Saturday 25 July 2020

Mulling on Mullein

Great Mullein - Verbascum thapsus

Here's a wild flower that is worth accepting when it turns up in your vegetable plot.  Statuesque and brightly coloured this plant is widely distributed around the world and has many uses and superstitions attached to it.  The flower is surely enough to bring joy to anyone coming across it.  I seem to recall it being all the fashion at Chelsea a few years ago.

Leaves
The leaves, especially the young ones,  are  soft like lambs ears and recognised as an excellent liner for shoes.  They are also dried and, in the past, smoked as a remedy for asthma bronchitis and catarrh

Head and shoulders above other weeds.
There is a structural similarity to foxglove, the first year's growth producing a rosette from which, in the second year the spire emerges rocketlike.

Rosette - First year's growth

The flowers are a rich source of nectar, attracting bees and many other pollinating insects.


This is a powerful plant not recommended for human consumption.  The seeds are narcotic and have been used to stupefy fish. Reputedly a remedy for lice it is also used as an ingredient in shampoo, particularly for fair hair.

Another traditional use of Great Mullein (also known as Hedge Taper) is as a flaming torch.  The dried stems are dipped in tallow or suet to provide a reliable long lasting bright light.  The French Fete de Brandons on the first Sunday in Lent relies on this tradition to locate corncockles in the fields and remove them from the harvest crop (as they spoil the crop).  This use always conjures up an image in my mind of a mob of country yokels advancing with pitchforks.  Here's a suitable candidate for this purpose:




As you can see they grow up to 10ft  and if damaged produce multiple heads.  There is an associated superstition connected with this plant.  The gist is that you name your true love's name as you twist off the head of the plant. If it recovers they return your affections - and the number of new flower heads that subsequently develop indicates the number of offspring resulting from your union.

Other ailments Mullein has been said to cure include warts, earache, bed wetting, boils, rheumatism, gout  and last but not least parrot bites!  Amongst these there may be some tall stories for this tall plant.


12 comments:

  1. Sorry Jane I was laughing so much I managed to delete your comment instead of posting it. Please feel free to repost.

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    1. OK That's good. We, or at least I, welcome laughs these days.

      Locally, especially in the mountains, mullein is called Indian toilet paper. But don't try it because that soft fuzz rubs off and is actually very prickly. (The comment was something like that.)

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    2. Here is a medieval cure for piles that I overlooked in my original post: "Take a pan with coals and heat a little stone glowing and put theron the leaves of ...mullein; and put under a chair or under a stool with a siege, that the smoke thereof may ascend to thy fundament as hot as thou mayest suffer"

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  2. Nice big tall plant. Yet another plant I'll have to find and drag to my garden. I'm seriously jealous when I see this tall pretty plants growing wild. No such luck here. Digitalis, lupine, delphinium...none of them want to grow here and I keep trying. I have a feeling mullein would be the same story. It would probably give me the finger like the one on your last photo :)

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  3. How about foxgloves then Ana. Do they grow with you?

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    1. Nope, if you sow them they will flower next year but they don't self-seed. Only way to have them in the garden is to sow them in pots each year and transplant in September.

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    2. Well that foxes me :)

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  4. That’s a great post, what a versatile plant! I’ve seen them at work but haven’t seen any at the allotment - though I’ve seen mullein moth caterpillars, perhaps that explains the lack of plants!

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    1. I've only seen other peoples photos of the mullein moth caterpillars (e.g. yours). Boy it is a spectacular!

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  5. It's one weed we don't get at the allotment. Looks good though - there again I always think bindweed has lovely flowers!!

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  6. Beautiful! I have never seen before

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  7. Do you get the lovely stripy caterpillars? Doesn't it require a particular soil type? - I think cultivated varieties do which could explain why it doesn't grow here.

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