Free: ~Soap Wart~ seeds (20) - Gardening Seeds & Bulbs - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: ~Soap Wart~ seeds (20)

~Soap Wart~ seeds (20)
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Description

The listing, ~Soap Wart~ seeds (20) has ended.

Propagate Soapwort with seeds or by division done in early spring. Soapwort spreads vigorously it has many attractive and aromatic flowers and can be used as a ground cover. Succeeds in any moderately fertile well-drained soil in sun or semi-shade. The fragrant flowers have five showy petals, each notched and refluxed, about an inch in diameter and are borne in large clusters in the axils of leaves and at the tip of the stems. Flowers bloom from June to October. The leaves are slightly hairy, simple and entire, the stem is smooth and swollen at the joints. It forms colonies from underground rhizomes. It will self sow. The root is harvested in the spring and can be dried for later herb use. Use flowers and leaves fresh as body soap. Soapwort root, has been used as an alternative medicine since the time of Dioscorides. It is medicinal as an alterative, antiscrophulatic, cholagogue, depurative, diaphoretic, mildly diuretic, expectorant, purgative and tonic. A decoction of the herb is applied externally to treat itchy skin. One of the saponins in this plant is proving of interest in the treatment of cancer. A soap can be obtained by boiling the whole plant (but especially the root) in water. It is a gentle effective cleaner, used on delicate fabrics that can be harmed by synthetic soaps. The best soap is obtained by infusing the plant in warm water. Soapwort is sometimes recommended as a hair shampoo, though it can cause eye irritations.
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Questions & Comments
Original
Do you have foxglove seed. And do you know how to tend to this bi- annual. I have two out of four but I don't know after winter if they will survive the snow. Should I try growing them inside.
I'm afraid they will finish dying and I didn't get a chance for them to re sow themselves. ?????? Not sure bout them. If u have time later on to tend to a student of growing flowers and herbs. Please feel free to pass some schooling on. Thanks.
Nov 12th, 2014 at 10:31:42 PM PST by
Original
Yes, I have Foxglove seeds. Which plant are you asking about re sowing. Foxglove or the Soap Wart?
Nov 13th, 2014 at 10:17:33 PM PST by
Original
Foxglove is the one I have now but I have lost some and I have couple plants left but soon shall dye from frost. I don't know how to take care of biannuals. And I'm trying to plant certain herbs around my property some more successful than others. Of course the foxglove is not for consumption. But I enjoy learning to grow this to cook with and learn my medicinal properties of plants, I'm a avid hiker and dug ginseng this year first time so it will be a life learning lesson I enjoy. Thanks and I would be blessed with any info or direction of books to read. Have a great day as I will also. Lol. My family from Florida should be walking in anytime to hunt the two weeks of deer season. Lol. Yeah !!!!!
Nov 14th, 2014 at 3:35:51 AM PST by
Original
Foxgloves are biennials or short-lived perennials. However, although individual plants may be short-lived, foxglove readily self-sows and multiplies. Remove the central flower spike after flowering to encourage other side shoots to form and produce more flowers. However, if you want the plant to self-sow and multiply, leave the flower spike intact on the plant so seeds can mature and disperse.Foxglove seeds spill out of the pod as they reach maturity, but you can still collect seeds for next year's garden by preparing the flower spikes as soon as the blooms begin to wither. Foxglove leaves contain digitalis, a potent heart medicine, and are considered poisonous.
Nov 14th, 2014 at 11:36:33 PM PST by

~Soap Wart~ seeds (20) is in the Home & Garden | Gardening | Gardening Seeds & Bulbs category