Me: I love my bug game!
Someone: aww yeah, I love silksong!
Me: *in the midst of gutting a beautiful blue butterfly, covered head to toe in bug flesh, weilding a staff made of candy*
Me: what's silksong?
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Me: I love my bug game!
Someone: aww yeah, I love silksong!
Me: *in the midst of gutting a beautiful blue butterfly, covered head to toe in bug flesh, weilding a staff made of candy*
Me: what's silksong?
This is why ppl taking meds need to check the ingredients on tea.
Willow bark has similar (albeit milder) effects as Aspirin. Willow bark has salicylates which reduce inflammation and related pain, but also act as blood thinners. If you're taking blood thinners, other NSAIDs and other meds that would normally interact with aspirin, you shouldn't be taking Willow bark.
Nettle is a great nerve tonic and while often used in later pregnancy, has been known to have the potential to cause miscarriage in the first trimester. It also has the potential to interact with some medications such as diabetes medications, blood thinners, and antihypertensives.
It bothers me that teas like this are just in the regular tea section with no other warning on them despite having the potential to cause issues for people. I've also seen teas with St. John's Wort; Valerian is common; and NO warnings on them.
Please always check med interactions. It could be nothing, but it could be something. I had a crazy interaction affecting my heart when I drank half a bottle of coke on Wellbutrin because of the caffeine. PLEASE BE CAREFUL
How to make...
Air salt
- Salt
- Lavender
- Willow bark
- Eucalyptus
Fire salt
- Salt
- Paprika
- Chili poder
- Red chili pepper flakes
Solar salt
- Salt
- Chamomile
- Orange peel
- calendula
Black salt:
- Salt
- Activated charcoal/ incense ashes
- Crushed eggshells
Water salt
- Salt
- Cornflower
- Damiana
Earth salt
- Salt
- Burdock
- Tulsi
- Peppermint
there is not only one way to make this types of salt, if you think or want to replace something with an herb, etc of that element, feel free to do so!!!
Don't forget to join our discord server to get more info! All Spiritual things
Foraging for Willow
Willow is one of the first trees to bud in the early spring. There are hundreds of species of willow throughout the world, all belonging to the genus Salix. Willow grows readily and often in large thickets, making it pretty easy to forage. Willows love water and grow in nearly all temperate regions in the world where water is available. Along streams, creeks, and ponds are great places to look for willow.
Willow is edible, but it isn't really tasty. The leaves, buds, and inner bark are all edible but very bitter. Despite this, there's excellent medicinal reasons to forage for willow!
The inner bark of willow branches contain salicylic acid, which is the precursor to aspirin! This makes willow excellent for pain relief. Salicylic acid is present in all willows and early spring is the best time to forage for this purpose. Willow's pain relieving properties are well known and have been used by many Indigenous cultures throughout the world. It's pain relieving effects are so effective that Charles Frederic Gerhardt set out to create a synthesized version of salicylic acid. The result, discovered in 1853 was called acetylsalicylic acid and in 1899 the pharmaceutical company BAYER named it aspirin!
Harvesting Willow Bark for Medicine:
Clip some thin (less than the diameter of your thumb) willow branches and peel off the outer bark. The inner bark will be white or cream to slightly green in color. It's a very thin layer of fibers just underneath the outer bark, this is where the medicine is!
Early spring is when the bark is the most pliable and easy to remove and also when the levels of salicylic acid are at their highest! By fall the amount of medicine in the bark will have dropped significantly.
Using Willow Bark as Medicine:
Willow bark can be used fresh or dried. To use it fresh, you can just pop some fresh bark in your mouth for a while. Peel off 3-4 small, 2-inch strips of bark and chew them, swallowing the juices. It will be bitter but it will work for pain relief! I've gotten headaches while hiking and willow has been a life saver. You should start feeling relief after 30 minutes or so, similar to over the counter pain medication. This can be repeated a few times a day as necessary.
Drying willow bark for tea is pretty easy as well. Cut your bark into strips about 3 inches long. They can be dried in a dehydrator or on a baking sheet left out on a counter for a few days, just turn them over every so often so all sides get air. Once dry you can use them as is or chop up your strips into small pieces.
