Plantain: A Healing Herb in Your Backyard

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Plantain-Backyard Healing Herb
Wellness Mama » Blog » Natural Remedies » Plantain: A Healing Herb in Your Backyard

Plantain is one herb that I literally would not be without. It grows in abundance in our yard so we use it fresh during the warm seasons and dry and freeze for use in the winter. I make salves with it for calming bug bites, rashes and burns and it works wonders.

What is Plantain?

Plantain, or Plantago Major, is a common backyard herb with broad leafs. Most people think of it as a weed, though it is an incredibly useful herb. According to Mountain Rose Herbs:

“Legend has it that Alexander the Great discovered it and brought it with him back to Europe in 327 BCE. It has been referred to as the Whiteman’s Foot by Native Americans, as wherever they went, it seemed to spring up. and in some places, it is seen as a noxious, invasive weed. It is, however, a useful little plant. It has been used by many cultures the world over, and the Saxons considered it one of their nine sacred herbs.

It was considered an early Christian symbol of the path followed by the devout and many cultures today refer to it as an aphrodisiac. The leaves are quite edible, and often used raw in salads and cooked as greens. Older leaves have a stronger, sometimes objectionable flavor, and can be tough and stringy, but can be used to make tea.

Plantain is very high in vitamins A and C and in calcium. Medicinally, Native Americans used plantain leaves to relieve the pain of bee stings and insect bites, stop the itching of poison ivy and other allergic rashes, and promote healing in sores and bruises. Plantain tea can be used as a mouthwash to help heal and prevent sores in the mouth, and as an expectorant. Most recently, plantain is being marketed as a stop smoking aid, adding one more use to the list of ways that this versatile herb is useful.”

“Plantain has been used as a panacea in some Native American cultures and with some very good reasons. Many of its active constituents show antibacterial and antimicrobial properties, as well as being anti-inflammatory and antitoxic. The leaves, shredded or chewed, are a traditional treatment for insect and animal bites and the antibacterial action helps prevent infection and the anti-inflammatory helps to relieve pain, burning, and itching. There is some investigation ongoing to study its affects on lowering blood sugar.

 The Many Uses of Plantain:

Plantain leaf can be made into a tea, tincture or infusion and used internally (according to Practical Herbalism):

  • To help get Cholesterol to healthy Levels
  • To aid those with Diabetes
  • For Hemorrhoid relief
  • To help relieve Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  • To help calm the bowels during Constipation or Diarrhea
  • To sooth kidney and bladder problems and to aid with Bladder infection, ITIs and similar problems. Safe for children
  • For indigestion and ulcers

Plantain Leaf is also very soothing on external  inflammation:

  • Bites
  • Stings
  • Rashes
  • Eczema
  • Psoriasis
  • Burns
  • Cuts
  • Yeast
  • Varicose Veins

 How to Use Plantain:

If fresh plantain grows in your yard, you can make sure it has not been sprayed by pesticides or pets and use in teas or the young leaves in salads.

For stings and bites,  make a poultice of fresh plantain leaf and bentonite clay with water to form a paste. It will take away the pain immediately when placed on the bite or sting. If you don’t have the other ingredients nearby, just chew up a leaf of plantain and spit on the bite. It sounds gross but greatly relieves the pain.

An infusion or strong tea of plantain leaf (dried or fresh) sprayed on a sunburn will cool the burn and relieve the pain. This will also help sooth rashes and reactions from Poison Ivy, Oak or Sumac. To make an even stronger remedy, steep plantain leaf (fresh or dried) in apple cider vinegar for a few weeks and then strain. The infused vinegar will sooth itching, burning and pain on the skin very quickly.

A cup of plantain tea from fresh or dried leaves will sooth indigestion, heartburn or IBS. It is calming on all types of digestive disturbances. It is also helpful for UTIs, Bladder infections or kidney infections.

I make a salve of Plantain and other herbs to speed healing of wounds and use in place of antibiotic cream. Recipe soon.

You can also get pre-made Plantain tincture, tea, or healing salve to have in your  purse or first aid kit when needed.

