Behold the lowly horsetail. A weed, some say, an eyesore proliferating in roadside ditches and untended yards. People love to hate the horsetail. Horsetails represent an ancient lineage. The twenty or so extant species constitute the only living genus of Equisetopsida, a diverse class of plants dominant during the Carboniferous Period, million years ago. You make face and hair tonics or rinses to improve the health of your skin and hair.
Ingesting it in the form of a tea will do the same thing plus provide many other health benefits such as the ones mentioned above. To make a strong infusion you use a good handful of chopped dried horsetail per cups of water. Pour the hot water over the herbs and let the tea steep for at least 15 minutes or up to several hours. This tea can also be used as a skin tonic. Horsetail has a mild grass-like flavor and combines really well with other herbs for a pleasant-tasting tea.
Combine it with any other herb of your choice. To make a hair rinse steep a generous cup of dried horsetail in about 6 cups of hot water for up to several hours. Let it cool completely and then pour it over your hair over a large bowl.
Disclosure: To ensure safety and selection of the correct plant, refer to diagrams and descriptions from a reputable plant identification guide. I have a very rare disease that causes me to ingest many medications. Do you know of a reputable source where I can find information on prescription interactions with Horsetail? Thank you.
My herbal resources I have a vast collection of herbal textbooks and am a holistic herbalist all recommnded NOT using horsetail for more than 6 weeks due to possibility of toxic build up of alkaloids and potassium salts.
I find this curious and possibly dangerous to those with kidney problems and other health problems. Am coming from Africa Uganda is there a possibility of accessing horsetail that can be. I know there are like 26 species of horsetail in the Equisetum family, but only Equisetum arvense is edible. All horsetails are poisonous to most livestock as well. I have yet to find a good guide to identifying E. Viola sororia. Panicum virgatum. Tweet this Page Share on Facebook. See below Description Field Horsetail is a native annual found along streambanks, roadsides, and disturbed areas.
The horsetail has bunches of green stems with many whorled branches resembling bottle brushes. In spring, these green stems are replaced by blunt-tipped brown ones. Horsetails can be found almost everywhere around the world except Australia and New Zealand.
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