To make willow bark tea with your dried bark, use about 1-2 teaspoons of bark for every 16oz of water. Bring your water to a boil and add the bark. Boil for 5 minutes and then turn the heat down and let it simmer another 10 minutes. Strain it and enjoy. If you're sick or sore, 1-2 cups of this tea per day will bring great relief. Unlike the fresh bark the tea isn't bitter, it's more of a woody flavor.
More Fun Willow Facts:
Willow is a natural rooting hormone. It will ready root and clone itself, helping it spread rapidly.
This isn't a plant to worry about over-harvesting, it's often seen as a nuisance because it spreads so rapidly. Of course still harvest responsibly!
If you place some willow branches in water they will quickly grow new roots and new growth. You can then plant these or use the "willow water" to help your other plants form roots. No more nasty rooting hormone chemicals from the store!
You can even just shove some branches in the ground and they'll very likely take root and grow into a tree of it's own.
Willow makes a great windbreak or living fence.
Willow branches are excellent for making baskets!
As always be safe and happy foraging!
Sources: 1, 2
Twigtail
“Rockbrook”
Rockhoof and Meadowbrook met long ago when Stygian gathered them on his quest to save his town from the sirens. Rockhoof was immediately smitten with Meadowbrook thanks to her fantastic cooking and her skills as a healer and fighter. Even after the Sirens were defeated, the two of them enjoyed talking and spending time together when they could. When the pillars were rescued from limbo and Stygian was redeemed, Meadowbrook returned to her home in the swamp to continue her work finding cures for ponies ills. Her work soon became well-known and ponies came to her from miles around for her remedies. Rockhoof meanwhile, had more difficulty adjusting to modern life in Equestria, having no home to go back to. Eventually, with the help of a young admirer, Rockhoof realized that he was uniquely qualified to pass on the stories of Equestria's past to future generations. Princess Twilight appointed him as Equestria's Keeper of Tales and Rockhoof began a new life traveling Equestria telling the stories he knew and collecting many others. As he traveled, Rockhoof always made time to visit his friends. On one such visit to the swamp, Meadowbrook proposed the idea of joining him in his travels. She wanted to go out and see more of Equestria and continue her work. So the two of them hit the road. They both enjoyed reconnecting and reminiscing about the old days traveling with Stygian and the other Pillars. Meadowbrook had quite a few stories of her own to share and Rockhoof was a pretty quick learner of the plants she used. Before very long, they were married and a short time later Meadowbrook gave birth to their son, who they named Maverick. A few years later they had a wee lass who they named Willow Bark. Maverick was his father's pride and joy. As soon as he was old enough Rockhoof began teaching his son to be a mighty warrior. Maverick enjoyed the training, but his heart was never really in it, though he was competent enough. He much preferred going on trips with his mother to gather herbs and learning about their properties while standing around a simmering cauldron. When his creation of a potion to cure dart frog poisoning earned him his cutie mark, he was worried his father would be disappointed. Rockhoof, however, beamed with even greater pride in his son and put those fears to rest. Maverick went on to learn everything his mother had to teach him and became an herbalist. Willow Bark, unlike her brother, took to the training of a warrior like a fish to water. She specialized in fighting with a spear, but also became a pretty handy archer. As a young filly, she was riveted by her father's tales of his days in the Mighty Helm. When she was old enough, she enlisted in the royal guard and after rising through the ranks was assigned to a post at Friendship Castle. When news reached the castle of supply routes between the Changeling and Griffon kingdom being attacked by groups of bandits, Willow volunteered to lead a caravan in an attempt to end the conflict. The bandits attacked, wounding her. However, Willow noticed the tactics they used and once she was healed, trained a group of her troops in tactics to counteract the bandits. When they were ready, she reached out to the Changeling kingdom, borrowing a number of troops from Prince Pharynx to aid in a second attempt to stop the bandits. Their caravan was attacked again, but this time Willow had ordered the changeling soldiers to travel alongside at a distance disguised a various small animals. When the bandits attacked, they found themselves surrounded as changelings and pony soldiers emerged from every surrounding rock and tree. Willow would go on to found her own branch of the guard specializing in such tactics that she named the Midnight Helm.
Willow Bark, a vaguely concerning looking pony, she’s a medicine mare of a kind. She calls herself a Witch-Doctor.
Merlin: Oh no someone is bleeding internally! Gaius!
Gaius: