🌿 Yarrow
🍴 Edible Parts
🤝 Companions (8)
⚠️ Keep Apart (3)
💊 Medicinal Uses
Astringent, anti-inflammatory, diaphoretic, styptic (stops bleeding). Used for wounds, fevers, colds, digestive issues, menstrual cramps. Contains achilleine (hemostatic alkaloid), flavonoids, volatile oils (cineole, camphor). Traditional wound herb — leaves applied directly to cuts to stop bleeding. Tea used for colds and fevers by inducing sweating.
📜 History & Traditional Uses
Named after Achilles who used it to treat soldiers' wounds at Troy. Used in battle medicine across Europe throughout history ('soldier's woundwort', 'herba militaris'). Anglo-Saxon nine sacred herbs. Chinese medicine for kidney and spleen. Native Americans used for toothache, earache, and as a poultice. Used in medieval beer brewing before hops (gruit).
📝 Notes
Outstanding companion plant — accumulates copper, potassium, and phosphorus from subsoil, making them available to neighbors. Attracts predatory wasps, hoverflies, lacewings, and ladybugs. Essential oil content highest when harvested in full bloom, midday. Spreading rhizomatous habit; can be aggressive in rich soil. Many ornamental cultivars with white, pink, red, yellow flowers.