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Yerba Santa

  • Eriodictyon californicum L.
  • Eriodictyon glutinosum
  • Hydrophyllaceae
  • Water leaf family



    Common Names

    ivyBear's weed
    ivyConsumptive's weed
    ivyGum bush
    ivyGum plant (Grindelia robusta L.)
    ivyMountain balm
    ivyTarweed
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    Parts Usually Used

    Leaves
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    Description of Plant(s) and Culture

    Yerba santa is an evergreen shrub; it is somewhat branching and grows to a height of 2-4 feet. The stems are smooth and exude a gummy substance. Leaves are 3-4 inches long, distinctively woolly on the undersides, containing a network of prominent veins, and the resinous substance appears as if the woolly fibers have been varnished; upper surface is smooth with depressed veins. The flowers are terminal, appearing in shades of dark lavender to pale shades of lavender to white; forming funnel-shaped clusters at the top of the plant. The honey is amber, with a slightly spicy flavor. Bees love this plant. The capsule fruit is oval, grayish-brown and contains small brown shriveled seeds.
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    Where Found

    Follow the bees and find santa yerba on dry mountain slopes and ridges in the coastal ranges and up into the foothills of the Sierra Nevada from Monterey to Tulare northward.
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    Medicinal Properties

    Aromatic, tonic, stimulant, expectorant
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    Biochemical Information

    Eriodictyol, homoeriodictyol, chrysocriol, zanthoeridol and eridonel. Also free formic and other acids, glycerides of fatty acids, a yellow volatile oil, a phytosterol, resin and glucose.
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    Legends, Myths and Stories

    The name yerba santa (means "Holy weed") was given by the Spanish fathers who became aware of it through Native Americans.

    The Native Americans smoked or chewed the leaves for asthma. The taste is peculiar, at first, when chewed, seems rather disagreeable, resinous, and bitter. This taste soon disappears and then tastes sweet and cooling, which is especially noticed when chewing stops a minute, or by drinking a glass of water. One Native American expressed it, "It makes one taste kind of sweety inside."
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    Uses

    Native Americans boiled the fresh or dried leaves for colds, coughs, sore throat, catarrh, asthma, bronchitis, hayfever, congestion due to allergies, laryngitis, fever, stomach aches, vomiting, diarrhea, hemorrhoids, kidney conditions, and rheumatism. Externally, Native Americans used the fresh or dried leaves as a poultice for broken or unbroken skin, fatigued limbs, insect bites, sprains, bruises, swellings, sores, poison ivy or poison oak rashes.
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    Formulas or Dosages

    Infusion: 1 tsp. of crushed leaves to 1 cup of boiling water, steep 30 minutes. Take 1 cup per day.

    Fluid extract: mix 10 to 20 drops in liquid daily.
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    Warning

    Yerba santa should be used in small amounts as too large doses will irritate the kidneys.
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    Bibliography

    • Buy It! The Herb Book, by John Lust, pgs., 413, 457, 458, 569.
    • Buy It! Back to Eden, by Jethro Kloss, pg., 203.
    • Old Ways Rediscovered, by Clarence Meyer, pg., 104.
    • Earl Mindell's Herb Bible, by Earl Mindell, pgs., 166-167.
    • Buy It! Planetary Herbology, by Michael Tierra, C.A., N.D., O.M.D., pgs., 58, 112, 382, 389.
    • Buy It! Indian Herbalogy of North America, by Alma R. Hutchens, pgs., 163, 317-318.
    • An Instant Guide to Medicinal Plants, by Pamela Forey and Ruth Lindsay, pg., 108.
    • Buy It! The Yoga of Herbs, by Dr. David Frawley & Dr. Vasant Lad, pgs., 64, 220.
    • The Rodale Herb Book, edited by William H. Hylton, pgs., 73, 78, 627.

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