Wild Herb Ways, Fiction author Paul Manski. Bioregional biospirit western vitalist. SW lower paw on Turtle Island. Ocotillo, juniper to pine bioregion.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Manzanita Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, little apples Manzanita

Manzanita Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, little apples Manzanita.
      So here is Arctostaphylos uva-ursi,
little apples Manzanita. Rich red brown shiny bark, astringent sour leaves.
A tree a bush, a friend who reminds me of an anonymous spring somewhere in Southern Utah, up on the Cockscomb above our house at Paria.
 A seep of water, canyon oaks, coolness and hair like water grabbing the minds eye. 
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, Manzanita:Sp 'Little apples", at Oak Flat, AZ


       Pale pink trumpet delicate flowers that bloom quickly in early spring. I searched for years to see those flowers up on the coxcomb. And they were always gone. Always too soon or too late tour too early or just not the right time. 
Now I find them everywhere,, I see them in the Santa Catalina's, along the rim rocks below Saguaro. They are always near the oaks, you see them with the gamble oak,
 with the white oaks, the Black Oaks, the blue Oaks, Manzanitas love the oaks. You see them with the silk tassel, with the alligator Juniper you see them all together growing happily. 
    For me always the smell of the manzanita leaves mixed with pinyon pine pitch,

juniper and artemisia: to take the Manzanita leaves and mix them with piñon pine sap Juniper
and sagebrush and then make an incense and use it as a way to pray. It makes a very thick fragrant meditative smoke.
I would go up to the slickrock and gather the piñon pine pitch & the Manzanita leaves, put them in a little depression in the slickrock and light them on fire and use it as incense. It sat on a piece of slick rock, wafting up and swirling around into the sky. Reminds me of prayers or "intention",
like Kristina said, or dreams or blessing and protection. With every dream or intention or prayer there is memories of dreams that were only dreams, no more no less, but dreams only. Smoke that didn't rise, fires that burned out, roofs that fell in leaving only rusted tin and walls. Yet still we pray
and we follow our dreams and make new dreams and new prayers a new medicine.

I now use Yerba Santa in the same way. As Kristine would say, "I make my intention."

          Manzanita is a good medicine for physical ailments to for the burning itching of a urinary tract infection. It's good for those itchy burning down there sorts of things that some unlucky are prone to, even though they wipe the right direction. Moist warm hairy soft places are sometimes problematic for multiple reasons, manzanita leaf tea can help. So Manzanita is for urinary tract infections, UTI. It's the medicine for that painful burning itching, it can be used The same way that people talk about cranberry juice to drink cranberry juice. Well drink leaf Manzanita Tea, you make a tea from the leaves and it has the same type of properties as cranberry. It would be good to mix it with the bark of the Mahonia the Berberis

or creeping Oregon grape which also grows around these manzanita.

       Then there's the apples, the little apples that tempted and nourished and guided us back in a dream, those fruits are there for jam

and tea and just to have and hold a tiny apple less than your baby finger nail, ripening in the sun. Nice to know and praise fertility and youth.
Arctostaphylos Sp, growing at Oak Flat, AZ 4100 ft


          But back to the name and burning dried manzanita leaves mixed with pine pitch and juniper branches. This is the bear. The north circling above, the hunter, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, the bear

that circles upon which all the stars follow like shadows, like dreams, like prayers. Good to see manzanita again and in that pollen of spring a memory of hair sparkling like water drawing the eye in closer and closer. Manzanita.
by Paul Manski

