
The juice from Goats Beard is good for constipation. It also helps with gall bladder function.
You can take two handfulls of the leaves, stalks, flowers and roots and clean them with cold water. Boil this in water for about 10 minutes and strain. Drink this with a little honey and it is good for bladder and kidney infections.
You can also use this tea for cuts, scrapes, wounds to relieve pain.
Do only the roots as stated above and make a tea to drink for heartburn. This tea can also be used for kidney stones.
Peel the roots, boil them and saute with onions. This is good for colds.
Make a tea from the leaves and drink to treat colds, headaches, to calm stomach and relieve menstruations cramps. Place crushed leaves on woulds to enhance healing. Chew leaves and place on insect bites to relieve itching.

Mouse Cat enjoying Lemon Balm I have planted under one of the Oaks.
Wood Sorrel:
This is one of my favorite herbs. Use the leaves to make a mild tea and cool this. Sip it for heartburn and it works pretty good.
Yucca:
The best part of the Yucca to use medicinally is the root. Pound the root into a mild soap. This is good to cleanse cuts, scrapes, etc or for washing your hair or bathing. Make a poultice of the soapy root for skin rashes, boils and poison ivy.
Sphagnum Moss:
Can be used for bandages, diapers, menstruation pads or crushed with other herbs and oils as a poultice.
New Jersey Tea:
Another one that requires one to know exactly what part of the plant to use…
Take the bark from the root of this flower and dry it. A mall handful of dried bark STEEPED in hot water for 1 1/2 hours makes a wonderful medicine for sinus issues. Drink 2 cups a day and it works as a sedative AND antihistamine.
Gargle it for sore throats and toothaches. It is also good for cold sores.
Mullein:
The best use I have found for this herb, and there are many….
If you have a stomach virus….
Get a handful of flowers from mullein and STEEP them in 2 cups of hot water, strain this and drink one entire cup. This will almost immediately ease stomach cramps.
These flowers make a good sedative for the nervous system and also will ease pain.
Breathe in the vapors of tea made with fresh leaves for congestion.
Elderberry:
Dry the berries and add one half cupful to two cups of hot water and SIMMER for 10 minutes. This helps with diarrhea from a stomach virus if you drink one half cup, cold, twice a day.
CATNIP:
Tea dosages:
Fever: One cup of strong tea made by steeping dried leaves for 20 minutes in hot water
Pain: Steep green leaves in hot water 7-12 minutes
Stomach Cramps: double the dose of the herb in one cup of water and simmer, not steep, for 15 minutes
Relaxation: Use the small, tiny leaves just below the flower head, right before it flowers. Dry them in a cool, dry place then steep the leaves for 20 minutes.
Bone and Joint pain: Make a mild tea by steeping the fresh (or dried) JOINED leaves of Boneset for about 30 minutes. A handful of leaves to two cups of water is sufficient.
Laxative: Make a cold tea from steeping a palmful of leaves of Boneset for 20 minutes and drink as a laxative.
Flu: Steep the Boneset leaves for 30 minutes and drink for colds, flu and fever.
You can add mint to this as well.
*use the upper, unjoined leaves for cold, flu and fever remedies. It is important to know when studying herbalism that one cannot just know this plant is good for that. One must know what part of the plant, when to remove it from the plant and how to remove it, how to prepare it and what route to present it to the body. One herb, like boneset, has many uses, making it the same way, but steeping it for different amounts of time. You don’t want to drink it for the flu and end up on the toilet because you mistakenly made the tea as a laxative!

