MY FAVORITE WEED, ITS USES, AND HOW TO MAKE CORDAGE FROM IT - By @papa-pepper

in health •  8 years ago 

Some love it, and yet most hate it. Though I often encountered it while I was growing up, it never interested me much. In fact, I found it to be rather annoying. Often, my summertime attire was nothing more than a pair of shorts, so having irritated itching legs from cutting through some Stinging Nettle was an all too frequent experience. Though we may not have started off on the right foot Urtica dioica has now become a dear friend of mine.

Now, I love to see it, and can't wait to encounter it. I hear it is plentiful in parts of Arkansas, but I've never been able to locate a patch of it. When we ventured up to Wisconsin last week though, I was seeing it everywhere. Basically, once we hit HWY 39/51, my eyes kept glancing into the ditches as patch after patch of dancing stalks passed by.

For some, like my wife, it would be difficult to accurately identify a cluster of Stinging Nettle plants 100 feet away on the other side of the highway when you're travelling 70 mph, but, it comes naturally to me. I know that I covered Stinging Nettle sometime ago in my THE EDIBLE OUTDOORS, but seeing so much of it lately here in Wisconsin made me decide to dedicate another post to this amazing plant.

This picture was taken from the driveway of a local restaurant. This particular patch was about 300 feet away, across multiple lanes of traffic. Yet, there is was, as clear as day. Some more beautiful nettle! I've actually stopped to gather some from at least five different locations since I have been up here.

The first stop was a local campground with an amazing crop of Nettle growing in a field every year. I had gotten permission from them last year to pick as much as I wanted whenever I wanted. Unlike me, they have no use for it. I picked up @noganoo and took him out to show him the blessing.


@noganoo in Stinging Nettle heaven, hard at work reaping a harvest!


@papa-pepper gathering up giant handfuls of the fresh leaves.


@papa-pepper surrounded by his favorite weed ever!


@noganoo back at home with an excellent harvest!


I had reaped quite a harvest as well. It is so nice to enjoy activities like this with others, as most people don't get @noganoo or @papa-pepper when it comes to things like this. Sometimes, my wife doesn't even understand what I'm up to, but she gives me the benefit of the doubt and let's me go with it, knowing and trusting that I am not wasting my time but that there must be some value in it. In fact, this time she even told me to make sure that I get some Stinging Nettle to bring back to Arkansas with us since the tea can help with her allergies. I quickly set out to dry my harvest to make transporting and storing it easier on us.


I started drying some on the driveway at my parents house.


Some I even began to dry on the hood of our truck.


USE 1 : FOOD

Although it is not so common, Stinging Nettle is an excellent food option. It is a great source of Vitamin K, Calcium, Manganese and Vitamin A. Though it is easier to enjoy steemed or stir-fried, it can also be eaten raw.

I like to carefully pick a leaf off, and then roll it inbetween my fingers so that the juices saturate the leaf and deactivate the tiny stingers. Once this has been done, the plant can be enjoyed without fear of getting "stung" in the lips or tongue.

I've made some great dishes and even a smoothie with Stinging Nettle in them already, and I will continue to explore the culinary uses of this wonderful plant.


USE 2 : DRINK

Technically, steeping the leaves in almost boiling water is the best method for making tea from Stinging Nettle. However, because of the flavor, I prefer to use this method, which may reduce many of the health benefits,


FILL POT HALFWAY WITH WATER


ADD SMALLER SECTIONS OF NETTLE PLANT


STRIP LEAVES OFF LARGER SECTIONS


KEEP ADDING LEAVES UNTIL SUFFIENT QUANTITY HAS BEEN REACHED


BRING WATER TO A BOIL FOR 10 MINUTES


LET COOL SLIGHTLY, POUR INTO GLASS AND ENJOY


Here are just some of the health benefits of Stinging Nettle tea:

  • Reduce Hypertension
  • Fights common cold
  • Reduces Inflammation
  • Relieves Asthma
  • Kills parasites
  • Break down Kidney stones
  • Stops bleeding
  • Relieves Arthritis
  • Helps the Kidneys
  • Boosts Immune System

SOURCE


USE 3 - PLANT FERTILIZER

Because of the high amount of nutrients in the Stinging Nettle plant, an impressive liquid fertilizer can be made from it. The technique is so simple, I'm almost done explaining it. Basically, all you need to do is to fill a bucket with Stinging Nettles and then add water. It helps if you beat the nettle material a bit first and if you wait a few days before using it, but that's it!

