Gardening with Gary
Gardening Advice from an Expert
St. Johns Wort
Member Caroline writes~
I have St. Johns Wort plants. I would like to know how to take care of them and
what I can use these in or for.
A. It is an herbaceous perennial growing freely wild to a height of 1 to 3 feet
in uncultivated ground, woods, hedges, roadsides, and meadows; short, decumbent,
barren shoots and erect stems branching in upper part, glabrous; leaves pale green,
sessile, oblong, with pellucid dots or oil glands which may be seen on holding leaf
to light. Flowers bright cheery yellow in terminal corymb. Calyx and corolla marked
with black dots and lines; sepals and petals five in number; ovary pear-shaped with
three long styles. Stamens in three bundles joined by their bases only. Blooms June
to August, followed by numerous small round blackish seeds which have a resinous
smell and are contained in a three-celled capsule; odor peculiar, terebenthic; taste
bitter, astringent and balsamic.
St. John's Wort makes a wonderful landscaping plant and is great for those hard
to cover areas. The plants are available at your local nursery. Seeds can be obtained
from a variety of mail order seed suppliers. Research is on going to develop strain
that increases the yield of Hypericin.
For medicinal use, Saint John's Wort is available in most health food stores
in capsule or liquid extract form. It should not be taken without a health care
professional's advice.
St John's Wort Internet Sites:
http://www.hypericum.com/
http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/s/
http://www.smartbasic.com/cat.herbs/
The Newsweek article can be read in it's entirety at:
http://www.solgar.com/whats_new/
Copyright 1997
Canterbury Farms
16185 S.W. 108th Ave.,
Tigard, Oregon
(503) 968-8269
E-mail your herb questions to canfarms@spiritone.com
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