Monday, December 23, 2013

Mahonia, bajos-Pelvic steam and bilis by Paul Manski

Algerita, Yerba de Sangre, Sangre de Christo, Mahonia.
Berberis wilcoxii, grows as a woody shrub. It is growing here in the coolness of a sky island at about 8000ft. It's neighbors are pine and fir along with narrow leafed cottonwood.
Mahonia spp.
    In the southwest  in Arizona and New Mexico we have this plant growing in a wide variety of habitats. Mahonia app grows high and low elevation and takes many forms.  Wherever it grows it has a reputation as a strong medicine plant. People look at it that way and respect it for it's tenacity and its ubiquitousness. It's not a secret, it's a screamer. Spending time with the plant you look beyond its expression to its inner form.
    Peal back the bark on a stem and taste. It's an enlightening bitter, provocative and profound. Looking at the bark: go for that intense hotdog mustard yellow color, in the peeled roots and stems. And that Guinness stout on steroids bitterness taste.
     It is Evergreen and the leaves are glossy. If you look at the leaves, you'll see that they are green and shiny. They're also pointed and prickly and if you look at the leaf pattern you'll see that they are opposite. Here below is another Mahonia, Berberis repens, growing low to the ground, short and squat, somewhat dainty and delicate in the fresh snow. Similar opposite leaf pattern.
If you're looking very quickly you may think it it is an oak. Holly-like, oak-like leaves. The pattern is different though. The leaves grow from the stem directly opposite one another. They are pinnately opposite. You can see the flowers or racemes are yellow. As you go up and down in elevation with this barberry you'll see different types of leaves sometimes thin other times more fat and round.
      The greater plant species is now Berberis formerly Mahonia. In this region where I live you can find it in the lower deserts, in the Pinion and junipers and then higher in the Pines and firs. 
     The plant  can be used from the berries, to the leaves to the stems and branches and down to the roots. It has lived with us for a long time and is the plant that goes back-and-forth speaking to us of healing in addressing our needs. The whole plant is useful from top to bottom. 
     The plant is useful both externally or topically on the skin, and also inside, internally. It is a complex plants with many medicinal components and applications. In terms of plants energetics return to work tomorrow the cold bitter taste indicates a powerful effect on the digestive complex. From the first taste in the mouth you will increased salivation. 
The plant energetics have to do with coolness, cooling and the taste is immediately bitter. You'll immediately notice saliva flowing and increased gastric secretions. This is characteristic of what is in herbal medicine called a bitter. So the bitter encourages digestion the movement of food and rapid transit of food through the intestines. Yet the bitter taste goes deeper than saliva in the mouth it extends all the way to the liver, the bile, and even further into the heart, and the seat of the emotions. In herbal energetics when ever you have this profound bitterness you can almost always be sure that it extends deeper to the cellular level in the way that we process nutrition and the glucose energy pathway. Recent studies have confirmed an effect similar to the pharmaceutical drug metformin. With a likewise similar effect on the red blood cell indicator test the HgA1c, showing promise for one of the great plagues of our modern society, metabolic syndrome and adult onset diabetes. 
      If you look at the stems, or the roots of the plant you will see a distinct hotdog mustard yellow color. If you scrape off a little bark of the stem and chew on it you'll get that intense bitter flavor which is the character of Algerita. It is common to make an alcohol tincture of the fresh plant bark and chopped roots. It is also common to combine the dried plant material including powdered leaves in oil to create a salve with beeswax. The leaves themselves can be powdered,  dried and stored to be utilized later, topically directly or added to salves. 
When tinctured in alcohol algerita, creates a dark red,  colored liquid, also known as yerba de sangre, sangre de Christo, the blood herb, the blood of Christ. 
    Uses: as a cold digestive bitter and liver tonic. Used for conditions that are hot- the liver is connected to emotion, specifically with hot thinking like angry blow ups, and the tradition of using estafiate in this way relates to bilis rage and angry hot conditions. Men often rage and smash things up, punching holes in walls and things like that and the two medicines together are good in addressing men's anger. It's also important to know that when a man is angry it also means that he is caught in a stock condition. People who have been schooled to something like a psychology often call this a depression. So often you may hear someone say, "I've caught a depression", make no mistake depression is contagious and whether it's spread by a virus or bacteria I'm not sure, but I know it's spread.  so if you're around a lot of people who are angry and smashing things up it could be that you might've caught their depression. Kind of like Wal-mart-itis. Mahonia is good for this and likewise estafiate. Bilis.
I advise men to steam their nuts, like a lady's bajo, but when (men) are that pissed off, they probably don't want to sit with the steam pot between their legs are too impatient for that. its more likely to use something an herb hops or anenome with estafiate or mahonia tea internally, or as a tincture. Here you can see clearly the distinctive yellow of the root mass. The same color and quality is also found in the above ground stems when peeled.

     Similarly women can use estafiate, algerita and romero together for steaming their pussy in a calming bajo, for that angry energy that comes from hot stuck periods. Often times women too can catch a depression bug, and rather than smashing things up, they often smash them selves up with negative thinking and sometimes this can manifest as bad period. So ladies out there should consider steaming their pussy with algerita, romero, and yerba santa.
Estafiate with a little algerita is great for a ladies depression which is often inactive, and sad with more passive self directed destructiveness. While a man's depression is often outward destructive smashing walls or fist fights, road rage and the like. But we have female MMA with Ronda Rousey so maybe will see more women punching walls. 
     Finally yerba de sangre is antibacterial, you have to see that intense hotdog mustard yellow in the stems and roots. Will go further into it for salves later- stay tuned...

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