Here I am at the garden of @noganoo, checking out some nettle that he grew from seeds I gave him last year. We discussed a lot of the benefits and uses of this incredible plant during our time together, and I gave him a demonstration of eating it raw, making tea from it, and using it to make cordage.


USE 4 : SEEDS

The seeds can be a great way to grow your own, as you saw above with the plants in the garden of @noganoo. However, the seeds can be used for much more.

At the end of the season, these perrenials go to seed and produce a large quantity of tiny seeds near the top of each stalk.

These tiny seeds help the plant spread out and keep the species alive, but they can also be used to help kidney function.

Much like the energy boost provided by nettle tea, eating the seeds can also have a stimulating effect. I remember some friends once using the tops of some nettle plants in a soup that they made for dinner, and everyone had a very hard time getting to bed that night, and stayed up late into the early morning hours.


USE 5 : RHIZOMES

The rhizomes or roots of the Stinging Nettle plant are another way that the plant spreads itself out. This is why older patches of Nettle can grow quite large. Each year, the parent plant will come back because it is a perennial, but it will also send out new shoots every year as well. Collecting and relocating the rhizomes is the easiest way to get your own patch of Stinging Nettles growing, just be careful because it is illegal in some places where Stinging Nettles are considered to be noxious or invasive.

There are actually some people who grow this plant as a cash crop and sell the rhizomes, as well as other parts of the plant. For a long time, herbalists and traditional healers have been using the roots of the nettle plant to rid the body of excess water and to relieve joint pain.

The most common use these days for the nettle root is to treat urinary tract infections and to ease the symptoms of an enlarged prostate.

SOURCE

Like with many "natural" remedies, the research needed to make certain claims appears lacking. I choose to use various parts of this plant for various reasons at certain times, but I am in no way providing any direct medical or dietary advice.


USE 6 : ANIMAL FODDER

Many animals will eat many things, and just because an animal will eat something does not mean that it is the best thing for them to be eating. Because of the incredible nutritional value of Stinging Nettle, it is actually an excellent choice for fodder.

Though some animals like goats have no problem consuming raw nettles, other livestock may be more picky. However, if dried nettle is added into the hay, this plant seems more palatable to other animals.

Many farmers have begun doing their own research on the benefits of using Stinging Nettle as a food supply for their farm animals. Personally, I think everyone on our farm will be familiar with this incredible plant.


USE 7 : LINEN AND CORDAGE

Stinging Nettle can also be used to make linen, clothing, and cordage. It has even been used as a cotton substitute. The process of harvesting the fibers and combing them to make them smooth and fine is a simple one, but for now, I'll just cover a rough version of how to make your own cordage, or rope, from the stalks of the nettle plant.


HOW TO MAKE CORDAGE WITH @papa-pepper


Here are a few of those close-ups I promised you in the video.


Not only is this cordage easy to make and incredibly useful, it's also extremely strong!

This "necklace" that I quickly made can obviously support at least 20 pounds.


If you haven't yet, check out that video quick. This skill is so easy to learn, and once you know how to do it, the practical know-how can be with you for a lifetime. The method can work with many kinds of fibrous plants, and I have even made cordage out of shredded Yucca leaves. Check it out and see what you think, and I hope that you enjoyed learning a little bit more about this amazing plant, Stinging Nettle, which just happens to also be my favorite weed.


