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Daisy uses: Overview, Uses, Side Effects, Precautions, Interactions, Dosing and Reviews

Overview, Uses, Side Effects, Precautions, Interactions, Dosing and Reviews

Overview

Wild daisy is a plant. The parts that grow above the ground are used to make medicinal tea.

People take wild daisy tea for coughs, bronchitis, disorders of the liver and kidneys, and swelling (inflammation). They also use it as a drying agent (astringent) and as a “blood purifier.” Some people take homeopathic wild daisy for preventing problems during childbirth, pain and soreness, and minor bleeding.

Wild daisy is sometimes applied directly to the skin for wounds and skin diseases.

Wild daisy contains chemicals called saponins. These chemicals might help skin cells produce more collagen.

Uses & Effectiveness ?

Insufficient Evidence for

  • Coughs.
  • Bronchitis.
  • Liver problems.
  • Kidney problems.
  • Swelling (inflammation).
  • Wounds, when applied to the skin.
  • Skin diseases, when applied to the skin.
  • Other conditions.

More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of wild daisy for these uses.

Side Effects

There isn’t enough information to know whether wild daisy is safe.

Special Precautions and Warnings

There isn’t enough information to know whether wild daisy is safe. Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Not enough is known about the use of wild daisy during pregnancy and breast-feeding. Stay on the safe side and avoid use.

Allergy to ragweed, daisies, and related plants: Wild daisy may cause an allergic reaction in people who are sensitive to the Asteraceae/Compositae plant family. Members of this family include ragweed, chrysanthemums, marigolds, daisies, and many others. If you have allergies, be sure to check with your healthcare provider before taking wild daisy.

Interactions ?

We currently have no information for WILD DAISY overview.

Dosing

The appropriate dose of wild daisy depends on several factors such as the user’s age, health, and several other conditions. At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for wild daisy. Keep in mind that natural products are not always necessarily safe and dosages can be important. Be sure to follow relevant directions on product labels and consult your pharmacist or physician or other healthcare professional before using.

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CONDITIONS OF USE AND IMPORTANT INFORMATION: This information is meant to supplement, not replace advice from your doctor or healthcare provider and is not meant to cover all possible uses, precautions, interactions or adverse effects. This information may not fit your specific health circumstances. Never delay or disregard seeking professional medical advice from your doctor or other qualified health care provider because of something you have read on WebMD. You should always speak with your doctor or health care professional before you start, stop, or change any prescribed part of your health care plan or treatment and to determine what course of therapy is right for you.

This copyrighted material is provided by Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database Consumer Version. Information from this source is evidence-based and objective, and without commercial influence. For professional medical information on natural medicines, see Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database Professional Version.
© Therapeutic Research Faculty 2020.

Daisy | The Plant Medicine School

Botanical description, cultivation and harvesting

A rosette of spoon shaped leaves that hugs the ground with the flowers arising on hairy stalks. The composite flower is a single capitulum with a domed yellow central disc surrounded by white rays (sometimes with a pink tinge) It does not like very acid soil and occurs in grassland. Ornamental forms with multiple rays and deeper colours are available. Native throughout Europe, naturalised in other places. There is rarely any need to cultivate other than limit weeding as it easily occurs in lawns and beds. Harvest of flwers is from April until around October, depending on the climate.

History, folklore, taste and energetics

Sour, due to the high vitamin C content. Daisy may well be a corruption of ‘day’s eye’ referring to how the flowers open in sunlight. Bellis probably refers to its beauty and perennis to the fact that it is both perennial and also self seeds freely and therefore once present is difficult to eradicate (not that one would want to).

It is as effective as Arnica for bruising ( and much easier to cultivate, as well as being native). It is a flower long associated with childhood and in homeopathy is used for bruising in childbirth both for the mother and baby, and birth trauma in general. It seems to help us recover from the bruisings and woundings of childhood at any age. Recently we harvested daisy heads to make an infused oil for a summer skin balm; when I went to see how the students we getting on they wwere all sitting in the daisy patch with daisy chains round their wrists, their necks, in their ears, on their heads with the most happy, innocent smiles on their faces (these students were aged 25-50 and had the expressions of delighted children on their faces).

