
GLORIOUS
GOLDENROD
© 2006 Susun S. Weed
I love autumn, don't you? The days shorten and
fall colors thrill my senses. Perennial roots
get busy storing nourishment that will last
them through the winter. And the meadows bloom
with purple asters and riotous goldenrod flowers.
Goldenrod
(the Solidago genus, Asteracea family) is one
of my favorite plants, and hopefully, soon it
will be one of your favorites too.
Before
you complain that goldenrod is a pest and you're
allergic to it, let me set the record straight:
You aren't. No one is, no one can be, allergic
to goldenrod pollen. Why? It has virtually none.
What little pollen it makes is sticky, all the
better to stick onto insects who pollinate the
goldenrod. Only wind-pollinated plants - like
ragweed (Ambrosia artemisifolia), which blooms
at the same time as goldenrod, and has an especially
irritating pollen - make enough pollen, and
spread it widely enough, to cause allergic reactions.
Set
aside your mistaken bad thoughts about lovely
goldenrod, and, if you can, visit a patch. Goldenrod
is a wide-spread wild plant in North America
(found from Florida to New Hampshire and west
into Texas), Europe, and Asia. Goldenrod is
also treasured as a garden plant from New Zealand
to Germany, and has become a highly-successful
weed in Japan. So, no matter where you live
as you read this article, it is likely that
you can find a patch of goldenrod.
It
is rare to see one goldenrod plant growing alone;
it multiplies by sending out root runners, so
there are usually dozens of plants growing densely
together. Notice all the bees and insects happily
crawling about on goldenrod's numerous small
yellow flowers.
There
are many types of goldenrod, and you are likely
to find several kinds if you look around. The
species Solidago canadensis and S. odora are
considered the most medicinal (and the tastiest),
but all species of goldenrod are safe and beneficial
and can be used to help the immune system get
ready for winter.
Goldenrod
tonics are easy to make. Harvest any goldenrod
by cutting the top third of the plant in full
flower on a sunny fall day. Or, respectfully
pull the entire plant, roots and all, in the
late autumn or early winter. Then follow the
simple directions below. Note: You can use any
size jar when making a vinegar or a tincture,
so long as you fill it full.
To
dry flowering goldenrod:
Bundle
2-3 stalks together and hang upside down in
a cool, shady room until thoroughly dry. When
the stalks snap crisply, store the dried herb
in brown paper bags. One or two large handfuls
of crushed leaves and flowers, steeped in a
quart of boiling water for 30 minutes makes
a tea that can be used hot, with honey*, to
counter allergies (especially pollen allergies),
fevers, sore throats, coughs, colds and the
flu; or taken cold to relieve colic in babies,
and gas in adults. Dried mint and/or yarrow
are tasty, and useful, additions when making
goldenrod flower tea.
To
dry goldenrod roots:
Rinse
dirt off the roots, then cut away all the stalks,
leaves and dead flowers. If possible, hang your
roots over a woodstove to dry; if not, place
them on racks and put them in a warm place to
dry until brittle. Store in glass jars. Depending
on the difficulty you are addressing, goldenrod
root tea may be made with large or small amounts
of the roots brewed or decocted in boiling water.
Or the roots may be powdered, alone or mixed
with flowers, and applied to hard-to-heal wounds
and sore joints.
To
make a goldenrod vinegar:
Chop
the goldenrod coarsely, filling a jar with chopped
flowers, leaves, stalks (and roots if you have
them); then fill the jar to the top with room-temperature,
pasteurized, apple cider vinegar. Cap it tightly
with a plastic lid. (Metal lids will be eroded
by the action of the vinegar. If you must use
one, protect it with several layers of plastic
between it and the vinegar.) Be sure to label
your vinegar with the date and contents. Your
goldenrod vinegar will be ready to use in six
weeks to improve mineral balance, help prevent
kidney stones, eliminate flatulence, and improve
immune functioning.
To
make a goldenrod tincture:
Chop
the goldenrod coarsely, filling a jar with chopped
flowers, leaves, stalks (and roots if you have
them); then add 100 proof vodka, filling the
jar to the very top. Cap tightly and label.
Your goldenrod tincture will be ready to use
in six weeks, by the dropperful, as an anti-inflammatory,
a sweat-inducing cold cure, and an astringent
digestive aid. Medical herbalists use large
doses (up to 4 dropperfuls at a time) of goldenrod
tincture several times daily to treat kidney
problems - including nephritis, hemorrhage,
kidney stones, and inability to void - and prostate
problems, including frequent urination.
The
colonists called goldenrod tea "Liberty
Tea" for they drank it instead of black
tea after the Boston Tea Party. In fact, Liberty
Tea proved so popular, it was exported to China!
Let goldenrod liberate you, too. Herbal medicine
is people's medicine, a gift from Mama Earth
to us. Green Blessings.
*Note: Do not
give honey to babies under 12 months old.

Green
Blessings

Susun Weed
PO Box 64
Woodstock, NY 12498
Fax: 1-845-246-8081
Visit Susun Weed at: www.susunweed.com and www.ashtreepublishing.com
For permission to reprint this article, contact
us at: susunweed@herbshealing.com

Susun
S. Weed is the author of four highly-acclaimed
books on herbs and women's health: Wise Woman
Herbal for the Childbearing Year, Healing Wise,
New Menopausal Years the Wise Woman Way and
Breast Cancer? Breast Health! the Wise Woman
Way. Ms. Weed lectures world-wide on women's
health and herbal medicine. From her home in
New York State's Catskill Mountains, she
directs the activities of the Wise Woman Center,
acts as editor-in-chief of Ash Tree Publishing,
personally oversees the work of 400 correspondence
students, and trains herbal and shamanic apprentices.
Susun has lived the simple life for nearly 40
years as an herbalist, goatkeeper, homesteader,
and feminist. She has been called "a true
radical - deeply rooted," "a modern
pioneer," and "one of the founding
mothers of herbal medicine in the United States”.
Susun
Weed’s books include:
http://www.ashtreepublishing.com/bookshop/

Wise
Woman Herbal for the Childbearing Year
Author:
Susun S. Weed. Simple, safe remedies for pregnancy,
childbirth, lactation, and newborns. Includes
herbs for fertility and birth control. Foreword
by Jeannine Parvati Baker. 196 pages, index,
illustrations. Retails for $9.95 Order at: www.ashtreepublishing.com
Healing
Wise
Author:
Susun S. Weed. Superb herbal in the feminine-intuitive
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plants for food, beauty, medicine, and longevity.
Introduction by Jean Houston. 312 pages, index,
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NEW Menopausal Years the Wise Woman
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Author: Susun S. Weed. The best book on menopause
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Foreword by Juliette de Bairacli Levy. 304 pages,
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For more info on menopause, visit: www.menopause-metamorphosis.com
Breast Cancer? Breast Health!
Author:
Susun S. Weed. Foods, exercises, and attitudes
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chemotherapy, or tamoxifen. Foreword by Christiane
Northrup, M.D. 380 pages, index, illustrations.
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