Homegrown Pain Relief/Leaf

Traditional Garden Cures That Work

I just visited my first pot shop and all I can say is, wow, man. Cannabis use is legal in Washington State, so we can buy and use various forms of cannabis treats as well as trips. There are bonbon bombs and brownies, bongs and assorted pedigreed splif-stuffings as well as more mundane ointments and salves. I was in search of a cannabis cream that has helped a surprising number of my friends find relief from arthritis pains as well as sore muscles and aching joints. My amazing massage therapist had used some on my hands and back and the result sent me straight off to the local den of iniquity with very rewarding results.

As any aging boomer knows, gardening in cold, wet weather can leave a body feeling rather worse for wear. Thus, I found myself waiting in line (!) with a dozen or so other folks of all legal ages. After a chat with the friendly, knowledgeable staff, I paid (cash only) (!!) and left bearing a little pot of Muscle Melt Heating Rub. Do I know how to have fun or what?

Home Remedies, Sensible Precautions

Perhaps I’m odd, but taking medicine makes me uncomfortable, like I can’t trust my body. Of course, after caring for a number of seriously ill and/or dying people, I absolutely get that medications can provide invaluable comfort and ease. Pain meds in particular can be extremely helpful. I’m certainly not into pain for myself, either, especially at my age, but most of mine is only low-level grumble-worthy. Thus, I prefer to treat my modest aches with herbal potions and lotions, especially when they work as well (for me, anyway) as the ubiquitous over-the-counter pain drugs that are now proving to have significant side effects.

Herbs can have significant side effects too, of course, especially the most powerful of them. It’s always wise to use herbal remedies as cautiously and respectfully as you would a prescriptive drug. It also helps to be very aware of your own allergy/sensitivity patterns; if you are triggered by lavender fragrance or oil, or birch or willow pollen, don’t use those plants as traditional medicinals. Children under 16 should not be given willow bark remedies, since salicylates similar to those that make aspirin potentially dangerous for kids are present in willow extracts.

Tried And True

That said, traditional folk medicinals have been used for thousands of years. People have been chewing willow bark since forever to relieve headaches, arthritis, joint pain and so forth. Back in the 1800s, when aspirin was brand new, it was initially derived from white willow bark (Salix alba). Today, aspirin contains acetylsalicylic acid, which is a created form of the salicin found abundantly in white willow bark (and more-or-less so in other species). What commercial aspirin lacks are white willow’s potent flavonoids, anti-inflammatory compounds that are a bit slower to kick in than over-the-counter aspirin but with longer lasting effects.

Here’s a link to a recipe if you want to make your own willow tea:
http://www.motherearthliving.com/natural-health/make-white-willow-bark-tea-for-pain-relief.aspx

And here’s a link to a lot more info about white willow use:
http://umm.edu/health/medical/altmed/herb/willow-bark

All-Purpose Birch

Birch trees have been used in folk medicine to treat a surprisingly broad range of woes for millennia. Since birches are circumpolar, they are found in most temperate parts of the world, and though many traditional remedies use European birch, Betula alba, native peoples used native birches in similar ways in North America as well. Like willow bark, birch bark includes salicylates which can relieve pain, while birch leaf teas are commonly used as diuretics and spring tonics. When I was a girl, I loved birch beer, which has a haunting, wild flavor. It was often sold in pop machines in Northern New England, right between the root beer and sarsaparilla. In Maine, birch sap was tapped as well as maple sap and cooked down to make a totally delicious syrup, too. Birch sap can be made into mildly alcoholic beer or wine as well as the soft drink, if you are so inclined.

To make your own birch leaf tea, harvest young leaves when they are full sized but still tender and bright green. You can use them fresh to make teas, or dry them in a single layer on a clean screen or  tea cloths. Store the dried leaves in tightly sealed glass jars, and keep them in a cool, dim place out of direct sunlight.   Birch leaf tea is a traditional spring tonic and diuretic, and has also been used to mitigate symptoms of arthritis, gout, and rheumatism as well as various skin disorders such as eczema and psoriasis. And of course, you can always make little switches of birch branches and whap yourself with them to get yor circulation flowing, as some Nordic folks do…

Birch Leaf Tea

4 fresh birch leaves, rinsed
1 cup boiling water
1 teaspoon maple syrup

Place the leaves in a glass jar and pour the boiling water over them. Steep for 5-10 minutes, strain into a mug and add maple syrup to taste. Makes 1 cup.

