Poultices to relieve
Boils and Other Inflamed Areas
- Flax seed poultice. Flax seed should be mixed with a little boiling water over heat. Stir constantly, using a knife to blend. When thick enough to drop from a knife, remove from heat and stir well. Spread 1/4 inch thick between antiseptic gauze, Turn over edges of gauze and put on hot plate and cover with another hot plate then carry to patient, or cover and place on a hot water bottle until ready to use. Test before applying. and if too hot, cool a minute or two. Cover a small area first, then gradually the entire surface. A poultice should not remain on longer than one hour as it cools it becomes uncomfortable. After half an hour or so another hot poultice can be applied.
- Soap poultice.
Grate a bar of brown or yellow soap such as Sunlight, add a little sugar, moisten and tie over boil to draw. - Bread and milk poultice.
Break bread into small pieces and moisten with milk and tie to area to draw out the infection. - Bacon rind.
Tie a piece of bacon rind over the boil or other infected area with the skin side of the rind on the outside. This will really draw out the infection
Poultices
Poultices have a very similar action as compresses, but involve applying the whole herb, rather than a liquid extract, directly to an affected area. Poultices are used to ease nerve or muscle pain, sprains, or broken bones, and to draw pus from infected wounds, ulcers, or boils. They are also effective in drawing out such foreign objects as splinters.
In times past, poultices were a favourite household remedy, often involving the use of bread or mashed potatoes as a carrying mixture for herbal infusions or oil. Like compresses, hot poultices can be used for swellings, sprains, or to draw pus or splinters, but cold pastes or poultices can also be useful, as in the case of comfrey root applied to varicose ulcers.
Powdered herbs can also be used to make poultices. The powder is mixed with a little hot water to form a paste and then spread directly onto the affected area or onto a gauze. If applying poultices directly to the skin, the skin should first be greased with a little vegetable oil to prevent sticking. When using a hot poultice, it should be renewed when it cools.
Some poultice examples are as follows:
- Selfheal relieves sprains and fractures.
- St. John's Wort relieves muscle or nerve pain.
- Slippery elm powder, mixed with calendula, draws out boils and infected wounds (as does tinctures of these herbs plus a myrrh tincture).
Preparation
Poultice
Simmer a sufficient quantity of herb to cover the affected area for two minutes. Sqeeze out any excess liquid. Gently rub a little oil on the area to prevent sticking and apply the herb as hot as can be tolerated. Bandage into place with gauze or cotton strips. Leave for up to three hours and reapply, if necessary.
A simpler method, rather than soaking bread or potato in an herbal infusion, for example, is to sweat the herb in a saucepan with very little water, strain it, spread the mixture onto a gauze, and apply to an affected area. The poultice can be held in place with a loose bandage.
Recipes
Sage and Vinegar Poultice
Bruise whole fresh sage leaves by flattening them with a rolling pin, but do not break or tear them. Put the leaves into a pan and barely cover with vinegar. Simmer gently for five minutes over a very low heat. The vinegar should not boil, but it should steam so that the sage leaves soften and blanch. After five minutes, remove the leaves and lay them on a cloth. Work quickly, but carefully, as the leaves will be very hot. Fold the cloth into a package which will just cover the affected area. Apply as hot as can be tolerated and cover with towels to retain the heat. Leave on for an hour or so until the swelling has subsided. Sage and Vinegar poultices are traditional for treating bruises or sprains. Vinegar brings bruises to the surface, cooling and reducing swelling. When used together, they are unsurpasses for easing sprains.
Vinegar and Brown Paper Poultice
Put five or six sheets of strong brown paper into a pan and cover with sage vinegar. Place a lid on the pan and steam over a very low heat for a few minutes. The time will depend on the type of paper used. It should soften and absorb some of the vinegar without breaking or disintegrating. Remove the paper and wrap it in overlapping layers around the affected part. Apply as hot as possible and build up several layers. Cover with plastic wrap and bandage in place. Leave for four hours and reapply twice a day until the swelling and bruising have subsided.
This is an effective remedy enshrined in the children's rhyme "Jack and Jill" (Jack "went to bed to mend his head with vinegar and brown paper"). It is very supportive and strengthening for bruises and swellings. Vinegar can also be diluted with warm water and used as a fomentation for sprains and bruises. Diluted with cold or ice water, it makes a good compress for hot, swollen joints or hot tension headaches.
Clay Poultice
- 4 ounces to one pound (depending on the area to be covered) of pure, green, healing clay
- Distilled water
Mix the clay with enough water to make a thick paste. Spread with a spoon onto the center of a piece of cloth, as a diaper, an area that corresponds to the affected area of the skin. Apply the clay directly to the area, pressing it into the flesh so that it adheres. Cover with a dry cloth and leave on until the clay pulls away of its own accord. This indicates that the therapy is completed.
