9.04.2009
More Weeds to Love
Well, if I keel over before anyone reads this from alkaloid poisoning, this post will have to serve as my last communication.
I don't think I'm any danger though. Yes, I know the photo is downright frightening, but in a way it's super cool as well.
I attempted to have this tree identified some years ago. I don't know if my photo wasn't that good or what, but the tree expert extension agent in the next county missed it completely. I learned it's true identity a few days ago.
It was a rainy day and I had some business to handle with my former neighbor who is now my insurance agent. Like friends do, we caught up on everything under the sun, including a story about how my fire ant cream helped one of his kids. Then out of the blue he reminisces about something that happened to him before that last kid was even born.
An old fellow took him out riding in his old pickup truck down a dirt road up near Evergreen. He showed him a tree, peeled off a piece of bark and had him hold the underside against his gum. In a few moments he didn't feel a thing. . . . the gum was numb. It was an old Indian remedy for toothaches.
It was a fascinating story, and out of the blue Roy had his friend on the phone. I was even able to talk to him and here's the rest of the story. The tree is a Prickly Ash, aka Southern Prickly Ash, aka Toothache Tree. It's not common and is most often found on, you guessed it, fence lines. And there's more to it than numbing gums. Turns out it's good for arthritis and will, in his words, "clean your arteries." It's supposed to "reduce bad cholesterol and raise good cholesterol"
I found out earlier this year that I have high cholesterol, so I figure there's not a lot to lose by giving it a shot. I already know it won't kill me because I positively identified my trees by putting the underside of a piece of bark on my gum. It actually numbed the whole left side of my face.
So I'm going easy on the stuff. Bark is soaking in a mason jar with apple cider vinegar and I'm told it tastes really bad, but thats no biggie . . . a spoonful of sugar, I mean honey, will help it go down. And isn't ACV and honey supposed to be some kind of miracle cure for a lot of stuff anyway? So what if it's got a few alkaloids in it.
But just in case, you've got a photo of the molecule for the autopsy.
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3 comments:
Hilarious!!
I hated that tree, but hey, maybe you can use it in arthritis cream or something...
You'd be surprised how many foods that are USDA & FDA approved, that contain alkaloids. Small doses won't hurt you a bit, and as far as I can tell, none of the ones contained in prickly ash are deadly. They bind with acute nerve endings (which are simply complex protein chains anyway). An example is found in Salix Nigra (Black willow) and is one of the primary ingredients in Aspirin.
Here's an excerpt from medicinenet:
"Alkaloid: A member of a large group of chemicals that are made by plants and have nitrogen in them. Many alkaloids possess potent pharmacologic effects. The alkaloids include cocaine, nicotine, strychnine, piperine, caffeine, morphine, pilocarpine, atropine, methamphetamine, mescaline, ephedrine, and tryptamine"
There are several plants that contain compounds in high levels that could be fatal, like belladonna, but even THAT is used medicinally as a topical, so don't worry!
If you check some of the new "holistic" eye products, they all use belladonna. Amazing.
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