from hereMy favorite salve is plain Calendula. It does everything I want a healing salve to do and it is easy to extract into oil. I use to make more complicated salves when younger, but I have simplified things in my old age. It was really fun experimenting when younger and I use to like to make complicated mixtures. Now I am more practical.
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jim walters wrote:I have a salve I make that is far simpler, but works quite well according to all those I have given it to . . . 1/3 plantain - 1/3 yarrow - 1/3 jewelweed. Like pretty much everything I make, they come off my own property here in the foothills of Appalachia and are free for the asking.
Heather Sharpe wrote:I've played with kitchen sink type salve formulas with crazy "strong" herbs and they can be cool. But I also tend to prefer simpler salves. Plantain is my go to salve for skin irritation and injury. Calendula and plantain is lovely too. I just made a new blend of plantain, goldenrod and mullein and am quite pleased with that. I've been trying to rethink the way I talk about the strength of herbs. I always like to use the most gentle herbs first. Just because something is more gentle in it's action, like plantain or calendula, doesn't make it less strong, I've come to realize. I've certainly seen powerful results from plantain alone.
Mullein is great too. I've been working with it recently to help a friend's baby cow who has a gnarly injured knee. It pulled a huge gob of ick out and created so much relief and increased mobility. I'm still surprised. I think I'll be using mullein a lot more, since joint and muscle issues are something I'm frequently trying to address with salves and mullein works quite well for that.
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Of course, Trace! First, you make an infused oil. There are several ways to do this. I like to use long, slow heat, between 110-120 Fahrenheit, ideally for a week, but at least several hours. This works for fresh or dried herbs. You can use a double boiler for this. I used the yogurt setting on my instant pot. If you're handy, you can rig a dimmer switch on a crock pot to maintain that temp, but I had a hard time getting it to stay consistent enough.Trace Oswald wrote: Would either of you care to make a post on how you make it? This is new to me, and I'm kind of step by step guy
“Action on behalf of life transforms. Because the relationship between self and the world is reciprocal, it is not a question of first getting enlightened or saved and then acting. As we work to heal the earth, the earth heals us.” ~ Robin Wall Kimmerer
Heather Sharpe wrote:...
Hope all that makes sense!
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Heather Sharpe wrote:Mullein is great too. I've been working with it recently to help a friend's baby cow who has a gnarly injured knee. It pulled a huge gob of ick out and created so much relief and increased mobility. I'm still surprised. I think I'll be using mullein a lot more, since joint and muscle issues are something I'm frequently trying to address with salves and mullein works quite well for that.
Faye Streiff wrote:Be careful using comfrey if it is a deep puncture type wound. It knits so fast, it can close the outside skin before the deeper healing occurs and if any bacteria is present, can cause a nasty infection.
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Matthew Nistico wrote:
Faye Streiff wrote:Be careful using comfrey if it is a deep puncture type wound. It knits so fast, it can close the outside skin before the deeper healing occurs and if any bacteria is present, can cause a nasty infection.
Yes, I've heard the same warning about comfrey use on deep punctures forming an abscess. Great for surface wounds and abrasions, great for broken bones, but dangerous when applied to punctures.
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Helen Siddall-Butchers wrote:Hi! This is a really interesting post, and I'd love to have a go, but I don't use beeswax. Is there an alternative that would work please?
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Rachel Royce wrote:Very interesting thread. Thank you!
We have a lot of plantain in the yard. To infuse the oils do I use the leaves, the flower stalks, flowers? Do I have to dry them first or use fresh herbs?
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Helen Siddall-Butchers wrote:Hi! This is a really interesting post, and I'd love to have a go, but I don't use beeswax. Is there an alternative that would work please?
Helen Siddall-Butchers wrote:Hi! This is a really interesting post, and I'd love to have a go, but I don't use beeswax. Is there an alternative that would work please?
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
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Rick Rogoski wrote:Has anyone used Moringa oil in the place of other oils?
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Anne Miller wrote:
My preference is to use the plantain leaves fresh, though I have not made a salve.
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Anne Miller wrote:
Rachel Royce wrote:Very interesting thread. Thank you!
We have a lot of plantain in the yard. To infuse the oils do I use the leaves, the flower stalks, flowers? Do I have to dry them first or use fresh herbs?
My preference is to use the plantain leaves fresh, though I have not made a salve.
It will be interesting to see how others use the plantain leaves whether fresh or dry or the seed head.
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Helen Siddall-Butchers wrote:Hi! This is a really interesting post, and I'd love to have a go, but I don't use beeswax. Is there an alternative that would work please?
Umi Saudade wrote:
Helen Siddall-Butchers wrote:Hi! This is a really interesting post, and I'd love to have a go, but I don't use beeswax. Is there an alternative that would work please?
Shea butter and cocoa butter work well. When you are in the final stage of salve making, take a dollop and put it on a plate in the freezer for a couple minutes to check that you have the desired consistency (just like with jelly making). I imagine the lack of beeswax would make a softer salve. I use 50/50 beeswax and cocoa butter normally.
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