There seems to be an affinity to the solar plexus, that healthy yellow central disc; an open clear solar plexus with pure, innocent energy radiating in the form of the white rays. Opening the solar plexus allows trapped emotional energy to move down to the earth to ground or clear up through the crown to dissipate. A clear solar plexus will allow the information we receive from the world to pass through and flow on. Daisy also seems to help us see clearly and to clear our eyes, our inner seeing of those traumatic images and memories that may cloud our inner vision and make us look at the world in a jaundice manner; it can also clear the rose tints that prevent us seeing people clearly, warts and all. There is a lot more to this plant; the way it roots firmly to the ground, is well grounded, and from there reaches up to bask in the sun.

Constituents

Saponins, essential oil, resin, mucilage, bitters, vitamin C.

Actions

  • Vulnerary
  • Astringent
  • Expectorant
  • Anti-inflammatory
  • Cicatriscant

Traditional and current uses

Externally:

  • Bruises
  • Sprains
  • Wounds
  • Sun damge to skin
  • Cuts and grazes
  • Boils
  • Skin disorders

Internally:

  • Bronchitis
  • Bronchial catarrh
  • Gastro-enteritis

Recipes

Plantain and Daisy Skin food

Harvest equal quantities of plantain leaves (either ribwort or larged leaved) and daisy flowers and place in a pyrex bowl in a bain marie. Cover with olive oil and simmer for 2 hours. Leave over night and then press off. This may be used simply after bathing or showering to nourish the skin. It can also be use to prepare a bumps and bruises salve by adding 35g beeswax per 500 ml and 2% each lavender and tea tree essential oils.

Daisy flowers ( an a few young leaves) can be added to forage salads and are rich in vitamin C. 

Daisy tea can be taken internally for the chest and stomach. The decoction or infusion can also be added to the bath.

Files for download

Daisy for the master: is it difficult to plant and grow a legendary crop?

Growing daisies does not require special skill: a little bit of effort and patience is enough for mother-of-pearl pink or pearl-white flowers to quickly scatter in the foreground of garden compositions, framing flower beds and flower beds with their delicate appearance. The unpretentious culture is famous for its high frost resistance, its modest charm and ease of cultivation managed to win many hearts.

The content of the article

1.

Growing seedlings of daisies from seeds

2.

Planting perennial daisies in open ground

2.1.

When to plant daisies

2.2.

How to plant daisies

3.

Caring for perennial daisies in the open field

3.1.

Watering

3.2.

top dressing

3.3.

Transfer

3.4.

Daisies in winter

4.

Diseases and pests

5.

Reproduction of daisies

6.

Daisies in landscape design

Growing seedlings of daisies from seeds

  • Before sowing seeds, it is necessary to moisten the soil mixture well, which is filled with a container for growing seedlings.

  • When sowing, it is important to observe an interval between seeds of about 5 cm, seeds slightly buried in the soil need only be lightly sprinkled with soil mixture and moistened using a spray bottle.

  • After 10 days, the first seedlings appear: during the entire period of their waiting, it is important not to forget to regularly moisten the soil, and keep the container in a warm and bright place.

  • With the appearance of the first leaves, the growing seedlings can be dived.

  • Young plants should receive maximum light so that insufficient light does not cause stems to stretch.

The advantage of the seedling method, in contrast to sowing in open soil, is the opportunity to admire the flowering of the plant already in the current season.

Outdoor planting of perennial daisies

The plant likes good light, so a sunny place is best for planting. However, an excess of the scorching midday sun can scorch delicate inflorescences and dry out the foliage, and this must be taken into account when choosing a site. If you plant a flower in a small penumbra, then the bushes will stretch a little more than when planting in a site with a sufficient level of lighting. A crop that does not have strict requirements for soil composition will show good growth rates when planted in any cultivated and well-drained soil. The best option is structured enriched loams.

