nor do we know who first chewed color cloth a beautiful bluish-purple, or that rose on a plantain leaf in order to apply the resultant petals, when allowed to macerate in warm, purified green “spit paste” to a bee sting, bringing almost fat, make a solid perfume that doubles as an uplift- immediate pain relief. Who realized that adding ing medicinal aromatic for times of grief, depres- cumin seeds to dinner greatly enhanced the flavor sion, and emotional stress? We’ll never know who and digestibility of the food? Or that infusing olive these individuals were, but thank goodness for oil with St. John’s wort flowers and leaves resulted them and their inquisitive natures. Uncomplicated, ardent medicine-making is as fundamental to the art and science of Herbalism as simple passionate cooking is to the art and science of nutrition. High technology has never increased the nutritional power of good food, simply prepared. — James Green, The Herbal Medicine- Maker’s Handbook

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