Archive for the 'Herbs' Category

18 February 2009

One day I made this tea for my friend Melissa who was having a particularly bad go of things.  Since her name is Melissa, I started out with Lemon Balm.   I added in chamomile for relaxation and to alleviate feelings of sadness.  I added in rose petals and lavender for the beauty of the flowers and scent and then some orange peel to pep it up.

Happy Tea

1 part Melissa (lemon balm)

1 part chamomile

1/2 part rose petals

1/2 part lavender

1/2 part orange peel

….

I got my first lesson of homework back from my herbalism home study course.  I got butterfly stickers!  And it said my work was excellent!  Very validating.  I think working with herbs on quiet afternoons is the only thing keeping me sane these days.  Lately I’ve been drinking root beer tonic tea with lots of cinnamon and ginger to support liver and kidneys.

2 February 2009

My friend says I can’t be Raw Canadian Girl anymore since I’m no longer a raw vegan.  I said I’m still a raw Canadian girl, it doesn’t have to mean I’m a raw foodist Canadian girl.  Only people who know what raw foodism is are going to assume that it implies I’m a raw foodist.

Anyway, I’m staying here until I can think of a better name. Any suggestions?  Primal Canadian Girl?  Primitive Canadian Girl?  I’m as lost as you are…

dishcloth

I made like a million of these knit cotton dishcloths for my family this year for Christmas.  (Okay, not a million, but a lot.)  This one for my sister is the only one I got around to taking a photo of.   It’s diagonal garter stitch and then my mom crocheted the edges since I don’t know how to crochet. I think the pink ones turned out particularly pretty.

scarf

This is the scarf I knit for my sister for her birthday.  It looks deceivingly short in this photo since I folded it many times to fit.  My sis likes extra long scarves so it took 3 balls of Soy Wool Stripes (SWS) to knit it up.

lulu

This is my sister’s dog Lulu who was just visiting here from Alberta for a week.  She got her hair cut at PetSmart the second day she was here and the employees had to phone my mom to come pick her up because she was having explosive diarrhea all over the store.  I’m sure they loved that!  With all the shitting and pissing (at PetSmart and then inside our house and on my bedroom floor, ew) I didn’t like her very much but then the cute little bugger grew on me.  I am used to big dogs and I love big dogs, so getting used to Lulu was different for me.  It’s so funny how different some dogs can be.  She is such a princess.

I made burn salve the other day with Calendula, Comfrey and St John’s Wort but I think it started to burn in the crockpot because I didn’t have quite enough oil to cover all the herbs.  I think it kinda smells burnt and that it’s the wrong colour, but I am not sure.  I don’t know what to do except make another batch and try to cover all the herbs with oil and then compare the two. I have no friends who are into such herby things to ask.

I also made some herbal shampoo this evening with a Rosemary Gladstar recipe.  It has comfrey, calendula and chamomile made into a tea as well as peppermint and lavender essential oil plus unscented Dr. Bronners and some Kukui nut oil.

Shifting Gears

Big shifts are headed my way this year.  I recently had a consultation with Kiva Rose, a medicine woman herbalist who I have a great respect for.  Since September, I have had a bad dry and itchy skin rash which spread and would not respond to the typical topical treatments or dietary changes, or even the advice of a Western medical doctor.  The rash continued to spread to other areas and it got so bad that I’d be scratching myself to bleeding while I was sleeping.  So I decided to consult Kiva.

Kiva told me I am dealing with sluggish liver, kidneys, and digestive system as well as insulin resistance. She recommended some nourishing herbal infusions, which I’d already been taking previous to the consult.  As well, she recommended some bitters to take before meals to help with the digestion of fats and proteins.  I had also mentioned to her that I have bipolar/depression in my history and she took that into account as well.  To this end, she also suggested some tinctures for mood balancing.  As well as this, she recommended a routine of 2-3 weeks of vitamins to help my metabolism and endocrine system.

From a mental health perspective, she says that lessening carb-load can help to relieve anxiety and depression.  This makes sense to me since refined carbs are addictive and ones that are highly processed create insulin spikes and mood disorders.

Her advice for dietary changes includes eating according to Mark Sisson’s Primal Blueprint.  The idea of this diet is that one would strive to eat in a caloro-nutrient ratio and style that resembled our hunter-gatherer ancestor’s diet.  For me this means eliminating/restricting bananas (!!!), dates and super sweet fruits.  It means eating blueberries, other berries, local apples instead of super sweet fruit.  It translates to eating more fats and proteins and keeping carbs limited to around 120 grams per day.  So, no super sweet fruit, only moderate amounts of fruit and starchy veg., no grains, limiting legumes/beans, limited “smart” grains such as quinoa.  The emphasis is on green vegetables and non-sweet fruits, with lots of healthy sources of fat/protein.

I had been eating lots of fruit, but also some cooked food such as legumes, rice, and vegetable soups.  When I had been eating cooked food, I was concentrating on carby things not fatty things, since I reckoned that fatty things didn’t combine well with super sweet fruits.  I think this was creating a major imbalance with the amount of sugar I was taking in, combined with the cooked carbs.  It’s okay to eat a lot of sugary fruits if that’s all you’re eating, but when you combine it with anything else, it’s a disaster.  I think what she is saying makes a lot of sense.

