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| https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=9601061 |
It favors habitats where the soil is damp, such as along creeks, or streams, bottomland soils, bog edges and ditches. It tolerates part sun to full shade.
We have jewelweed all over our farm and I see it in many other locations around Northwest Missouri. It is difficult to mistake for any other plant with its branching, weak stems, succulent foliage and a small, cornucopia shaped flower that blooms brilliant orange with brownish-red spotting. Occasionally nearby you will see a relative called the yellow jewelweed, while related they are not known to hybridize. Jewelweed is considered an annual, however, they readily self-seed and do so in a unique way called ballistochory or explosive dehiscence. The seed pods are packed with seeds, and as they swell little valves within the seed pod coil back rapidly and eject the seeds! This is where the name “touch-me-not” comes from. When the seed pod reaches maturity, if you gently touch it, you can trigger the valves, and the seeds will eject.
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| https://openverse.org/image/6f4aa72e-1cb4-479e-9efe-aec7d5e751d1?q=jewelweed&p=28 |
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| https://openverse.org/image/2f5d95ad-0ff7-426d-97b5-c67cd6b16492?q=jewelweed&p=45 |
It is reported that Native Americans regularly used the juices within the stems and leaves of Jewelweed to create poultices to treat rashes such as poison ivy. This might explain why jewelweed often grows near poison ivy. Nature provides us with the cure right next to the culprit. There is evidence found in peer reviewed studies that there is validity in the effectiveness of jewelweed against poison ivy, provided you apply it after short term exposure. Keep this in mind the next time you are in the timber and brush against or accidentally touch poison ivy, reach for the jewelweed and apply the juices contained within, hopefully you will have no lasting consequences in the form of an unbearable itch. Native Americans also considered this plant useful in relieving the sting from stinging nettles and the itch from chiggers. I will be trying this the next time I fall into a patch of nettles or chiggers find my ankles.
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| https://openverse.org/image/b8b44912-d932-4e1f-af8a-a76a71332d08?q=jewelweed&p=37 |
Nature often provides the very thing we need to counteract many ill effects of plant foliage either through ingestion or by touch. We just need to learn which ones are effective for what ails us.




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