150

Cherokee Herbal, The


Classification

Series Number: 152
Genre: Pagan
Series:
Condition: New
Read: ✓
Shelf: 40
Goodreads: Yes

General

Subtitle: Native Plant Medicine from the Four Directions
Author: Garrett, J. T.
Binding: Softback
Cover Price: 15.00
Amazon Link: Buy from Amazon.com

Publishing

Publisher: Bear & Company
Copyright Year: 2003
Publication Year: 2003
ISBN#: 1-879181-96-7
LCCN#: 2003040388
Pages: 288
Address: Rochester, Vt
Dewey Decimal: 615/.321/0899755
LoC Classification: RS171 .G375 2003
ISSN#:

Comments

A practical guide to the medicinal uses of over 450 plants and herbs as applied in the traditional practices of the Cherokee.

• Details the uses of over 450 plants for the treatment of over 120 ailments.

• Written by the coauthor of Medicine of the Cherokee (40,000 copies sold).

• Explains the healing elements of the Four Directions and the plants associated with them.

• Includes traditional teaching tales as told to the author by Cherokee Elders.

In this rare collection of the acquired herbal knowledge of Cherokee Elders, author J. T. Garrett presents the healing properties and medicinal applications of over 450 North American plants. Readers will learn how Native American healers utilize the gifts of nature for ceremonial purposes and to treat over 120 ailments, from the common cold to a bruised heart. The book presents the medicine of the Four Directions and the plants with which each direction is associated. From the East comes the knowledge of "heart medicine"--blood-building tonics and plants for vitality and detoxification. The medicine of the South focuses on the innocence of life and the energy of youthfulness. West medicine treats the internal aspects of the physical body to encourage strength and endurance, while North medicine offers a sense of freedom and connection to the stars and the greater Universal Circle. This resource also includes traditional teaching tales to offer insights from Cherokee cosmology into the origin of illness, how the animals found their medicine, and the naming of the plants.