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Showing posts with label Wormwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wormwood. Show all posts

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Video showing Wormwood growth and harvest.


This is a nice video overview about
growing wormwod from start to finish.



[wormwood] [growing herbs] [video]

Video showing how to properly grow wormwood.

This video shows a basic overview of how to grow wormwood.




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guide to Growing Wormwood at home for healing remedies.

Learn how to grow wormwood.





How to grow wormwood for natural healing.

wormwood Pictures, Images and Photos

Botanical Names: Artemisia, but is also called mugwort and of course wormwood.

Plant Type: perennial

Growth: 3 to 5 feet. Rounded shape

Growing Location:
• Grow indoors under lights (See growing indoors with lights articles)
• Grow outside (full to part sun) Zones 3-10

Soil: Loose well drained soil works best.
Add perlite to soil for good drainage.



Learn about shamanism and shamans.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Ancient Myths & Wormwood

Ancient Myths & Wormwood

Learn about shamanism and shamans.

image of a Wormwood Plant growing in a pot.
Wormwood Plant growing in a pot.


Author: Ernie Fitzpatrick
A myth is a sacred story usually concerning the origins of the world or how the world and the creatures in it came to be their present form. Myths are the glue that holds all societies together. There's an element of truth embedded. So how much TRUTH (if any) is there in the ancient myths from Sumeria, Egypt, and Maya cultures about a visiting planet from afar?

This visiting planet has been given so many names. The Sumerians called the planet Nibiru which means "Planet of the crossing". Later cultures, including ours simply call what we "think" is out there, Planet X. Many believe that the book of Revelation (chapter 8) speaks of this same brown dwarf but gives it the name of Wormwood which means "bitter".

Ancient cultures estimated that this brown dwarf would visit our neighborhood approximately every 3,600 years and that the descriptions of the plagues of Egypt speaks of it's last visit to our solar system around 1,500 BCE.

The most current thinking, of those who think therre is actually something tangible to think about, estimate a visit anytime from 2009 to 2012 (naturally 2012!). The brown dwarf isn't just going to suddenly show up on December 21, 2012. If there is such a planet, we will SEE it COMING and it will create havoc for 2-3 years as it's makes its pass through our solar system tracking along the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

So, we will be able to affirm or debunk this theory sometime next year or there abouts. Or we may be able to confirm it.

Many say the confirmations began in 1982 when NASA announced a mystery object and then went silent about it. If it is getting close then there would be great effects on our solar system. Are the massive earthquakes, tsunamis, CAT 5 storms, and other anomalies an indication that our earth is feeling something ominous? Is the fact that we've had more than ONE MILLION people killed though natural disasters in the last seven years an indication that soemthing is up?

And what about global warming? Is it really solar warming? :-)

Ancient cultures have know things long since forgotten. The bitter truth is that we just might be on the cusp of being reminded again of things they once knew.
About the Author:
As a spiritual-futurist my commentaries and articles deal primarily with an interpretation of current events in light of macro-universal forces at play.
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Ancient Myths & Wormwood

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Wormwood - Medicinal Uses, Interactions, Side Effects,

Wormwood - Medicinal Uses, Interactions, Side Effects, Dosage wormwood - Medicinal Uses, Interactions, Side Effects, Dosage

Author: Steve Mathew
Wormwood

Wormwood is a common name for specific plants of the Artemisia genus, which includes over 350 species worldwide. Two species used commonly in herbal medicine include A. absinthium (common wormwood) and A. annua (Chinese wormwood, or "qing hao").

Wormwood plant
Wormwood plant

Wormwood Uses and Benefits:

Preparations of wormwood have been used as medicine for thousands of years. Common wormwood (A. absinthium) has traditionally been employed to eliminate parasitic worms and as an aromatic "bitter" to promote intestinal secretory activity for treating anorexia, dyspepsia, and "biliary dyskinesia." Absinthe, an alcoholic beverage made from A. absinthium extract, was extremely popular in turn-of-the-century France. Its mild hallucinogenic properties led to the belief that it stimulated "creative" and intellectual powers. Numerous artists, including Van Gogh, celebrated these effects; however, its use was ultimately banned because of purported CNS toxicity.


Chinese wormwood (A. annua) has been used for thousands of years by Chinese practitioners for the treatment of fever and related conditions, including malaria. In the 1970s, Chinese researchers isolated an active constituent of the herb, artemisinin (qinghaosu), and found that it had parasiticidal activity against both chloroquine-sensitive and chloroquine-resistant strains of Plasmodium falciparum. Artemisinin and several semi-synthetic derivatives are now used in Southeast Asia and Africa, especially for severe P. falciparum and multi-resistant malaria.