Harnessing The Buzz

For those who want to try their hand at crafting home remedies, the key will be finding Full Extract Cannabis Oil, which has been heated and treated to make it effective for topical pain relief use. Available from many pharmaceutical cannabis suppliers, it’s thick, sticky and very green, and can stain clothing as well as skin. This link will help you do your homework:
http://cannabisnowmagazine.com/grow/strains/strain-review-full-extract-cannabis-oil-feco

Cannabis Muscle Relief Cream

1/2 cup coconut oil OR shea butter OR mango seed butter
2 tablespoons full extract cannabis oil

Bring coconut oil, shea butter, or mango seed butter to room temperature or warm it until it’s runny. Stir in cannabis oil concentrate until throughly mixed, then refrigerate until firmly set. Rub gently into sore areas several times a day. Do not use if skin is raw or broken.

Need more ideas? https://www.hempista.com/2014/diy-cannabis-spa-marijuana-lotion/

To Your Health!

Posted in Health & Wellbeing, Nutrition, preserving food, Recipes, Sustainable Gardening, Sustainable Living | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Training Trees And Vines On Walls

Wall Candy

I’ve always lusted after one of those multi-grafted fruit trees, with compatible varieties chosen to cross-pollinate each other and produce several kinds of fruit on a single tree. However, my resident deer population is equally interested in feasting on such bounty so I chose not to create another exercise in frustration. However, I just planted a lovely little 3-way apple espalier, having found the perfect spot. Because my house is built into a hillside, the large deck is a good 15 feet above ground level. Last year, I had the end section caged off with goat pen wire to make a cat garden space where Sophie can ramble amid pet-safe plants without fear of coyotes, eagles, raccoons, or roaming dog packs.

A few weeks ago, I was at a nursery (of course), eyeing the espalier fruit trees longingly, when it occurred to me that I now have an ideal place for such a plant. The south-facing deck gets full sun, the cage wire offers support coupled with excellent air circulation, and the tender branches and fruit will be out of reach for critters. Yay! After much inner debate, I chose a handsome, sturdy looking 4-footer with paired branches of Akane, Honeycrisp, and Spartan apples.

When Four Hands Are Better

I happily filled a large tree pot with several bags of planting medium (I’m really impressed with the EB Stone organic soils and planting composts). I then tried to gently pull the tree from its fiber pot, but realized that the roots had grown into the fiber. It was impossible to free the plant from its fiber pot without putting too much stress on the tree or bashing into the sides or top of the cage. Dang. It was the independent gardener’s nightmare come to life: time to ask for help. Horrors!

Happily, I am wiser in my advancing maturity than in my youth, when I was too stiff necked to ask for a helping hand. A friend and I gently wrestled the tree out of its prison and into its new home without damage, tucking in some succulent Marshall strawberry plants around the trunk. I try to keep my heritage Marshalls well away from other strawberries to prevent other people (you know who you are) from eating them all. Now they’re locked into a cage and protected by a watch-cat, so I’m counting on getting most of them for myself this season. Unless Sophie eats them, which she might…

Pick Your Wall With Care

European garden books often feature lovely old walls covered with vines or tidily trained fruit trees, laden with ripening fruit. In this country, stone or brick walls are less common and it’s best to remember that constant contact with plants can be highly damaging to wooden walls and fences. Thus, if you decide to grow espalier or any kind of vine on a house or outbuilding, do yourself a favor and build a stout support structure that will hold the plants well away from the wall. The plants will still get the benefit of the reflected heat and light, but by keeping a clear space between the plants and the wall, they’ll also get good air exchange, vital for preventing rots, mildews and mold build up on walls and plants alike.

If you don’t have the significant space required to grow full sized fruit trees, the ancient art of espalier allows even small gardens to produce a satisfying variety of fruit. For modern espalier, dwarf fruit trees are grafted on special root stock that limits their mature size to about 8 to 10 feet tall and wide. Dwarf trees become productive at a younger age than their full-sized kin and don’t require a ladder for pruning and harvesting. If properly pruned, they can thrive in tree pots or large containers where garden room is lacking.

Buddy System Training

Multiple-bud dwarf fruit trees are grafted with several varieties (usually 3-5) of a given fruit. The different varieties rarely grow with equal vigor, so if planting in the garden, always position the smallest of the grafted branches to face south to encourage strong growth. With careful pruning in the first few years, you can balance out the branching so each section becomes roughly equivalent.

