CAMOMILE
(Anthemis nobilis)
common camomile, chamomile, Roman chamomile, ground
apple, whig plant
Description:
Low growing creeping or trailing plant with tufts of leaves and
flowers, 1 ft. high. Root, perennial, jointed and fibrous. Stems,
hairy, freely branching, covered with leaves, alternate, bipinate,
finely dissected, downy to glabrous with sweet apple-scent. Solitary
terminal daisy-like flower heads have a yellow conical center
with 18 outer silver-white ray flowers drooping when in bud. Found
throughout U.S. as a common weed in dry fields, around gardens,
cultivated grounds.
Medicinal:
Anodyne, antispasmodic, carminative, sedative, aromatic, tonic,
stimulant. Helpful for gas, colic, fevers and restlessness in
children, urinary infections and diaper rash. Use 2 tbsp. flowers
to 2 cups water, heat to just short of boiling. Soothes toothache,
earache, sore nipples and neuralgia, suppresses nausea, reduces
inflammation and dark shadows under the eyes. As a poultice, to
treat eczema and wounds. An oil, made of the flowers, for swellings,
calluses and painful joints.
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