Showing posts with label prepping in the yard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prepping in the yard. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2013

More Hidden Treasures in your garden.

Yesterday, I posted my joy in discovering a plant I acquired to grow in a dark shady place turned out to be a valuable variety of ginger.  Today I had a lot of time on my hands waiting on someone else and did a little research on some of the other plants I have growing to baffle the lawn guards.  You see, if I grow a lot of flowering plants and place vegetables in between, no one notices when they are flowering or fruiting.


ALOE vera
  
Aloe Vera is a great statement plant that hides the fact that pineapple grows in my garden and is used for burns and small cuts and scrapes and a skin softener.
Basil, a great herb for cooking also used to treat intestinal parasites.  
Catnip. besides making the cat happy and I grow a little around the trash can at the roadside to keep the strays out of my backyard, is a digestive aid, a tranquilizer and sleep aid.
Chamomile is my favorite headache relief in tea form also used for arthritis and boosting the immune system.
Dandelion
Dandelion, I have an area I let go to weed, it flowers in dandelion and shasta daisy.  The Dandelion tea is a diuretic also used for urinary tract infections. 
Echinacea has gotten a lot of hype as a curative for the cold, I don't know but it is a good anti-inflammatory.
Eucalyptus grows down the street and I am allowed to trim all I want from it.  Used for relief from colds, flu and as an anti-bacterial.
Fennel grows wild here so, if you need it for prostate cancer, I can tell you where to get it.
Ginger and shampoo ginger I spoke of yesterday.  
Lantana
Hibiscus- A Southern favorite.  Makes a nice tea and is used as a remedy for colds and dissolving phlegm.
Lantana berries are said to be edible when fully black and ripe but I was warned off them as mildly poisonous and my grandmother's voice still rings in my ears.  I let lantan grow here for it's profusion of flowers and the fact that aphids hate it.  I plant tender vegetables near it to keep them safe from infestation.
Lavender has a calming effect and in a sachet, aids in restful sleep.
www.lemonbalmcream.com 
Lemon Balm I use as a repellant tfpr mosquitos.  It is touted as an aid for menstrual cramps.
Lemon Grass I use as a border plant and is good for fever and rheumatism.
Mexican marigold
Marigold is grown for the repeating flowers like the lantana and to ward off bugs in the garden.  Fresh or dried leaves of the mexican variety substitute for tarragon in cooking.
Salvia OFFICIANALIS or, common sage, only is grown for it's scent, and as a flavoring in food.  The psychedelic is not sold locally and is harmful when used.
Pineapple is a great source of vitamin C and manganese, but the root may also be eaten as an anti-inflammatory.
Plumbago
Plumbago, called leadwort, is in the mix to put a light blue flower in among all the yellow.  It's root in powdered form is used as a topical ointment (mixed with oil) for rheumatism.  1/2 tsp. with warm water is taken for diarrhea.


That's all the time I had to kill waiting for my sister's brand new car to be cured of it's recalled wiring failure.  Great way to kill a day, supporting your family when they need it and rocking the car dealers' free wi-fi and computers!  Maybe I didn't get a lot of yard saling or bubble bathing done, but my sister loves me and I got some research into my garden.  It is so much better than I thought with the medicinal uses of the plants I grow for show!   What's in YOUR garden? and, what does it do for YOU?




Saturday, August 3, 2013

What Is In Your Garden?

     I have mentioned in several posts that I suffer from the occasional outbreak of lawn guards.  They are the enforcement arm of the 'association'.  They ride around in golf carts hoping not to be called to work.  Oh, don't get me wrong, they also pick up trash the garbage truck dropped and they clean the pool.  But, often I find them examining my garden.  Apparently the city doesn't want people farming in their front yards, but I think they spend too much time worried about my garden.


www.onalee.com
     Usually, I entertain myself by answering their questions with honesty, but not 100% of the truth.  I have been asked about the squash in the big planter and I just point out the pretty yellow flowers.  Flowering vines, there's no rule against that, right?  A couple days ago, one of the guys was waiting at the end of the driveway when I got home to ask me about the exotic flowers in the shade garden.  When he pointed it out, I really didn't know much about it.

I had to go look it up. 

     Honestly, it was just a shade loving tropical I planted to hide the fact that I was rooting seeds earlier in the spring.  I acquired this plant working with one of my son's in a yard that was overgrown.  The homeowner just wanted a lawn that looked like a golf course. Unfortunately, for him, he had purchased a yard from a woman who had close ties to an actual plant wrangler.  A plant wrangler is a person who travels collecting plants for study by colleges, university, plant nurseries and botanical gardens.  This particular wrangler worked for Harry P. Leu Botanical Gardens (almost 50 acres of tropical and subtropical wonders).  I do love a gossipy neighbor!  I gave away a lot of plants and I took a lot of this material home.  
www.leugardens.org

     I looked at this thing the lawn guard pointed out.  It didn't look like that when I planted it, and promptly forgot about it.  It has taken to it's home and flowered.  It put out a pinecone shaped bracht on a stalk and then it put out flowers.  It was pretty odd.  So, I looked it up and thank you Plant Wranglers of the world and silly men who like flat grass!  