Wormwood Pharmacology: 

Common wormwood contains a number of biochemical compounds that have physiological effects. Absinthin and artabsin are believed responsible for the bitter properties of herb. Several studies of bitter oral wormwood extracts have ,demonstrated increased gastric and biliary secretion in both animals and humans. The essential oil contains the terpenoid thume, which in toxic doses can cause autonomic excitability and convulsions. Thujone is believed to be the ingredient in absinthe at is responsible for CNS toxicity. The structure of thujone is related to camphor and tetrahydrocannabinol, the active component marijuana, which may account for some of the hallucinatory effects attributed to its use. Santonin, a sesquiterpene lactone isolated from A. absinthium, can paralyze helminthic worms, which then unable to maintain their position within the bowell Other constituents of wormwood, including flavonoids, phenolic compounds, and coumarins, have in vitro antimicrobial, anti-tumor, ilepatoprotective, anti-inflammatory, and insecticidal activity.


Extracts of Chinese wormwood also contain a number of volatile oils, including camphor, thujone, cineole, caryophyllene and artemisia ketone. The sesquiterpene lactone artemisinin (qinghaosu) has antimalarial activity both in animals and in vitro. Artemisinin and an active metabolite, dihydroartemisinin, have a rapid action, and parasite clearance times are much shorter than with other antimalarial drugs.


Clinical Trials:


Common Wormwood-Despite the long history of use as an antihelminthic, there are no controlled trials of the crude herb for use in humans. Santonin, isolated from A. absinthium,About the Author:


Steve Mathew is a writer, who writes many great articles on herbal medicines for common ailments and diseases. For more information on herbal remedies and home remedies visit our site on health care. Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Wormwood - Medicinal Uses, Interactions, Side Effects, Dosage wormwood - Medicinal Uses, Interactions, Side Effects, Dosage

Great article on wormwood.

#wormwood


Healing Wormwood: Its Medicinal Properties and Uses. Natural healing article

Overview: A nice general overview about the healing value and uses of wormwood.

Wormwood: Its Medicinal Properties

Author: Andrew W John
If not for the medicinal properties of wormwood, we might not be enjoying this otherworldly drink known as absinthe today.

Wormwood
Wormwood


Due to a plethora of illnesses and ailments which wormwood was believed to cure, absinthe was first mass-produced in 1798 as a tonic. Thousands of years ago, wormwood had already been harvested in China as a cure for malaria thanks to its artemisinin component, which reacts with the high iron levels in the malarial parasite, producing free radicals. These then destroy the cell walls of the parasite, effectively subduing the illness. Today, it is still one of the most effective malarial cures and is still being sought in Asia and certain places in Africa.

The downside to this herb, however, is its extreme bitterness. This is why several other herbs have been added to the absinthe recipe to make the taste more appealing. On the other hand, it is exactly this tartness that stimulates the bitter-sensing taste buds of the tongue and consequently sends signals to our brain, stimulating our digestive system. It also excites the liver's bile production and bile storage in the gall bladder.



Below are more of wormwood's medicinal uses:

• As a digestive stimulant. Used in treating stomach pain, bloating, gas, heartburn, and indigestion.

• As a tonic in recuperation. Wormwood has been known to aid in the absorption of nutrients in the body, thus helping people recover from a long illness.

• As a purgative. This perennial shrub has been extensively used to purge intestinal worms (thus its name), particularly roundworms and pinworms.

• As an insecticide. Its hairy yellowish-green leaves contain glands that have resinous fragments where the natural insecticide resides.

• As a potential cancer cure. Research has shown that artemisinin, the same substance responsible for treating malaria, can also be used to target cancer cells.

• As a pain reliever. Wormwood has been used to relieve pains associated with childbirth, as well as muscle sores and pain due to arthritic joints, broken bones, and sprains.

• As an anti-inflammatory agent. It has long been known to cure inflammation of the gall bladder as well as certain types of infections, jaundice, and hepatitis.

• As a brain stimulant. Due to its component thujone, it has been used to treat mild depression and to restore impaired cognitive functions such as perceiving, remembering, and thinking.

Wormwood preparations should only be done by professionals in the field due to the danger of ingesting dangerously high levels of thujone. However, the thujone levels used in all our products are true to the original Swiss recipe and are highly regulated, safely giving you those sought-after effects when consumed in the recommended manner.



Be Sure to check out or future articles on growing wormwood.


About the Author: To find out more about Wormwood, please feel free to visit our site: Wormwood Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Wormwood: Its Medicinal Properties [wormwood] [medical wormwood] [thujone] [absinthe] [healing herbs] [natural remedy] [natural cure] herbalism] [natural healing] [herbs] [shaman] [shamanism] [spirit plants]