As always, I'm @papa-pepper, and here's the proof:


proof-of-my-favorite-weed


All photos taken by @papa-pepper, @noganoo, or one of my children.
All information that was not original has been linked above.


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  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Great article @papa-pepper. I found this today while doing research for day 13 round 2..

It's great to see how your old articles can still be useful at teaching new lessons. I would otherwise not have known how valuable this plant is.

Keep up the good work like always.

Glad to hear it! Thank you!

Nice!
This is my kinda post!
Thats my two cents...Literally...

Yeah, I gotta love it.

So versatile and beneficial, yet detested by society at large...

Remind you of anyone?

Hahhahaahahahahahah ;-)>

I thought so!

Best post ever, awesome job guys :)

These are great skills everyone should learn, and its always good to see a an underappreciated "weed" put to good use

Side node about operation translation on this post - A full transcript of the video would be a massive bonus

Wow! Thanks for that massive compliment.

That's a shit ton of Weed hahaha!

It grows amazingly thick in some places.

I can't wait to get my own patch growing!

Reminds me of my childhood and my dad. Haven't had stinging nettle soup or tea for ages. Not sure if it grows in tropical Cambodia though.

Not sure if I can send you some...

Lol... it's Cambodia. No postal address or proper working postal service here! But thanks for the offer! On the bright side going to visit family and friends in a month in Belgium and I'll ask my dad to make his famous soup again. Nostalgic.

Nice!

Sounds like Guatemala re no postal service.

Wise Man
You Are
I Use To Take The Store Bought Stinging Nettle
It Would Help Me
With Inflammatory Sinusitis
And Bronchitis.
^ upvoted
Steem On!

Yeah, it goes for about $17 per pound at the natural food store by us; I probably just saved at least $60!

Wow! I have 2 acres. Maybe I should harvest it!

"Maybe?"

I See
:))

good info!
nice gifs too!

Yeah, I like the one of me eating raw leaves.

I think it turned out well and gets the point across.

wow great post! I had no idea people had any use of this plant haha. Most people probably just get pissed off at them 99% of the time :D

That's how I used to be, but not any more.

Perhaps I can influence some others!

wow! great post!
I know another one method to use :))
Stinging Nettle often uses there for nurture punishment tool in the childhood.

And another one way of using was making the broom and take a steam bath with :)
It helps to prevent some diseases

Wow, interesting.

I bet children would pay attention after being introduced to some Stinging Nettle, but I wouldn't try that myself.

Amazing post and great information. My hunt is on for some stinging nettle. Maybe you should have a STEEMIN STINGING NETTLE CONTEST!

Eating the most raw or jumping in a bath tub full of it?

Thank you for posting this, @papa-pepper. It was recommended by @karenmckersie, and was so good that we decided to feature it in our latest newspaper. Click this link to learn more: https://steemit.com/steemplus/@steemplus/steemplus-friday-october-7-the-daily-newspaper-that-pays-you-to-find-high-quality-content

I will check that out and upvote it!

Thanks to @karenmckersie!

You sure found some nice patches of nettles there - nice harvest! I like eating nettles in the spring, as cooked greens. And I've had many a run-in with older nettles -- to me, they are like running into a nest of biting ants. I like them better to eat! : )

Yeah, truly blessed with a whole ton of nettles up in WI!

I'll be bringing some home!

Once you get it started, maybe you'll start seeing wild patches of nettles growing everywhere - that's the way those things work, lol.

I'm looking forward to seeing whether you appreciate the painfully prickly Arkansas Greenbrier in the same way... It creates challenges for getting around in outdoors, too, but it's a pretty good green in the spring, for salad, stir-fry, a mixed pot of greens, and more -- way under-appreciated, except to prompt swearing out in the woods. And, at least in my experience, dense patches of greenbrier are good places to look for the tasty hedgehog mushrooms, too, in the winter. Enjoy your time in WI, especially with all those fall colors!

I'll look into that green Brier.

A good way to get rid of something is to eat it.

