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Scattered stinging nettle seeds all over my yard (on purpose). So, if you're ever wandering up here in a future post apocalytic wasteland and suddenly your shins and thighs are stinging... it's all edible (cook and eat like spinach, or make it into tea).

#gardening #stingingnettle

in reply to AI6YR Ben

I made a nettle risotto once. Was a pain to prepare the nettles, and the risotto was...okay. It was okay. It was green.
in reply to AI6YR Ben

One of my earliest childhood memories is of being stung by nettles on the hillside ranch in Half Moon Bay where the family lived during my first two years of existing. I don't remember the scene, only that particular pain and the word "nettles."
in reply to AI6YR Ben

The sting is itself quite medicinal. good for sore or strained muscles and for sprains. brings blood flow to the area.
in reply to Hippy Steve

@exador23 I'll have to remember that! That said, I did follow your advice and I just pick it up by hand now and ignore the sting.
in reply to AI6YR Ben

I personally don't like the sting on my fingers, so I wear gloves when harvesting. The women dancers ask for it every year in ceremony. I harvest every day for them (plentiful in Oregon), and they gently whack their calves with it. I do the same on my ankles & feet.
in reply to AI6YR Ben

You may end up with a colony of Red Admiral butterflies, or similar, too.
in reply to zl2tod

@zl2tod Interesting, wonder what the North American equivalent is....
in reply to AI6YR Ben

It seems that Red Admirals are widespread in North America.

Here they very much love Ongaonga tree nettles, but will settle for other species.

fs.usda.gov/wildflowers/pollin…

in reply to zl2tod

@zl2tod @AI6YR Ben
@womble , you're my kinda person. I rear butterflies too, and I was going to chime in about the Red Admiral. Yes they are indeed in N. America but in declining numbers. other butters eat Stinging Nettle, as it happens, like the Comma and the Painted Lady. You'll be doing pollinators a big favor there.
The butters I've currently taken into protective custody are the Eastern Black Swallowtails, but I've reared others including the Monarch.
in reply to Radio Free Trumpistan

@Steve Canon
#Alt4U above is a photo of half of a pupation pen in which are mounted the overwintering pupae of Eastern Black Swallowtails waiting for spring to arrive. There are just as many chrysalides in the other half.
in reply to Radio Free Trumpistan

@claralistensprechen5th awesome! I have never overwintered the chrysalides, but they are frequent guests in our dill and fennel patch.
in reply to Steve Canon

@Steve Canon
One major reason for overwintering them in a protected area is that mice will eat them when they find them. It's true of all types of chrysalides.
in reply to Radio Free Trumpistan

@claralistensprechen5th

We are killing the ecosystem we rely on to survive, and the current US administration is doubling down on the destruction with avarice and greed, and despite all science.

Lunatics. Asylum.

@ai6yr @womble

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Hippy Steve

@Coho @NilaJones @thesquirrelfish
Tried finding a little more info without much luck, but did come across this warning for its use from MedicineNet.com presumed to be regarding ingestion.

Stinging nettle can cause side effects, such as skin irritation, sweating and stomach upset. It can cause increased uterine (womb) contractions and consequent miscarriage. Thus, it should be avoided in pregnant women. Older nettle leaves contain oxalate that may harm the kidneys. You must take your doctor’s opinion before using stinging nettle preparations in any form.

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NilaJones
@exador23 @Coho @thesquirrelfish
I don't know! But it's an interesting question. I wonder if that's part of why it helps with arthritis and things like that, if it decreases mast cell activation
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Hippy Steve
@Coho @NilaJones @thesquirrelfish
is there an antihistamine effect from the sting? or just via ingestion?
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NilaJones

@thesquirrelfish @exador23 @Coho

It's an antihistamine. I've been taking it at bedtime for the past week for allergies.

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AI6YR Ben
@womble Oooh! Awesome...
in reply to AI6YR Ben

Fantastic plant! I've got some seeds planted this year as well. I use it dried all of the time for tea, and I've got some fresh leaves in the fridge to make a soup soon.

