Wednesday, August 25, 2010

~ Yarrow Salve ~

















Yarrow is well-known as an antibacterial, analgesic, and anti-styptic (stops bleeding). It's wonderful for insect bites, paper cuts and any other little painful cuts. It’s a perfect choice for all abrasions,cutting down the pain dramatically within minutes and minimizing chances of infection. A thin layer on the inside of the nose will also stop a nosebleed.
I recently held a Yarrow Salve making class at Thrive.
Here are some photos & the the recipe we used.
Happy Wildcrafting!


Yarrow Salve





1. Wild, white yarrow (not the golden yarrow or other hybrid colors)Gather the leaves (flowers in full bloom can also be used), and dry in the shade or indoors (never in sunlight, which degrades the chemistry once it is separated from the earth). Dry for minimum of 5-7 days, longer is fine. Store in clean paper bags (not plastic, as this will promote growth of fungi, with any stored herb)


2. Melt 4 cups of olive oil and 1/2 cup of pure beeswax on a stovetop, or if funds are tight 4 cups of Crisco instead (no need for the beeswax to solidify it at room temperature).; smaller batches are simply scaled down from these proportions, using about a 1/8 ratio of beeswax to olive oil


3. Add as much dried yarrow leaf (and flowers if included) as you can immerse in the oil, stirring gently with a wooden spoon on simmer. Avoid "french-frying" or blackening or browning of the leaves. Simmer 15-20 minutes on low, stirring. The medicinal aroma will be prominent, and the color of the oil will turn green or golden green.




4. Cool approximately 15 minutes to allow safer handling. Strain through a fine metal-screen sieve into a 4-cup glass measure, then pour from that into clean, small glass jars, e.g. baby food or tiny jelly jars.


5. LABEL each jar with "yarrow salve" (Achillea millefolium), and the date. Store in refrigerator. Will last for over a year if refrigerated. These make great gifts for friends and family.6. Use liberally with a band-aid or other sterile dressing, to cover the wound, keeping in the salve and keeping clothes protected from the oil.

2 comments:

  1. Amazing Yarrow salve, I live in Dominican Republic and I had so much yarrow growing at one time that I started from seed, they were as beautiful as yours.. they faded away and I haven't seen them again,, i think because of all our tropical rain we have been having. Yay for midwifery!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. This sounds wonderful! We have lots of wild yarrow growing around the farm, but I had no idea it does so many good things. Thanks for the recipe. :)

    ReplyDelete