It is now Fall and time to think about grounding, about
the energies of the plants moving to their roots. Fall is the best time to
harvest medicinal roots to make medicines, i.e. Burdock Root, Echinacea Root and
most other root medicine plants.
Burdock Root, Articum lappa, is a large leafed,
cool weather plant with sticky cockle buttons. Some of you might have grown up
with this plant and even gotten your hair caught in the cockle burrs (happened
to my teacher, Rosemary one day while studying in Vermont! Ouch!). Burdock
Root, AKA Thorny Burr, Beggar’s Buttons, Cockle Buttons, Love Leaves and
Clot-Bur, grows in the northern USA, and Europe, in waste ground and along
roadsides. It needs cool temperature and good soil, as the root grows deeply
into the ground. I’ve dug up the root in Vermont and it truly is quite large.
Burdock is also known in Japanese cuisine as Gobo, and is
eaten in salads, soups or as a steamed vegetable. The Japanese use it to
eliminate excess nervous energy and as an aphrodisiac. Burdock Root has a sweet
taste, a somewhat spicy odor and a healthy, earthy feeling. I find it cooling
to the body.
Burdock Root has been used medicinally as a tonic for the
blood, as a liver cleanser ( a good portion of it is included in my Spring/Fall
Liver Cleansing Tea), and for skin disorders such as eczema, psoriasis and
acne. It is also useful for arthritis, sciatica and is one of the main 4
ingredients in Essiac formula noted for the treatment of cancer.
Not only is the root useful, but the leaves and seeds can
be made into an infusion for the treatment of chronic indigestion. The roots
and the leaves encourage the elimination or uric aced via the kidneys. Burdock
can also be used externally for bruises and skin problems.
I like to use Burdock Root (Gobo) in soups and as a
decoction, combined with several other liver cleansing and blood purifying
herbs. It is now time for a Fall Liver Cleanse, so drinking a good root formula
tea for a week, along with other simple dietary regimes, I believe, is an
excellent idea as we approach winter.
So enjoy this glorious Fall weather, get out there and
plant, plant, plant. Fall gardening is the BEST here in Central Texas. Love,
Health and Peace to All.