When to plant daisies

Seedlings germinated from seeds sown in March or April can be planted in open soil in the last days of spring, in temperate latitudes June planting is also acceptable. At the same time, the divisions obtained as a result of the division of an adult bush are planted. Delenki can be planted on the site in the last days of summer.

How to plant daisies

Germinated seedlings or cuttings should be planted in open soil, keeping a clod of earth around the roots so as not to injure them. The interval between planting pits can reach from 10 to 20 cm. Holes for planting should be made shallow. When planting, you must first carefully tamp the ground with which the holes are covered, and then moisten the young plants with high quality.

Caring for perennial daisies in the open field

After watering, loosen the soil at the planting site to provide the root system with good oxygen access. Loosening the soil is recommended to be combined with weeding. Young plants that have recently transplanted into open soil will need to be weeded. Over time, perennial bushes will begin to grow, displacing weeds from the site on their own. To increase the flowering period, it is necessary to regularly prune fading inflorescences so that seeds do not have time to ripen in them. This will additionally save the strength of the plant and prevent unwanted self-seeding.

Watering

The shallow root system of plants dictates the most optimal watering regime for daisies: it is important to maintain regular moistening, avoiding overdrying of the soil or stagnant moisture in the planting sites. The need for regular high-quality watering increases significantly during the summer drought.

The lack of moisture immediately affects the condition of the inflorescences, which can quickly grind and lose their doubleness.

Top dressing

Plants quickly respond to well-timed and balanced fertilizing, which improves the decorative effect of the culture.

  • Early spring top dressing is carried out immediately after the snow melts, at this time of the year it is recommended to use nitrogen and potash fertilizers applied in the form of a solution.

  • The beginning of the budding period serves as a signal for the introduction of complex mineral fertilizers into the soil.

  • Flowering bushes can be fed with phosphorus-potassium fertilizers.

  • The plant will also react favorably to top dressing with organic matter, for example, an aqueous solution of rotted cow manure.

It is important to observe the recommended balance of applied mineral fertilizers: an excess of nitrogen can lead to the growth of greenery at the expense of blooming flowers.

Transplantation

A feature of the plant is its ability to successfully transfer transplantation during the periods of budding and flowering. Experienced gardeners recommend replanting the crop at least once every two years: such a transplant regime serves as a powerful incentive for subsequent lush flowering and the preservation of all decorative characteristics by the plant. A good solution is to combine a plant transplant with the division of an adult bush into divisions. Rejuvenated bushes will quickly demonstrate a real flowering extravaganza.

Daisies in winter

The crop is capable of overwintering without problems, but vulnerable roots of young plants may require additional preparation for winter cold. Peat, humus or sawdust can be sprinkled under the crops – these materials can protect the bushes in a little snowy winter. In anticipation of the winter season, there is no need to cut the plants at the root, the bushes go under the snow with leaves. With the threat of a harsh and snowless winter, you can additionally cover the plantings with spruce paws.

Diseases and pests

If powdery mildew or gray rot occurs, the infected fragments must be urgently removed and destroyed, and the plants themselves should be sprayed with tincture of garlic or horsetail. In case of severe infection with fungal diseases, it is recommended to use fungicides. The culture can become prey for spider mites, aphids, slugs. Insecticides are effective in killing pests.

Propagation of daisies

In addition to seed propagation and division of the bush, the culture can be propagated by cuttings, which are cut from side shoots. Rooting of cuttings occurs in open soil under a layer of covering material. At the end of summer, rooted planting material is ready for planting in a permanent place.

Daisies in landscape design

The attractiveness of a low-growing culture allows it to be used as a spectacular foreground of flowerbeds and borders, forming borders. The compactness and picturesqueness of the bushes makes it possible to grow them not only in open soil, but also in containers and even baskets, which are components of the original portable garden.

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