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Archiver > TXREDRIV > 2001-01 > 0979158539


From: "Ken & Betty Rowland" <>
Subject: Re: [TXREDRIV-L] Re: TXREDRIV-D Digest V01 #13
Date: Wed, 10 Jan 2001 14:28:59 -0600


Did anyone else have tobacco juice smeared on their bull nettle stings
to remove the "itch"? My dad always did that and it looked nasty but
took away the pain. Of course, he tried to "doctor" my city daughter
the same way and traumatized her for life! Perhaps the tobacco plant
[many varieties] is a good treatment to neutralize the formic acid?
Betty Rowland, Houston

http://freeweb.pdq.net/kenrow/

----------
> From: Andrea Ramsay <>
> To:
> Subject: [TXREDRIV-L] Re: TXREDRIV-D Digest V01 #13
> Date: Wednesday, January 10, 2001 11:41 AM
>
> According to sites on the internet, the leaves of the stinging
nettles,
> or bull nettles ("urtica"), are edible. They need to be cooked down,
> which removes the formic acid that causes the stinging on the skin.
> They are high in Vitamin C and supposed to have other beneficial
> qualities.
>
> As an aside, a couple of the notes on the internet indicate that many
> poisonous or irritating plants, such as poison ivy and stinging
nettles
> often grow in the vicinity of other plants which can be used to
remove
> the sting or the skin irritation. Would be useful to find out which
> plants counteract the irritations and learn to recognize them.
>
>
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