Backyard Drugstore
by Maria Reidelbach
What a snowy hammering we endured in February—who knew you
had to shovel your roof too? Right in
the midst of it all I got a cold. You know the drill, first the creepy feeling
all over, then a little shivery and before you know it you've slid into the
slippery pit of the most common illness of all.
I don't get sick very often, injury's my bane. So I've never
had much of a practical reason to be interested in herbal medicine—that means
using plants and fungi to support health. As a teen, I learned a little about
it from my grandmother, who used medicinal herbs in her farming family in
Allegheny Mountains, but being a modern American, when I was sick, I saw an
M.D.
It's worth remembering that even though our health and lives
depend on it, medicine is still a very incomplete science. Although western
medicine is great at some things, like preventing infection and setting bones,
when it comes down to sickness, there's still much to learn. It doesn't help
that health care here is dominated by multinational corporations motivated by
profit. And the big money is in exclusive, patent-protected medicines that are
sold with huge markups. All too often, lacking a real cure, Big Pharma will
either invent or ignore research so that they can create, license and patent a
product to sell to the desperate.
I guess we shouldn't be surprised. After all, the branded
medicine industry evolved from
infamous 18th and 19th century patent medicines,
also known in the day as “miracle elixirs,” “snake oil,” and “nostrum
remedium.” Latin always sounds so
impressive, doesn't it? Medicine show barkers also liked references to other
exotic cultures—Kickapoo Indian Sagwa Renovator was one of the era's best
sellers.
All those mystery illnesses that lack a cure have been
fertile ground for a universe of alternatives. Some alternative treatments
work, but others are well-intended though ineffective. Then there's the pure
snake oil.
However, although herbal medicine is usually considered an
alternative medicine, it's worth understanding that plant- and fungi-based
treatments are actually the basis of the
modern pharmaceutical industry. Virtually all medications are made of chemicals
found first in plants and fungi being used by traditional indigenous healers.
And the use of plants as meds goes way back before humans
even existed: biologists have found that many, many other animals use herbal
medications. Here's an example of herbal insect repellant that will astound
you: some fruit flies eat rotten, fermented fruit to repel fatal, parasitic
wasps. Tipsy flies are quick death to tea-totaling, bodily fluid-sucking wasps.
It's a super-effective repellent, and, the clincher: the flies love fresh fruit
when the coast is clear. Mama fruit flies will even lay eggs in alcoholic
fruit, but again, only when the deadly wasps loom. These kinds of behaviors are
being observed throughout the animal kingdom.
So, naturally all human cultures have herbal medicine
knowledge passed down from generation to generation. Although our ancestors may
have lacked those big double-blind studies, before the scientific method people
used experimentation, logic, observation to learn about plants. These simple
practices applied over and over for thousands of years resulted in a body of
knowledge that has kept the human race alive until now.
Chinese medicine is a great example. Hillary Thing, one of
the mid-Hudson Valley's most prominent herbalists, explained to me that Chinese
medicine is a rigorous tradition of medical learning has been unbroken from
antiquity to today. In the west, by contrast, our medical progress has been
disrupted a number of times, like by the fall of the Roman Empire and the witch
hunts of the Middle Ages, during which it's estimated that 40,000 to 100,000
people, most of whom were actually traditional healers, were executed. And of
course, the most recent break has been in the modern age. Nevertheless, much
traditional knowledge has endured.
Hillary explained to me that while Chinese medicine is vast,
her extensive, traditional training was focused on which healing herbs and
fungi to use and how to use them, but not on finding or growing them. Hillary
suggested that more local medicinal herb farms would be a great benefit to the
community.
By contrast, Barbara Fornal, another knowledgeable Hudson
Valley herbalist, focuses on plants that are local and wild. Barbara's got a
background in biology, many years teaching science, and 25 years developing her
practice, which incorporates modern developments as well as ancient traditions
from around the world. Barbara points out that, sometimes astoundingly, the
plants we need to heal ourselves are growing happily right outside our door.
Only knowledge is needed to unlock their healing properties.
In a world where we are conditioned to turn to professionals
for every little health problem, both Hillary and Barbara impressed on me that
learning and using herbal medicine is the way to gain some power over your own
well being. “Independently healthy,” is the way Hillary put it. In this area,
we are fortunate to have several top-notch herbal medicine practitioners. They
all emphasising teaching just as much as they practice treatment, because
knowledge is the best tool of self-empowerment.
Our area's herbalists teach about so many things—from herbal
first aid and wild plant identification to shamanic healing practices and herbs
for serious illnesses like lyme disease and cancer. When you learn from a
master and then share the knowledge with others, then you become an integral
part of the herbal medicine tradition.
So what did I do about my winter cold? A little honey-ginger
tea and a good night's sleep worked wonders—by the next day my faithful immune
system was kicking in and the cold was already dissipating. Maybe all those
yummy herbs I've been eating just for fun also had some great fringe benefits.
Stinging Nettle Tea
This is a great spring tonic that's a major source of
phytonutrients—it's better than a vitamin supplement and will get that slushy
winter blood moving!
Wearing gardening gloves (nettles actually sting!), snip the
top 6 inches of young nettles. If you leave 12 inches of stem, the tops will
grow back. Put a handful of leaves in a cup, add boiling water and let steep
until pale green. To me, nettle tea is so delicious and rich that I add a shake
of salt and drink it like bullion. You can also cook nettles as a green
vegetable.
To spring!
Resources:
Susun Weed: a local living treasure, Susun is a nationally
known founder of the herbal medicine renaissance and lives in Woodstock, www.susunweed.com.
Gifts from Nature, Barbara Fornal's practice, workshops on
foraging local medicinals, bfornal@hvi.net
and 845-626-4621
Accord Acupuncture and Herb Shoppe, Hillary Thing's
headquarters, teaching and treatment, accordacupuncture.com
Peterson Field Guide to Medicinal Plants and Herbs of
Eastern and Central North America by Steven
Foster and James A. Duke, a classic source of info.
http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/
“Animal Pharm”
University of Maryland Medical Center Alternative Medicine
Guide: a huge data base of information. umm.edu/health/medical/altmed
Maria Reidelbach is an author and applied artist who lives,
coughs and sniffles in Accord, NY.




