Heather Staas wrote:https://eattheplanet.org/catmint-a-useful-and-irresistible-herb/
Here are some ways. I do tea now and then but it's not a favorite for me. And my cat loves rolling around in it when he goes outside.
Nicely done! I had a good stand of
stinging nettle which I thought was catnip/catmint (partly because my cat loved to roll in it). I I lost it all to my
chickens (same time as I lost the sunchokes) but I just discovered (same as the sunchokes) that I have a number of volunteers in the same bed which really relieves me. I do have a lot of general inflammation I blame on general aging but may try making a tea from it to see if it helps.
I *really* like it when I ignore/neglect something and it recovers/endures anyway. Then I *know* the conditions it really likes to thrive.
I get tomatillo volunteers every year *somewhere* as well as devils claws. I have had a small stand (3-6 plants) of mullien in the eastern side of my 16' yurt (not primary residence) that really exploded this year... I must have (literally) 1000 tiny first year plants in about a 30' vicinity with different levels of shade... I really need to see if I can develop a taste for them as salad (and wilted?) greens.
I also have a lot of
volunteer "bee weed" (
local indigenous name is guaco) popping up lots of places far from the two small stands I have had for years. These stands are host to "tarantula wasps" every (late) summer but all the small pollinators love them. The seeds are used here in a traditional ceramic glaze... I believe it has to do with a particular high iron content... for black on black pottery.