As well, she disagrees with veganism from a nutritional standpoint but understands ethically where I am coming from.  She says that I am headed for long-term nutritional deficiencies if I remain vegan, but if I want to do so, I should at least continue with daily herbal infusions, some b-vitamins, magnesium and zinc.  I am not ready to eat meat any time soon, but am considering slowly adding in raw local cow’s milk or goat’s milk yogourt/kefir/pima.  Maybe eggs in the long-term.  (“Yogourt?  I thought you were vegan?”  Yeah, I know!  Crazy, huh?)  I have been interested in the body ecology/primal eating thing for quite some time and I got to a point where I understood that an animal-based diet can be as healthy if it’s from wild sources rather than domesticated.  I think that’s why I got my gun license, since in the back of my idealistic mind I have a vision of one day being able to hunt my own food.  Hunting my own would probably be the only way I’d eat meat at this point in my thinking and I’m nowhere near there yet since the thought of eating it still repulses me (hey, it’s been a while since I ate meat). As well, in terms of preparing for the crash of civilization and fall of the oil economy, I would like not to depend on the fruits of civilization so much.  I want to know how to hunt for that reason.

Of course, all of this information about eating low-carb and high-fat/protein to someone who strongly believe(s?)(d?)  in the 80/10/10 diet which is strictly vegan and high carb, seems pretty overwhelming.  It seems crazy to have invested so much energy into a philosophy.  As you all know, I have already abandoned all ideas of an animal-rights based approach to eating because of the preposterousness of that idea, although I had remained vegan because I thought it was healthy.  I feel as though 811 was just part of my journey and knowledge.  I agree with Dr Graham that we need to eat more produce. And I agree that grains are toxic and an inappropriate food for humans. Some of the principles of 811 are still important.  Eating a produce-dominated diet full of fruits and greens is still what I want to do.  I just want to eat less-sweet fruits instead, and change the caloro-nutrient ratio.

I am not saying that 80-10-10 did not work for me at some point in my life.  It did work for me, to a great extent.  When I was following 811 strictly for a period of 8 months my depression lifted and I experienced great health.  But when it came around to winter, I started having difficulty finding good sources of fruit.  On 811, I also experienced low blood pressure with dizziness spells and vertigo and cold temperature, because of all the fruit and greens.  I am already cold and even colder on 811.  When one isn’t exercising at an intense level 1+ hrs per day, the sugar can’t be used by the body easily.  And in the winter it’s hard to exercise at such an intense level because it’s so cold outside.  I have always felt limited in finding good quality fruit, especially in the winter.  Bananas just aren’t available locally, organically in Canada :P   And I have always felt guilty about eating a diet that consisted of mostly imported fruit from the tropics.  (I plan to continue to live in Canada, not the tropics.)  What I am saying is that I am having problems and insurmountable challenges in sticking to 80-10-10 now in the present, and in the past so I have to admit it is not working for me.

I have to be realistic and not idealistic, which I tend towards.  I have not been consistently 100% raw for periods more than a few weeks for the past year or more.  And my interim plan of eating high raw foods (lots of sweet fruit) + some cooked carb-y things was creating problems.  I kept holding onto this plan because I thought maybe, just maybe, someday I’ll be able to be 100% raw and it will all be okay.  Even though it clearly wasn’t working I was still holding out.  So realistically, what I was doing was not only (a) not working, (b) creating mood disorders, (c) creating skin rashes, but it was also nutritionally deficient! Realistically, I feel like Kiva’s dietary recommendations make sense and are do-able for me.

Guides and Gurus on APTN

For all you Canadians, there’s a great show on APTN on Wednesday nights at 10:30pm (eastern time).  It’s called Guides and Gurus.  I saw one that was about a Cree medicine man who talked about plants he used to heal his cancer.  Last night’s was about Peru and it featured both an Andean medicine woman and a shamanic healer who brings his knowledge to the West about psychotropic plants and emotional/spiritual release through ceremony.

Making Nutritious Wild Herbal Infusions

infusion01

What you will need:

One sterilized 1L capacity Mason Jar (to sterilize, boil some water and rinse out jar and lid)

One ounce of fresh dried herbs (such as nettle, oatstraw, comfrey, red clover)

Straining device

One litre of boiling water (distilled or spring is best)

Instructions: Boil water and pour on top of herbs.  Put the lid on the jar and let it sit and cool overnight as the herbs release their nutrients overnight.  In the morning, strain the herbs and drink the infusion.

I know it’s not technically “raw” but I love drinking tea in the winter.  I have a tendency to always be cold and I live in Canada so drinking tea helps me cope.  Herbal infusions are like a super-charged extra-strong tea.  It’s a great way to get more wild foods in your diet in the summer time when you can pick your own herbs.  During the colder months, the next best thing is to order organic, wildcrafted herbs from Mountain Rose Herbs.

Making infusions is preferable to tea for a few reasons.  They create less waste than tea bags because typically herbs are purchased in bulk so there’s less packaging.  As well, infusions are incredibly rich in nutrients because a typical tea bag only contains a few grams of raw material, but an herbal infusion uses 1 entire ounce of herbs per litre.  Dark leafy green herbs such as nettle contain loads of minerals and other healing properties.

I make my infusions in the evening before bed and then let it sit until the morning the next day.  I drink about a cup at a time and finish the litre of fluid before the end of the day.  If you don’t finish it, you can refrigerate for the next day, use it as a hair rinse, as plant food or use a few drops as a nourishing addition to your pet’s water.  Depending on the herb, you might want to sweeten with agave or stevia.