Espalier pruning and training involves careful shaping of young trees so that all branches grow on a single plane. Generally the plants are grown against a south-facing wall or fence to provide support and protection from high winds. One great place to try your hand at espalier is on a chain link fence in a sunny area. Espaliered trees are planted 8-10 inches from their support and secured to a sturdy trellis. As they grow, young branches are gently tied in to the trellis to guide their development.

Espalier Pruning

In winter, we prune dormant fruit trees to remove dead, damaged branches, or any growing the wrong way. Winter pruning triggers the release of hormones that encourage vigorous spring growth. Summer pruning is the key to making–and keeping—fruit trees shapely, productive, and picker-friendly. In summer, tree pruning stimulates fruit-ripening hormones rather than new growth, so trees stay smaller.

Pruning properly is hugely important with espalier; done right, you get bumper crops. Done wrong, you get bushy overgrowth and/or little fruit. For best results, prune back to a strong bud, a healthy branch, or to the main trunk. Be especially careful not to remove fruiting spurs when espalier pruning (get a pruning book from the library or look up guidelines online. Never remove more than 30% of a tree in a calendar year.

A Sucker Is Born All Too Often

Midsummer is the time to remove water shoots, which rise straight-up on fruiting limbs, and suckers, which come from the base of a tree. From late July into August, you can remove water shoots on fruit trees without triggering suckering. Water shoots crowd the tree, reducing air circulation and making it easier for diseases to take hold. They also shade out lower limbs, decreasing fruit production and size. Make clean cuts just outside a branch’s “collar” and never leave long stubs.

Base suckers usually indicate harm to the tree, whether from improper pruning, weed-whacker damage, nearby digging, drought, or disease. Some fruit trees (notably cherries) may send suckers a considerable distance from the mother tree, seeking a safer environment. All suckers should be removed every summer in order to redirect the energy to the upper limbs. When pruning, always use well-sharpened bypass loppers and pruners (not anvil types). Clean tool blades with alcohol wipes between different limbs or trees to avoid spreading diseases.

Aussie Pruning Tips

Here’s a charming how-to espalier pruning video made by Julian Blackhirst, Head Gardener at The Garden of St. Erth:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkfTXq46j1g

Posted in Garden Prep, Pruning, Soil, Sustainable Gardening, Sustainable Living | 2 Comments

Kitchen & Garden Cures For Common Colds & More

Colds, Flu, and You (Or Me, Anyway)

Headache, check. Sore throat, check. Stuffy head, check. Drizzly nose, check. Itchy eyes, check. Earache, check. Gotta be a duck, right? Or at least one of the virulent cruds that are making the rounds these days. Overall, I feel blessed to have escaped the worst of the seasons’ illnesses, especially when my entire household has been nailed by the nasties. However, even this garden-variety version is bad enough to have me canceling everything for the next few days.

Actually, I kind of love hunkering down with an excellent excuse to stay home. Sadly, the actual cold makes it a lot harder to enjoy the freedom (sniff sneeze sniff). Happily, my garden herbs are providing some garden-variety relief in the form of teas, soups, and gargles. My kitchen pantry supplies the rest of my remedy ingredients and I can already feel the effectiveness of these gentle treatments. For instant relief, put a dab of organic coconut oil on that raw, sore nose, and cover itchy eyes with warm, wet black tea bags (used ones work fine) while you take five. Drink plenty of hot herbal teas (ginger, chamomile, yarrow and peppermint are all useful) and rest when you can. The especially good news is that these old time techniques reduce the most unpleasant symptoms not by masking them but by promoting a cure.

It Starts With The Sea

Long, long ago, we came from the sea, and our bodies are largely salt water to this day. Thus, sea salt is a very natural balancer for our systems. Salty water’s not for drinking (though some folks swear by it), but this simple gargling solution eases a sore throat very quickly and rids your throat of the post-nasal-drip gunge that can turn into a bacterial swamp. Do this several times a day, or at least when you wake up and before you go to sleep.

Sea Salt Gargle

1 cup warm water
1/4 teaspoon sea salt

Stir well and gargle with a small amount, spitting copiously and unattractively in the privacy of the bathroom. And shut the door, unless you live alone, in which case your pets will probably be fascinated and want to play too.