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AI6YR Ben
@exador23 @NilaJones @Coho @thesquirrelfish I struggle to properly identify Mugwort. For some reason.
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NilaJones
@Coho @exador23 @thesquirrelfish
Have you tried rubbing Artemisia leaves on the itchy places? Works for me. I learned this from an old prospector, back in the day
in reply to NilaJones

@NilaJones @Coho @thesquirrelfish
Mugwort (artemisia) is a native american remedy for poison oak. Best thing is, the elders say they are usually growing near each other. While crushed mugwort leaves can provide some relief after poison oak exposure, they're even more effective as a preventative.

i.e. if you see one plant, the other is probably nearby. So grab a few leaves (responsibly, with respect to the plant nation. even ask it to help you), and rub over exposed skin to prevent or significantly reduce symptoms if you get some poison oak on you.

in reply to NilaJones

@NilaJones @exador23 @thesquirrelfish
I find the one combination that actually really helps poison oak is a combination of nettles and the bioflavonoid quercetin. Nettles is an old topical remedy for arthritis, I wonder if it works like bee stings for arthritis?
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AI6YR Ben
@thesquirrelfish @Coho @exador23 @NilaJones I found the best prevention is dish soap everywhere (gear, people) after hiking. Works, and a lot less harsh than Tecnu. Tecnu works but basically scours every last bit of oil off your skin, which really is not great.
in reply to Hippy Steve

@exador23 @NilaJones @thesquirrelfish
I've used mugwort for PO , and manzanita, they do relieve the itch for awhile, but bioflavonoid quercetin works like nothing else if you have a really bad case, kicks it out of the system in a few days.
How to avoid po altogether is as soon as you can wash with liquid dish, or laundry, detergent 3xs using cold water. Lather up rinse, repeat 3xs pat dry with a paper towel. I haven't had po in a decade
in reply to Coho

@Coho @exador23 @NilaJones for the bioflavonoid quercetin are you eating or applying? Any specific food sources? Cuz I do like the idea of either apples or berries helping address poison oak and I'll try a bath of that if necessary... For science.
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AI6YR Ben
@EverydayMoggie @NilaJones @thesquirrelfish @Coho @exador23 Tecnu is apparently a 1940's or 1950's cold war innovation... designed by researchers to strip every last everything off your skin in case of nuclear fallout.
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moggie

Since poison oak and poison ivy rashes are allergic reactions to urushiol, anything that works for allergic skin conditions should work on them. Of course, yeah, best to get it off your skin immediately as prevention.

And don't breathe the smoke if you ever encounter any of it in a fire. I knew someone who ended up in the hospital from doing that accidentally. Apparently it does to your lungs what it does to your skin.

Somehow I've managed to never have poison oak or poison ivy in spite of living in places where they were common. Either I've been very lucky or I happen to among the minority who don't react.

@NilaJones @ai6yr @thesquirrelfish @Coho @exador23

in reply to Douglas

@douglasvb @EverydayMoggie @NilaJones @thesquirrelfish @Coho @exador23 Yep... Makes my skin dry and itchy for a week. I prefer just nuking everything and myself in Dawn dishwashing detergent... as a preventative action (usually out in the backyard). That usually prevent anything further.
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AI6YR Ben
@Coho @NilaJones @exador23 @EverydayMoggie @thesquirrelfish Seriously, they actually called it "Hysterical House Wife Disease"?!?!
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NilaJones

@exador23 @EverydayMoggie @thesquirrelfish @Coho

Oh I didn't know that! I use it for the itching (works on mosquito bites also) but I didn't know that it would also counteract stuff!

in reply to NilaJones

@NilaJones @exador23 @EverydayMoggie @thesquirrelfish
I'm enjoying this po thread
I read a book on the history of po
The first English botanists in the new world, took samples back to Europe, they thought it was pretty, and started cultivatng it. People started growing it. For awhile this disease took hold in England, with symptoms of a rash,. They called it "Hysterical House Wife Disease" it took them awhile to put two and two together that po was causing it
in reply to moggie

@EverydayMoggie @NilaJones @thesquirrelfish @Coho

Same for weed whacking poison oak. If you hire people for that, be sure to warn them and better yet provide them with N95s in case they don’t have respirators.

The beauty of mugwort is that it counteracts the urushiol and is available right there in the wild. So if rubbed on exposed skin as soon as you see it, it lessens the chance of developing a rash if you get exposed later and before you can get home and wash with soap and water.