I'm an enforcer that way -- eat those problems! If Privet was edible, Arkansas would be a lot better off, lol!

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It reminds me of bamboo. If you're not careful it might take over your entire yard! I wonder if it's as difficult to kill or maintain as bamboo is. My previous yard had shoots popping up EVERYWHERE. Between that and the elephant ears, I couldn't tell you which was worse! LOL

Yeah, Japanese Knot Weed is another one.

My friends have some at their house, and it quickly makes a living fence!

Wow, that's the motherlode of nettles! And ya'll didn't even wear gloves gathering it, brave brave souls.

Yeah, not wearing gloves... I didn't mind, but @noganoo cared quite a bit at first!

@papa-pepper, I do drink stinging nettle tea specially in autumn. It does boost the immune system.
I love that plant in summer and sunny days because that's where I could collect ladybugs - they love sting nettles, too. Those guys hang out on them in summer or sunny days. I'd go bring a washed pint ice cream container to collect them in and release them later in the green house to munch on the aphids there.
I didn't know they've got rhisomes. Thanks to this article now I could grow them in the garden -but would pot them as they tend to run pretty fast.

Excellent.

I like the ladybugs for aphid control, good job!

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Wow, what a versatile weed/plant, who would of known all the uses for this weed! Excellent title for this post btw!

Yeah, I like the title too.

It is an amazing plant, and there are more uses than I listed!

Yes, that is an awesome weed! So is the dandelion.

Oh yeah, Dandelion is another friend!

We had it all over when we lived in Washington state. Wifey got into some that was growing through blackberries, unbeknownst to her. She thought she was just getting scratched by the berry plants, but was actually rubbing on the nettle. Her arms were a mess for a couple of days.
The young leaves have less propensity to sting and can be used more readily in food, from what my step-mil, says. I think she served it to us, but I can't recall the flavor.
Great info. Thanks!!

Thank you, and thanks for letting me join in on your Jackfruit post.

I'm glad you learned something from my video!

That's a lot of nettles! I was educating myself on the health benefits of nettles only a couple of weeks ago, and considering it's something you see EVERYWHERE it's funny that hardly anyone uses them, or even knows they're medicinal. Good job in spreading the word!

Yeah, what a great plant to have everywhere, especially when no one else is interested!

Thanks @woman-onthe-wing!

I'm so glad you dedicated a whole article to Urtica: that's one of my favourite plant too.
I use it for preparing pasta dishes and as fertilizer, but to me it's important for my hairs: they tend to get very dry together with my scalp. As I wash my hairs once a week with the water from boiled Urtica (what you call tea), my scalp start to produce sebum again and I feel (and look) much better.

Yep, I've heard of that.

I did a post a while ago about it, but I wanted to do another.

Perhaps you should do your own to and explain why you like and what you use it for.

Thanks!

I will!

Please do!

Looks like you'll be getting a payout too!

Thanks for listening, I like the post!

THANX!

Hey @papa-pepper, aaaaawesome post!
Quick question, we have this plant in chile:

http://www.chileflora.com/Florachilena/FloraEnglish/HighResPages/EH1567.htm

Does it look like the same type of stinging nettle that you are accustomed to?

No, that is definitely a different plant.

This one is Urtica Dioica in Latin.

Found it! They call it ortiga here. Thanks, buddy!

Great, and you're welcome!

Haha, this is a really funny article! 😂

Funny, but true!

Great write up! Nettle is an awesome plant. In one of my Herbal books I had read about a legend of a Buddhist monk who lived on nothing but Nettle soup for years. We seem to be on the same wavelength when it comes to the hunter gatherer thing.

That we do!

Thanks @andre-ager!

Great article! I used to drink stinging nettle that I would gather from my grandma's house.

Sounds like a nice memory.

Thanks for sharing!

  ·  8 years ago Reveal Comment

Oh yeah, "weed" has more than one meaning...

Actually, this kind of looks like that a bit too.