Apple Cider Gargle Or Sinus Swig

1 tablespoon organic apple cider
1 cup (or more) water, hot or cold

Use warm water and gargle (spitting as above) if your throat stays sore for more than a day. If your sinuses get involved, drink this stuff hot or cold every hour or two while awake to help battle both bacteria and viruses. Taken before or after meals, it’s a fine aid to good digestion. This combo also stops acid reflux almost immediately for many folks, who take it at bedtime to prevent uncomfortable nights.

The Allium Clan

When your body is fighting off colds or flu, turn to garlic and onions for speedy aid. The old chicken soup remedy still works, but the good news for vegetarians is that chicken is not the magic ingredient; onions and steam are what do your body good. Adding a few other vegetables can’t hurt, so use whatever sounds good to you (think kale and sweet potatoes). Pureed soups are easier on sore throats, and naturally antibiotic herbs like thyme and rosemary are less irritating than pepper, though a little smoked paprika offers body and depth as well as a little bite. The optional nutritional yeast adds a nutty, cheesy flavor that gives vegetable soups a savory, umami quality.

Super Soup For The Sickly

1 tablespoon olive or avocado oil
2 large white onions, chopped
4-6 cloves garlic, chopped
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon stemmed thyme, minced
1 teaspoon stemmed rosemary, minced
2 cups chopped carrots
1 cup chopped celery
1 medium Carola or Yukon Gold potato, chopped
1/4 cup flaked nutritional yeast (optional)
1/4 cup stemmed parsley or cilantro
1 lime or lemon, quartered

In a soup pot, combine oil, onion, and garlic over medium heat and cook to the fragrance point (1-2 minutes). Add the salt, the thyme and rosemary, and the carrots, celery, and potato, reduce heat to medium low, cover the pan and sweat the vegetables for 8-10 minutes. Add water to cover all, bring to a simmer, cover pan and simmer until all is tender (15-20 minutes). Puree with a stick blender, stir in nutritional yeast and serve, garnished with parsley or cilantro and a squeeze of citrus. Serves 3-4.

To your health!

Posted in fall/winter crops, Health & Wellbeing, Nutrition, Recipes, Sustainable Gardening, Sustainable Living | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Grow Your Own Heritage Soup Beans

Winter Soups From Summer Bounty

Raw, windy February days cry out for soup and I am rarely without a simmering soup pot on the stove and a jar or two of split pea soup or bean chili or curry in my fridge. Because I mostly cook vegetarian or vegan meals, I often add beans or peas to lend vegetable soups more protein, so I’ve always got an assortment of dried beans and peas in the cupboard. When I eat alone, it’s very often soup, so drop-in family and friends rootling through the fridge can always find the latest version of soup ready to warm up and enjoy with thick slices of homemade oatmeal bread.

Over the years, I’ve dried many kinds of home grown beans and peas to use in soup making, and pretty much any of them can work. However, the heritage types really are the best for clear reasons. They are easy to grow, they dry and store well, and they taste wonderful. In terms of protein and other nutrients per square footage, beans are right up there with potatoes and quinoa for productive use of garden space. Pumpkins and squash should get some space as well, as much for their meaty, vitamin-packed flesh as for their low-carb, protein-rich seeds. Add a handful of toasted pepitas to pureed potato leek soup (or anything else) and you double the protein while adding a delightfully crunchy contrast to the silky soup.

Classic Soup Legumes

There are dozens if not hundreds of classic soup bean varieties from all over the world. Many originated in South and Central America, where native beans range from white through red to black (their descendants are the heritage beans that have been grown throughout Europe for centuries). The Mediterranean basin is home to garbanzo beans, while mung and adzuki beans as well as peas are native from India into Asia. Happily, home gardeners can grow most of them in the maritime Northwest, especially when we get a warm, dry summer.

Among my favorites are Cranberry beans, soft white with burgundy splashes and speckles and a deep, rich flavor. There are many selected forms, all lovely in soups and spreads. I especially like the tenderness of Black Turtle black beans, but all make extraordinary soup and are great in tacos and chilis. Cannellini or white kidney beans are notably creamy and are the go-to bean for Tuscan spreads and soups. They also make a lovely alternative to garbanzos in pesto hummus, a family favorite. Among lima types, I prefer the cheerful red-and-white striped Christmas beans, which shell quickly when dry and make superb slow-cooked baked beans.

