***SPAM*** Re: Be careful on garden cleanup!

Tim Eck timeck17582@gmail.com
Tue, 17 Mar 2020 08:57:16 PDT
I had heard that impatiens and aloe worked great on nettles, hymenoptera
stings, etc.  When I tried both, the poultice seemed to help when you
rubbed it in.  But always the skeptic, I also tried rubbing the injury with
no poultice of any kind and that worked just as well.
My gardening experience involved picking up some debris when I received a
disabilitatingly severe sting - like being hit with a baseball bat while
being stung.  I never found out the culprit though I had suggestions from
cicada killer to Japanese hornet.  A few years later my wife was picking up
some stuff when I heard a squeak and turned to see her standing rigid,
holding her hand, eyes bulging, mouth open and realized she had gotten
tagged by the same thing.  Both of us were too distracted to notice what
actually got us so we'll never know.

On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 11:49 PM Randall P. Linke <randysgarden@gmail.com>
wrote:

> My memorable experience with nettles was when I was 12 years old, visiting
> friends of my parents in Scotland.  I was playing street tennis with a
> daughter of their friends when I missed the ball.  I went to fetch it and
> plunged my hand into a patch of nettles.  I have no idea what it was, but
> the girl I was playing with ran over, grabbed a bunch of leaves from some
> plant and rubbed it on my hand and the irritation was almost immediately
> abated.  I've always wondered what this obviously common folk remedy was.
>
> On Mon, Mar 16, 2020, 3:30 PM Jane McGary <janemcgary@earthlink.net>
> wrote:
>
> > When I lived in the Cascade foothills, my place had every kind of
> > wildlife from elk to newts (even the mountain beaver). The most exciting
> > (?) episode in the garden itself happened while I was showing a visiting
> > couple the rock garden, accompanied by one of my female Malamutes.
> > Suddenly the dog pounced on a big rock, shoved it aside, and dug
> > quickly. She had found a nest of baby rabbits. She ate them right in
> > front of my visitors. Fortunately they were outdoors people -- the man
> > was an ichthyologist -- and were not horrified by nature red in tooth
> > and claw.
> >
> > Jane McGary, Portland, Oregon, USA
> >
> >
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