Editor's Blog1 min ago
nettles and dock leaves
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by skinnyblue. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There are a couple of old rhymes about docks:-
The Dock
Come here, son: look: that leaf is dock,
Beside the dandelion clock.
Wherever stinging nettle grows
There, too, the healing dock leaf blows
As if to show some grand Design
Of Mother Nature, all benign,
Who suffers with her children's pain
And longs to make them well again:
Who cannot but provide relief
As in this stingremoving leaf.
*
And is it ever thus? Does food
Wait on the starving multitude,
Or buildingleaves grow round about
When earthquakes put a town to rout?
And are there rain clouds standing by
When forest fires light up the sky,
Or are there flowers that can abate
The pain when people love, or hate?
No: men and towns to dust return:
The fires drink up the clouds, and burn.
Oh no, relief is never there.
Come, we must go: and son, beware,
For where the balmy dock leaves stand
Are stinging nettles close at hand.
&
�Nettle in, dock out, dock rub, nettle out�
The dock leaf must be crushed first before applying to the sting. Some say yellow dock leaves should be used and others curling leaves of dock. Some researchers have suggested that the cooling effect of applying the leaf is what helps and that a lettuce leaf would be as effective. Many other herbalists still advise the use of dock on nettle stings.
I have googled for an authoritive answer to this question and have found the following:-
Does rubbing a dock leaf onto a nettle sting help alleviate the pain, and are there any other plants that can help to ease other
types of pain?
Yes rubbing a dock leaf onto a nettle sting releases a natural antihistamine, which helps to relief the irritation. However, merely rubbing the site of the sting would also help. There are other plants that alleviate irritation such as the oil from Evening Primrose, which can be used to treat eczema.
(This was found at) http://www.chic.org.uk/chicmco/pressoffice/2000/3.htm
There is also an interesting article here:-
http://tinyurl.com/cblwc
Click on the link and scroll down to just off the bottom of the page.
You might also find this link interesting:-
http://tinyurl.com/9tgw2