Special Soup Peas, Please

Soup peas enjoy our generally cool Northwestern climate and even appreciate our mildly acid garden soils. The best kinds for drying are not the super sweet, crunchy podded types but heritage varieties that produce dense, starchy peas in tough, inedible pods. You can plant peas a lot earlier than beans, which demand warm soils and tend to rot in cool spring weather. Most soup peas can’t rival sugar snaps and snow peas for raw eating, but they have superior staying power in terms of drying and storing.

I’ve had great crops from Blauschokker, a heritage purple podded shelling pea dating back to the 1500’s. It’s tasty fresh and richly savory when dried and makes a very pretty ornamental vine that hummingbirds love to visit. Amish Snap peas also dry very well, with a deep, pleasant flavor, though the color is beige rather than bright green. As the name suggests, Amplissimo Viktoria Ukrainskaya is a Ukranian soup pea that dries to a soft gold with outstanding flavor.

A World Of Bean Soups

There are as many styles of bean soup as there are pasta sauces, and similarly, a few changes of ingredients or techniques produce markedly different results. To change up texture, puree the soup with a stick blender, or just puree half of it for a cream-base effect. Add crunchy garnishes like fresh pea tendrils or chopped snow peas, diced raw apples or toasted coconut flakes, roasted pumpkin seeds or chopped peanuts. Stir in some tart yogurt or add a drizzle of mellow coconut or olive oil.

To speed things up, cook your beans ahead, saving their broth. As a rule, 1 cup dried beans makes about 3 cups cooked. You can refrigerate cooked beans for 3-5 days or freeze them for up to three months. Here are two current favorite recipes to get you started:

Tarascan Bean Soup

I like cranberry beans in this traditional soup, which is usually made with chicken broth. I think my vegan version, topped with quickly pan-fried tortilla strips and fresh chiles instead of cheese, is even better. It’s not watery, because the nutritional yeast builds the savory flavor and adds a cheese-like warmth to the soup.

Vegetarian Tarascan Bean Soup

4 cups cooked beans with their cooking broth
2 tablespoons avocado or olive oil
1 large yellow onion, halved and sliced
3 cloves garlic, chopped
1 teaspoon dried Mexican oregano or marjoram
1 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 teaspoon smoked paprika (hot or mild)
3 yellow corn tortillas, chopped
3 ancho chiles, chopped
2 cups fire-roasted or slow-roasted tomatoes
1/4 cup flaked nutritional yeast (optional)
1 ripe avocado, thinly sliced
1 cup stemmed cilantro

Bring beans and broth to a simmer over medium heat. If broth does not generously cover beans, add water to cover. In a large soup pot, heat 1 tablespoon oil with the onion, garlic, oregano or marjoram, 1/2 teaspoon sea salt and the paprika over medium heat and cook, stirring occasionally, until very tender (10-12 minutes). In a frying pan, heat remaining oil and quickly pan-fry tortilla pieces, then set aside on a plate and repeat with fresh chiles (1 minute is plenty), set aside. Add the warm beans and broth and roasted tomatoes and juices to the onion and puree with a stick blender. Add water to desired consistency and stir in nutritional yeast, adding salt to taste. Stir in avocado slices and cilantro and serve, garnished with tortilla bits and chiles. Serves 4.

Vegetarian Tuscan Bean Soup With Kale & Kale Chips

1 tablespoon fruity olive oil
1 yellow onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1/2 teaspoon dried peperoncini flakes (hot or mild)
1 organic lemon, juiced, rind grated
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon stemmed thyme
1 teaspoon chopped rosemary
2 cups chopped celery
1 cup finely chopped carrots
1 bunch Tuscan kale, stems chopped, leaves sliced in ribbons
4 cups cooked white cannellini beans (rinsed if canned)
1 cup toasted kale chips (optional)

In a soup pot, heat oil, onion, garlic, pepper flakes, lemon rind and salt over medium heat for 1 minute. Add thyme, rosemary, celery, carrots and kale stems, cover pan and cook for 3-4 minutes. Add water to cover, bring to a simmer, then add beans and chopped kale, adding water to cover if need be. Reduce heat to low, cover pan and simmer until kale is tender (10-15 minutes). Serve as is or puree the soup with a stick blender and serve, garnished with kale chips if using. Serves 4-6.

Posted in Nutrition, preserving food, Recipes, Sustainable Gardening, Sustainable Living | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments