Herbs

If any herbs get wet, set them out in the sun to dry out.

When gathering herbs, don't gather too much or all of it and make sure there is plenty for the herb to continue to grow. If it is available, collect the herb seeds so you can grow them closer to camp.

Make sure to stock up before fall and winter, that way there are no worries about running low on a herb.

Check herb patches regularly and be sure they are tended to properly. Make sure they have enough room, sunlight and water. Move to another patch if there are any signs of the patch dying or bug infestation.

Throw out old herbs that can no longer be used and make room for new ones.

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ᶲ Healing Herbs ᶲ

Alder Bark

Found: Alder trees in damp, cool or wet areas

Uses: Chewed to treat toothaches

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Alfalfa

Found: Moist, thick soil in mild climates

Uses: Chewed to prevent tooth decay

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Aloe Vera

Found: Damp soil near water and rocky, open places

Uses: Applied as poultice and placed on burns, damaged skin, can also be used to speed up healing wounds. Skin from the leaves can be applied as a paste to extract poison.

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Angelica

Found: Fields, hedgerows, forests, and swamps

Uses: Consumed to treat severe coughs, colds, and chest infections. Can be eaten by mothers to help produce more milk.

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Apple Blossoms

Found: Apple trees

Uses: Consumed to ease Depression

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Arnica Blossoms

Found: Soil containing rocks or forests

Uses: Applied as an ointment for bruises, sore muscles, and sprains. Also applied to help inflammation.

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Ash Tree Sprouts

Found: Near Ash Trees in mild places and direct sunlight.

Uses: Applied as a poultice and placed on adder bites

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Aspen Tree Bark

Found: On Aspen Trees

Uses: Helps relieve anxiety and stress

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Basil

Found: Near Human Gardens

Uses: Chewed or eaten to relieve mouth sores or can be mixed with water and eaten to help headaches or sore throats

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Bay Leaves

Found: Bay Trees in damp soil

Uses: Applied as paste to treat small wounds and thorn injuries

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Breech Leaves

Found: Forests near rivers and streams

Uses: Carry and store herbs

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Bindweed

Found: Anywhere near lots on sunlight and low moisture soil

Uses: Used with cobwebs to bind broken, dislocated, or sprained bones.

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Birth Tree Bark

Found: Birch Trees in mildly cold places

Uses: Applied on broken bones to speed healing.

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Birthwort

Found: Near human places and places with damp soil

Uses: Chewed to help stomach aches and creates contractions for delayed birth for mothers.

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Blackberry Leaves

Found: Anywhere near human gardens or damp soil

Uses: Chewed into poultice to treat bee stings.

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Blueberries

Found: Anywhere near lots of sunlight and soil containing rocks and sand

Uses: Consumed to ease fevers and stomach aches.

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Bramble Twigs

Found: Thick forests

Uses: Chewed/Crushed into a syrup to help with sleep or go unconcious.

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Broom

Found: Thick Forests

Uses: Applied as poultice and placed on sprains and dislocations.

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Burdock Root

Found: Dry places

Uses: Applied as poultice to heal or prevent infected rat bites.

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Burnet

Found: Aried and grassy soil

Uses: Eaten fro strength or to subside hunger.

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Buttonbush

Found: Wetlands

Uses: Eaten to help with digestive problems

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Chives

Found: Damp meadows and pastures containing rocks

Uses: Eaten to gain strength, applied as a poultice to help wounds and lesions, applied to wounds to slow bleeding.

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Cilantro

Found: Fields near rivers in cold places

Uses: Applied to help heal minor wounds and ease pain

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Cobwebs

Found: Anywhere spiders reside

Uses: Placed over wounds with pressure to stop bleeding, can be wrapped around sitcks to help bind broken bones, can be used to cover wounds while they heal.

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Cranberries

Found: Wetlands

Uses: Applied to wounds to help heal.

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Daisy Leaves

Found: Grassy places and damp meadows

Uses: Applied as a paste and placed onto painfull or stiff joints

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Damian Sprigs

Found: Human gardens

Uses: Can be mixed with water and consumed to increase circulation.

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Dandelions

Found: Anywhere open with moist soil

Uses: Leaves and stems can be chewed to soothe pain, white liquid inside the stem can be applied to soothe pain and reduce swelling from bee stings.

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Daylily

Found: Open grasslands, wetlands and moist forests

Uses: Consumed to ease coughs and colds, can be applied to infections

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Dill

Found: Human gardens

Uses: Consumed to deteriorate gas and soothe heartburns

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Dock Leaves

Found: Dense forests

Uses: Applied as poultice to soothe and speed up healing for scratches. Also applied as a paste to soothe cracked or sore pads.

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Elder Leaves

Found: Damp places in damp soil and partial sunlight

Uses: Applied as a paste to soothe sprains

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Eucalyptus Leaves

Found: Deserts with lots of sunlight

Uses: Consumed to ease pain and clear the mind, eating too much can cause stumach aches.

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Feverfew

Found: Near or along water

Uses: Consumed to help with fever, pains, or headaches.

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Ginger

Found: Dry, sandy Soil

Uses: Consumed to ease coughs and nausea. Juices can be consumed along with the herb to treat Asthma.

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Goatweed

Found: Any mild place

Uses: Consumed to ease grief

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Goldenrod

Found: Open fields and moors

Uses: Applied as a poultice on wounds to help them heal

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Goosegrass

Found: Large plains and fields

Uses: Used with cobwebs to stop bleeding

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Hawthorn Berries

Found: Open Forests and rocky places

Uses: Consumed to help easy digestion after a wolf has consumed something by accident

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Honey

Found: Beehives

Uses: Consumed to ease sore throats and provides energy. Can be mixed with Aloe Vera to heal burns, also can sweeten herbs and be applied to poultices/pastes to help stay in place

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Horsetail

Found: Marshy places

Uses: Applied as a poultice to reduce bleeding and prevent infections

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Ivy Leaves

Found: Ivy bushes around most plants

Uses: Can be used to carry and store herbs

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Jasmine Leaves

Found: Human Places

Uses: Applied to venomous bites to stop the poison from spreading, also can be mixed with Rose Petals as a paste to extract poison.

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Lamb's Ear

Found: Mountains

Uses: Consumed to increase strength and calm nerves.

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Mallow Leaves

Found: Shores

Uses: Applied to soothe stings

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Marigold

Found: Near water

Uses: Applied as a poultice to heal wounds and clear infections

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Mint Leaves

Found: Human gardens and large forests

Uses: Chewed to open the nasal and ease a wolf of seasonal allergies. Can be mixed with warm water and consumed to stop hiccups. Also can be rubbed into the pelt to hide the scent of death.

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Moss

Found; Damp shady places

Uses: Can be soaked in water and brought to weak wolves who need a drink, can be dampened to sterilize wounds, ease swelling, pain and grief. Also can be packed inside wounds while others are being worked on and can be used as a bedding.

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Mud

Found: Anywhere raining or near water

Uses: Can be applied to bee stings to reduce swelling and pain. Can be used to help cool off. Do not put anywhere near wounds for it could cause infections.

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Olive Leaves

Found: Olive trees in warm dry places

Uses: Applied to severe wounds and poisions to help heal.

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Oregano

Found: Dry grass

Uses: Consumed to easy stomach aches

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Parsley

Found: Moist soil

Uses: Consumed to ease stomach aches or stop a mother from producing milk.

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Poppy Seeds

Found: Forests and fields

Uses: Consumed in small amounts to calm the nevers or in larger amounts to relieve pain. Applied as a paste to extract minor poisions from spider bites. Can be mixed with warm water and consumed to help sleep. Feeding large amounts to pups can be dangerous, do not feed to mothers as it can reduce the milk produced.

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Ragweed Leaves

Found: Mountains

Uses: Consumed to increase strength.

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Ragwort Leaves

Found: Cool places with lots of rain

Uses: Can be mixed with Juniper Berries and applied to help aching joints. Do not eat for its highlly poisionous.

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Raspberry Leaves

Found: Fertile soil

Uses: Chewed to ease pain of bee stings or to help a Mother in labor

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Red Oak Leaves (Dried)

Found: Under Oak Trees during Fall or Winter

Uses: Applied as a pulp to prevent infections

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Roses

Found: In clearings, open forests or rocky slopes

Uses: The petals can be mixed with Jasmine into paste to extract pision or combined with the thorns into a paste to help close wounds.

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Rose Thorns (Crushed)

Found: On roses

Uses: Applied as a paste to cover or seal wounds.

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Rosewood

Found: Wet forests

Uses: Can be applied to venomous adder bites

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Saffron

Found: Thick clay soil

Uses: Consumed to make a wolf unconsious. Keep away from Pups and Elders.

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Sage

Found: Human Gardens and sandy soil

Uses: Applied as a poultice onto the pelt to remove dandruff. Can be mixed with water, crushed and consumed to help memory.

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Snakeroot

Found: Warm places

Uses: Applied as poultice on venomous bites to counter the poison or on wounds to clear infections.

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Sorrel

Found: Human gardens or places as well as sandy soil

Uses: Consumed to subside hunger.

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Sticks

Found: Anywhere near trees

Usues: Can be bound by cobwebs to a broken bone to hold the bone in place or can be used to bite on and serve as a distraction from pain.

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Stinging Nettle

Found: Near forests

Uses: Consumed to ease allergies, the seeds can be consumed to fight minor poisons and make a wolf vomit. Stem is chewed on to fight intestinal infections. And the leaves can be applied to bring down swelling.

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Sunflower Seeds

Found: Praires and human gardens

Uses: Consumed to treat Bronchitis and other lung problems.

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Tansy

Found: Forests, human places, and cold or cool places.

Uses: Consumed in small amounts to help coughs and soothe sore throats.

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Thyme

Found: Hot places

Uses: Consumed to calm a wolf in shock

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Tormentil

Found: Fields

Uses: Applied to treat wounds or stop bleeding

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Valerain Roots

Found: Fields, near water or forests

Uses: Consumed to reduce fevers, chills, and thirst.

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Watercress

Found: Shallow, moving water

Uses: Applied to soothe irritated skin or treat lesions.

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Watermint

Found: Streams and wet soil

Uses: Consumed to treat stomach aches

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Water Violet

Found: Ponds or ditches

Uses: Applied as a poultice to heal sever wounds, or applied to an infectied wound to clear infection.

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Wild Garlic

Found: Forests

Uses: Applied or rolled to prevent intections from rat bites

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Willow Tree Bark

Found: On Willow Trees in human gardens or near water

Uses: Chewed on to soothe aches and pains, especially stomach aches.

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Willow Tree Leaves

Found: Willow Trees

Uses: Pevent vomiting

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Willow Tree Sap

Found: On Willow Trees

Uses: The sap is squeezed into the eye to cure blurry vision

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Windflower Sprouts

Found: High altitudes near Oak trees and sandy soil

Uses: Consumed to vomit swallowed poisions in the intestines. Also can be applied as a paste to heal wounds.

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Witch Hazel

Found: Dense forests with dry soil

Uses: Consumed to give energy. Chewed to soothe toothaches, and can be applied to soothe sores, bruises, insect bites, and stop bleeding.

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Yarrow

Found: In and around rocks

Usues: Consumed to make vomit poision or applied as a poultice or ointment to treat cracked or sore pads.

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P O I S O N

H E R B S

Dividerblack435 Death Berries

Found: Shady forest ravines

Appearance: Dark leaves and bright red berries

Causes: Paralysis and death. Extremely fatal to young wolves

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Nightshade Berries (Deadly Nightshade)

Found: Shady heavily forested areas

Appearance: Reddish shaped flowers with glossy black berries

Causes: Instant death

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Foxglove

Found: Anywhere with a temperate climate

Appearance: Tall stem, the flowers are tubular and come in various colors such as pink, purple, white, and yellow.

Causes: Paralysis and heart failure

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Holly Berries

Found: Any forest

Appearance: Glossy green leaves with red berries

Causes: Vomiting, diarrhea, has the capacity to kill a pup.

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Water Hemlock

Found: Marshy areas

Appearance: Small green or white flowers arranged in an umbrella shape

Causes: Foaming of the mouth, severe pain, seizures and death to young pups.

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Fresh Boneset

Found: Low, damp ground along rivers and steams

Appearance: Long stem topped with white blossoms

Causes: Nausea, weakness, vomiting, some cases seizures. Can be fatal if large amounts are consumed