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Contents:
Common Names
Parts Usually Used
Plant(s) & Culture
Where Found
Medicinal Properties
Biochemical Information Legends, Myths and Stories
Uses
Formulas or Dosages
How Sold
Warning
Bibliography
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Common Names
Black birch
Cherry birch
Mahogany birch
Mountain mahogany
Spice birch
Sweet birch
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Parts Usually Used
Inner bark, small twigs, and leaves
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Description of Plant(s) and Culture
Black birch is a tree (this is the common birch tree) that grows 60-80 feet
high; the bark is brown when the tree is young, dark gray later, and is horizontally
striped. Bark is non-peeling, sweet, aromatic. On old trees the bark is more
irregularly broken. The ovate, pointed leaves, 6 inches long, occur alternately
in pairs and are finely serrate. The flowers grow in inconspicuous male catkins
about 3 inches long and female catkins about 1 inch long, the male appearing
in the fall and the female the following spring. The fruits are oblong, upright,
3/4 inch long. The bark and small twigs have a flavor similar to wintergreen.
Other varieties: marsh birch (B. pubescens);
silver birch (B. pendula); and B. verrucossa.
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Where Found
Found in rich woods; southern Quebec; southwestern Maine to northern Georgia,
Alabama, north to eastern Ohio.
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Medicinal Properties
Anthelmintic, astringent, diuretic, stimulant, diaphoretic, aromatic
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Biochemical Information
Traces of essential oil (methyl salicylate), saponins, tannin, bitter principle,
glycosides
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Legends, Myths and Stories
The inner bark of both these trees contains an oil which is identical in flavor
with the wintergreen plant (Gaultheria procumbens).
In Slavic and Germanic tradition the birch tree was special. It was believed that by being whipped with a birch rod before sunrise on Easter Sunday, a person could barter for health, transferring diseases to the birch branches; witches were said to ride birch brooms at their gathering on the Brocken in the Walpurgis night.
At Pentecost and on Corpus Christi Day, house entrances are decorated with birch branches.
The birch rod is the rod of the saying,
"spare the rod and spoil the child". Birch rods were used by the schoolmasters
of old to correct children. It was used in old Roman days as the bundle of twigs
and with axes born in like manner as an ensign, they declared the punishment
for lesser, and greater offenses, to the people.
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Uses
Leaf tea is used for urinary problems and to expel intestinal worms. Inner bark
tea used as mouthwash and taken internally for diarrhea, dysentery, cholera
infantum, kidney stones, blood purifier, bowel problems, neuralgia, anti-inflammatory,
muscle soreness and pain, gout, scrofula, rheumatism, and externally for sores,
boils, canker sores in the mouth. An oil similar to oil of wintergreen can be
distilled from the inner bark and twigs. Black birch sap (in springtime) is
used for beer makings and flavorings. Used to make root beer. The tea is a pleasant
drink in place of water for a time.
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Formulas or Dosages
Decoction: use 1 tsp. inner bark or leaves with 1 cup boiling water. Take 1-2
cups a day.
Tincture: A dose is 1/4 to 1/2 tsp., 3 times
a day.
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How Sold
A type of oil of wintergreen
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Warning
Essential oil is toxic. Easily absorbed through the skin. Fatalities reported.
Birch leaves should not be used to treat edema (collections of fluids) resulting from reduced cardiac or renal (kidney) activity.