It is a plant called Shampoo Ginger!  Who knew?  And, for a prepper, it is a multipurpose plant.  lucky me! 

Zingiber zerumbet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uses[edit source | editbeta]

The juice can be used to quench thirst when out walking in the forest and can be combined with Mountain Apples as a meal.

Medicinal uses[edit source | editbeta]


Specimen at North Carolina Zoo
In Hawaii, the spicy-smelling fresh rhizomes were pounded and used as medicine for indigestion and other ailments.[citation needed] The rhizomes can be stored in a cool, dark place to keep for use when needed. In traditional use, the rhizome was ground in a stone mortar with a stone pestle, was mixed with a ripe Noni fruit and then used to treat severe sprains.[citation needed] The pulp was placed in a cloth and loosely bound around the injured area.[citation needed]
For a toothache or a cavity, the cooked and softened 'Awapuhi rhizome was pressed into the hollow and left for as long as was needed.[citation needed]
To ease a stomach ache, the ground and strained rhizome material is mixed with water and drunk.[citation needed] Similarly, 'Awapuhi Pake or Ginger root (Zingiber officinale) is widely cultivated and eaten, or made into a tea for indigestion as well as increased circulation of the blood and an increased sense of well-being.[citation needed]
Rhizome extracts have been used in Malay traditional medicine for various types of ailments such as inflammatory- and pain-mediated diseases, worm infestation and diarrhea.[1]
An extract, "Zerumbone", from Zingiber zerumbet Smith, has been found to induce apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in human liver cancer cells, in an in vitro study.[2]

Indigenous Practices[edit source | editbeta]

The leaves and leaf stalks, which are also fragrant, were used in baking in the imu, underground oven, to enhance the flavor of pork and fish as they cooked. Traditionally, the aromatic underground rhizomes were sliced, dried and pounded to a powder, then added to the folds of stored Kapa (Tapa) cloth.
Perhaps the most common use of 'Awapuhi is as a shampoo and conditioner for the hair. The clear slimy juice present in the mature flower heads is excellent for softening and bringing shininess to the hair. It can be left in the hair or rinsed out. Hawaiian women often pick or cut the flowerheads of this plant in the forest, as they approach a pool or waterfallfor a refreshing summer bath, leave the flowers atop a nearby rock, and then squeeze the sweet juices into their hair and over their bodies when the swim is completed. The sudsy juice is excellent for massage also.
     Sooooo, now we have a new plant to use in the natural medicine bag, and a cleaning product for the hair.  How lucky did I get?  I already have other tropical plants that grow from rhizomes in the yard so I know how to propagate and grow this plant faster than I have by just plunking it in the ground, ooops!

      Now, it is time to go back through the yard and examine the plants there more carefully.  I was surprised the exotic flower would give me so much joy.  I need to know what every plant does besides look good and cover the few vegetables I can get away with.  

I know my lemon balm is fragrant and a bug repellant and great in soap for both reasons.  I know my canna lilies are not lilies they are a useful plant, beyond the pretty flowers, they are: a starch for humans that can make noodles and for animals, fodder from the ground up, they produce a dye from the seeds, the fibre in the stalks can be used as a jute substitute or to make paper.  

I need to thoroughly investigate the entire garden to discover prepper's gold. 




Saturday, May 18, 2013

Mini Greenhouses

     Today, I am in the mood to talk about the garden, again.  Yes, again!  In the world of prepping there are the all sorts.  There are the gun preppers, the bulk buy preppers, the retreat preppers, the turn your yard into a farm preppers and more.  Don't forget the zombie apocalypse preppers who plan to shoot the infected and steal the leftover survival gear!
     This blog wishes to post for the "I can't afford to go out there and buy the moon preppers!"  I also want to encourage broadening your horizon for a prepped life and live a better fortified life as a lifestyle more than a hobby.

      Most preppers forced to live in town to keep their jobs while they can, dream of the retreat in the hills.  I feel you.  I too must work to live.  But, I survive my life by practicing my prep principles and maintaining an ultimate bug out plan.  I have already learned to blend my little yard garden in with the flowers so the neighborhood yard guards just see flowers.  I have begun to harvest from the tomatoes and the beans.  Then two days ago, on the way up the drive, I plucked a couple of tomatoes and thought, "I need to replant, soon."  I will miss these little red jewels when they are gone, unless, I replant soon.  

my.gardenguides.com
     I have some seeds started and the little plants are just a bit too tender to set out on their own.  I use these inverted water bottles as miniature greenhouses.  They protect the plants.

    They are great against the wind, and help me to regulate the amount of water the plants get.  Our afternoon rains can be very harsh, so, the little bottles are also little umbrellas.  When the plants are strong enough, I take the lids off.  They get air and water, but not the full force of the elements.  After a few more weeks, I take off the bottle and cut it in half.  I replace the ring at the bottom of the plant as a weed barrier.  
www.flickr.com 

www.sodahead.com
I like my system but, as I was surfing the net, I saw some interesting twists on the same principle.  

     THEN, just for fun, I found other things you can do with those plastic bottles.
recycledawblog.blogspot.com

ppsagar.blogspot.com