NOTE: Plantain is generally considered a safe herb but as with anything, consult your doctor before using if you have any kind of medical condition. It should not be used in place of medical attention when needed.

Other Backyard Foraging

Ever used Plantain? Seen it in your yard and thought it was a weed? Share below!

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

144 responses to “Plantain: A Healing Herb in Your Backyard”

  1. Tara Avatar

    May I ask how to properly freeze it? I bought a 1lb bag (from Starwest) and want to make sure I don’t let any go bad! Also can freezing dried herbs be done with any herb? Thanks for all your herb profiles they are so helpful!!

  2. Barbara Avatar

    Every plantain post mentions insect bites. I specifically have used plantain over a paste of honey garlic and turmeric to heal not one but THREE different spider bites. I do not even have a scar from the bites. I am still healing the third bite on my elbow. When I discovered the bite, my elbow was an angry red up to the middle of my upper arm, and I had shooting pain from my elbow to my wrist. At the very center of the red was a tiny vampire like bite, right on the point of my elbow. I put plantain on it immediately, and the pain subsided and the swelling began to reverse. That was four weeks ago. I have a small patch of red, about what your elbow looks like when you have been leaning on it. The pain has almost gone as well. It has gone from shooting up my arm to something like a stone bruise on my elbow. I have been using the plantain every other day, since the arm began to heal. I hope that it will finish the job and the pain in my arm will soon be a memory.

  3. KENISHA MOORE Avatar
    KENISHA MOORE

    I love this “weed”! I make a salve with it. I’ve use my salve on minor wounds and burns. Heals super-fast! Also chew it up and slap it on bug bites..works like a charm!

  4. Shawn Swanson Avatar
    Shawn Swanson

    I recently discovered plantain and all I can say is wow! I made a salve for bug bites this year and it works great! So far it works on mosquito bites, ant bites, wasp stings, and poison ivy! The best part is it grows all over my yard. Do yourself a favor and get to know this plant.

  5. Mike Carter Avatar
    Mike Carter

    My 2 cents on the plantain weed. It is amazing. Wife was stung on the back of her neck, I went into the yard grabbed a few leaves, bruised them up and applied it the the sting and in 5 minutes it was as if nothing happened. Same experience on several occasions with mosquito bites. Finally, one of my co-workers had a tooth abscess. We were working out of state and no where near a dentist. He had made himself ill with Tylenol trying to dull the pain. I mentioned the plantain to him and at that point he was willing to try anything. We took a walk outside, found some growing and I told him to chew it slightly and pack it around his tooth. In about 10 minutes his pain was gone.
    It also works well as a blood coagulant. I scratched my arm on an exposed staple. 2 long scratches about 6″ long. Bleeding but not profusely. I wiped off the blood, picked a few leaves and chewed them up and placed them directly on the wound. Bleeding stopped. After about 10 minutes I wiped them off, and the bleeding started back up. Truly an amazing weed.

  6. Daniel coy Avatar
    Daniel coy

    Don’t buy plantain. It’s s scam in marketing to make the rich more rich. Is a weed and grows everywhere. I’m so sicko and tired of all you wanna be true Americans looking for health benefit by going to whole foods in your gas guzzling suv or trendy cars. Leave plantain alone. It’s not for sale!!!

  7. Chris Avatar

    I read this a few days ago and today was stung by a wasp on a knuckle….within minutes hand swelling, pounding up my arm. Chewed on a leaf put it on my finger, stopped pain right away…I had some plantain tea in a spray bottle for my dog so sprayed that on, then after a while rubbed a calendula/comfrey oil on my hand. Several hours later hardly any swelling, stiffness…I’m so pleased. this would normally be a useless, swollen hand!

    thanks Katie, great article as always 🙂

  8. John Avatar

    I don’t think it would be a problem freezing plantain.
    You could also make a herbal healing oil using 2 parts plantain, 3 parts olive and 1 part hemp oil in a blender.

  9. Amanda Avatar
    Amanda

    This is excellent information! My son just seems to roll in poison ivy. And I’ve been looking at those plants, saying to myself, “I know those are useful, but I can’t remember what they are called and what for!”