Comfrey or Plantain Poultice
- Fresh comfrey or plantain leaves
- Distilled water
Blend the leaves and water together in a blender or with a mortar and pestle until a mucilage is formed. Place on a gauze pad and apply to the affected area. Wrap with a bandage to hold in place. A little olive oil applied to the area first will prevent the poultice from adhering to the wound and prevent any skin irritation that may arise from sensitivities to the plant.
Both can be used on deep cuts, scrapes, stings, and burns, as well as to draw out such foreign objects as splinters or glass. Faithful application will eventually see the skin regenerate.
Onion Poultice
3 large fresh, organic onions Distilled water
Slice onions thinly and sauté them in a small amount of distilled water until transparent. Fold half into a diaper so that the finished pack is approximately 8x8 inches. Apply to the chest as hot as can be tolerated and immediately cover with a towel to hold in the heat. Begin preparing another poultice with the other half of the onions. When the first one is cool, immediately replace it with the second. After treatment, gently dry the chest and tuck the patient into bed to rest.
This is used in cases of deep lung congestion and bronchial inflammation. It will bring penetrating relief from the annoying itch when it hurts too much to cough. It can also be applied over the ear and lymph nodes to treat ear aches, only make the poultice smaller.
turpintine info.
Your caution about the use of turpentine is well advised, but not explained. In the days of our fathers when they didn't have a clinic to visit, and hospitals were the place people went to die, medical needs were met by the women of the farms, or the ranch cook.
Yes, they had doctors in their day, and these doctors were a hardy bunch, having to run a circuit through their territory. By todays standards, they were extremely barbaric, usually called upon as the last resort to set a badly broken bone, deliver a difficult birth, or preform an amputation. Internal medicine as we know it today was non existent. In those days every farmstead and ranch, in addition to their family garden, had a herb, or medicine garden to grow the plants needed to make their home remedies. In addition to this, every barn had a jug of turpentine.
I don't know how it works as a topical agent, but it does. Do not use on a contaminated surface, or to treat bug bites or skin rashes! One of the curative properties of turpentine (turp) is it's a carrier and penetrating agent. In other words if you put turp on a bee sting, not only will the inflamed area spread, it will penetrate deeper.
However if turp is put on a cut, it will stop the bleeding immediately, and cause the wounded area to start healing at a rapid rate of speed. Another quality of turp is it nullifies the 'after throbbing' associated with a deep cut.
I would advocate the first time use of turp to be applied to a cloth bandage and wrapped around the cut area for one day, and then the next day inspected. The cut will have pulled together, and started it's bonding process.
Turp also works well on burns. Case in point, when I was about 3 I fell into a burning fireplace. I received 3rd degree burns from my neck to my thighs. When my father (an old timer in those days) saw me at the hospital, he doused me down with turp, right through the bandages. Of course the nurse kicked the both of us out of the hospital. Today I don't have a hair from my adams apple to my thighs, but I'm not burdened by scars. Was it the turp, or was I just lucky?
Most of us are familiar with DMSO, the magic liquid that helped to relieve arthritic discomfort. This is a cousin of turp, it is a byproduct of the wood pulp industry, unlike turp a refined pine pitch. DMSO is the chemically reduced product of wood fiber, and its liquids (pitch), so what is so scarry?
To my knowlege, I haven't taken turp internally except maybe as a small kid in a home remedy or two. So I won't say how effective it is in small quantities. The old timers did it, and they survived, but their life expectancy wasn't as great as it is today. I would use a real jaundiced eye before doing this.
The day of the old circuit riding doctor is gone; medical science has greatly improved. The marvels of modern medical science are truly wondrous, and yet I am skeptical of the practitioners who treat the symptom and not the illness. Is return business that necessary? In the day of my father, if someone got hurt on the farm, turp was called for, and if it was a bad cut, Grandma grabbed her sewing basket too! Turpentine stole a lot of money from the doctors in those days, as I'm sure it could today if the AMA didn't poo-poo its use.
I'm not a rich man. I can't afford $40 visits to a doctor to sew me up, and another $40 visit just to have the doctor take the stitches out after a few weeks. I'm happy to do these things for myself. I'm old and crotchety, it is my nature, and it is my way; it works for me.
The above is only my opinion and not meant to be taken as fact. I have no facts showing proof for any of it. I do not advocate everyone to use turp, this is my decision, take care, and in whatever you do, enjoy life and don't take yourself so seriously.
Rusty Oxydado