Treating Poison Ivy Exposures
If you are exposed, according to the FDA, you should quickly (within 10 minutes):
first, cleanse exposed areas with rubbing alcohol.
next, wash the exposed areas with water only (no soap yet, since soap can move the urushiol, which is the oil from the poison ivy that triggers the rash, around your body and actually make the reaction worse).
now, take a shower with soap and warm water.
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^HahahahahahahaNick Garbarino wrote:Many years ago I knew a woman who ate it and it apparently worked as a preventative for her without any problems. She talked her husband into eating some and the inside of his mouth and throat swelled up so bad he had to be rushed to the emergency room. With medical treatment, he survived. They split up not long after that.
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* Cilantro juice -- take a handful of cilantro in a blender with a cup of water, then drink it. If you've got active rash, strain the juice and put the cilantro mush on the rash as a poultice and drink the juice. If I'm active outside I drink 1 cup per day, if I get a rash I go up to 3-4 cups a day.
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Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
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YES!Larry Shaules wrote:I have found that washing with Dawn dish soap and applying it on infected areas after using witch hazel to kill the infection is the easiest and most cost effective answer. I am very sensitive to poison oak and have even gotten it from the dust. I am now able to go prospecting for gold in California without fear. Oh happy days.
Hope this helps.
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Lorinne Anderson: Specializing in sick, injured, orphaned and problem wildlife for over 20 years.
My thought is would a hive, located near poison ivy or poison oak (we have neither where I live, to my knowledge) create the same edible inoculation in a safer manner?
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
Lisa Allen wrote:Erica - check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumac_family
Also - remember the "antidote" plants, which often grow nearby Poison Ivy, etcetera (how handy is THAT?)
Jewelweed (Impatiens capensi)
Plantain (Plantago major)
Yarrow (Achilles millefolium)
Mullein (Verbascum thapsis)
Do a google "image search" for each Latin name here, and if you don't recognize any of them, try just googling the "genus" name without the species name to see what other species may live near you! The reason I suggest this is that hundreds of pictures showing the same plant is very helpful for identification by us non-botanists hehe!
To use - chew some fresh plant material and apply to rash. That usually does it. You can also tincture these and carry it with a cotton ball (or cloth) and use it that way.
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