    Do you think I could wash and freeze them to use in a smoothie or is it better just steeped as a tea for maximum benefits?

    Are there any look alike plants that I should be aware of?

    1. Laurie Avatar
      Laurie

      I heard from an herbalist that heat destroys some of the medicinal properties. However, plantain tea is supposed to deworm, so it still keeps some of its benefits.

      On that note, we gave some fresh leaves to some new foals that we bought who most certainly had visible worms. After they ate as much as they wanted after 2 weeks, they were worm free and they were no longer interested in the plantain.

  10. Mary Finn Avatar
    Mary Finn

    My father misidentified this plant as “dock”, also another plant with similar medicinal qualities. Both Plantains and Dock leaves are specifics for skin irritation caused by rashes, insect bites and poison ivy.

  11. Lillian Zuidema Avatar
    Lillian Zuidema

    My eye is painful. Could I use a leaf for a patch on my eye.

  12. Terry Avatar

    I use plantain to cure poison Ivy. First, wash the affected area with Fels Naptha soap. Apply real lard (not Crisco) to the affected area. Place several clean plantain leaves over the area covered in lard and then wrap with gauze. Leave it on for 24 hours and then remove. This usually clears up the poison ivy the first time around but a second application never hurts.

  13. Angela Avatar

    Hi Welness Mamma, is there any other types of plantains (official names) that are good for allergies??

  14. Brenny Avatar

    Thank you for all your plant information, your website is SO interesting! I lived in CO for 60 years,, and used this plant frequently, as I am a beekeeper. I now live in western KS, and we have a plant here called tuberous Indian plantain, or arnoglossum plantagineum. My sources don’t give any of the uses for this plant (if it has any); would you know if the two are related, or a reliable source for more research? I appreciate any help you can give me. Thank you.

  15. Michele Avatar

    I have a friend that is anaphylactic allergic to poison ivy & she puts jewel weed n her soap. I plan on using your coconut soap recipe, adding this plantain plant and/or the jewel weed to it, depending on which grows better here in tropical south Florida +its January 2nd & I’m wearing shorts, it was 81 degrees yesterday).

  16. Michael Avatar

    I keep getting swollen glands all over my body it comes every few years or so been in hospital a few times they say it’s viral infection been tested for glandular fever but comes back negative can these remedies help. Also they look like doc leaves that’s what we called them are they the same ?

  17. Kelly Avatar

    Can this be used for a bad eye laceration? Our daughter had an open globe injury. Can I make eye drops and use this?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      I don’t have any experience with using plantain in the eye. If there is a naturopath or herbalist in your area, they would be good to ask.

  18. John Avatar

    @Doug, I bet it works on your daughters psoriatis as it will on eczema

    @Jodi, I’m relatively new to this herbal thingy, regardless it has served me well so far.
    As nature babies we must take baby steps.
    Let’s do some job sharing, you in the Yukon and moi in OZ?
    Thank you Mama for starting this blog.
    I just made 23 litres of herbal tincture. It!s called fireweed, camomile, rosehip homemade wine.
    If I don’t see you in the future, I will see you in the pasture.
    John

  19. Doug L Avatar

    Great article. Thanks. Made a Plantain Salve as my wife came into contact with poison sumac while gardening. Due to an on-going battle with adrenal and thyroid issues, even topical ointments like benodryl worsen her conditions. This ointment went a long way in relieving the itching and rash.

    We called the salve ‘Boo-Boo Be Gone’. The grandkids love it, putting it on multiple scrapes and insect bites.

    I just made another salve with Calendula flowers, Plantain and Oregon Grape. Getting my daughter-in-law to test this one on her psoriasis.

    1. Laurie Avatar

      What I used to clear my psoriasis was magnesium chloride. It is different than magnesium sulfate (epsom salts).
      I mixed the flakes with water to saturate, making magnesium oil. I put this on my skin and left it for 20 minutes, then washed it off. I did this for 1 1/2-2 months.
      It has not returned. I have not had an issue with it now for 2 years.
      I hear magnesium salts can vary in quality. The one I used was Ancient Minerals.

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