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You can visit our Verbascum page or browse the pictures using the next and previous links. If you've been inspired take a look at the Verbascum plants in our garden centre.

new plants...basal rosette...Mullein...Verbascum thapsus... is biennial.

Lori

By Lori


new plants...basal rosette...Mullein...Verbascum thapsus... is biennial. (verbascum thapsus)

just this rosette the first season...then second season it sends up the flower spike! It has been used for so many ailments in the phamacopia that it's uses cover a page or two...diuretic, demulcent, antiseptic...etc...etc.



Comments on this photo

 

Is this plant the one you were talking about, Lori? That's the one that had the ice crystals in your other picture, right?

29 Oct, 2008

 

Yes Skippy...this is it!

29 Oct, 2008

 

It looks nice and juicy!

29 Oct, 2008

 

Mullein grows wild here...but I have gathered the seeds and started them too...they are a very dramatic looking plant...

29 Oct, 2008

 

I love them when they are in their hay days, Catfinch...if they have a downside it's the fact that when they finish...they brown up and die...standing in the middle of your border!! Be prepared to pull them once they peak. put a plastic bag over the seed head to capture the seeds...they are similar in size to poppy seed... They are a very useful medicinal herb too...

30 Oct, 2008

 

Hi Celandine... those leaves are just like velvet...very hairy plant...soft a moleskin.

30 Oct, 2008

 

I wondered why the ones I put in this year didn't shoot up. Hope they are there next season, some are mulched pretty well.

2 Nov, 2008

 

they are biennial GT... they will set seed next season. the first year they look like this pic...next year they will be 8 to 10 ft tall!!

2 Nov, 2008

 

Ooooo, I'm so excited!

2 Nov, 2008

 

I love the leaves of Verbascum more than the flowers. So soft and silky looking and so large! Trouble is here the caterpillars destroy them.
I have never used them medicinally. What do you use them for most?

11 Nov, 2008

 

My knowledge of their medicinal value comes from reading...no direct personal experience ...used as a treatment for tuberculosis, coughs and congestion. They will grow on the poorest sandy soil. The only downside that I see is their lifespan...once the seed is set the plant dies..they become brown dessicated stocks... dead but still standing...the chickadees and the downy woodpeckers just love them.

11 Nov, 2008



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