Nice Natural Remedies Hemorrhoids photos

<p>A few nice Natural Remedies Hemorrhoids images I found:

184_4370 Berries Mountain Ash Rowan Tree Sorbus aucuparia Rosaceae
Natural Remedies Hemorrhoids
Image by Kate's Photo Diary
Mountain Ash - Rowan Tree Sorbus aucuparia Rosaceae
Sorbus aucuparia is a fine tree with pretty fine leaflets that makes a dense rounded tree when mature. This is the native rowan. There are white flowers in summer and big round clusters of juicy red berries in the autumn. The berries are beloved by birds and can disappear quickly. This is a tree of simple fresh charm, unspoiled and natural looking.
The Mountain Ash is not related to the true Ashes, but has derived its name from the similarity of the leaves.
In comparison to the true Ash, it is but a small tree, rarely more than 30 feet high. It belongs to the order Rosacece and is distinguished from its immediate relations the Pear, Crab Apple, White Beam and Wild Service Tree by its regularly pinnate, Ashlike leaves.
All parts of the tree are astringent and may be used in tanning and dyeing black. When cut, the Mountain Ash yields poles and hoops for barrels.
Both the bark and fruit have medicinal properties.
The fruit is rather globose, with teeth at the apex and two to three seeded cells. They are used medicinally in either the fresh or the dried state.
In herbal medicine, a decoction of the bark is given for diarrhoea and used as a vaginal injection in leucorrhoea, etc.
The ripe berries furnish an acidulous and astringent gargle for sore throats and inflamed tonsils. For their anti-scorbutic properties, they have been used in scurvy. The astringent infusion is used as a remedy in haemorrhoids and strangury.
The fruit is a favourite food of birds. A delicious jelly is made from the berries, which is excellent with cold game or wild fowl, and a wholesome kind of perry or cider can also be made from them.
In Northern Europe they are dried for flour, and when fermented yield a strong spirit. The Welsh used to brew an ale from the berries, the secret of which is now lost .
www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/a/ashmo076.html

184_4371 leaves Mountain Ash Rowan Tree Sorbus aucuparia Rosaceae
Natural Remedies Hemorrhoids
Image by Kate's Photo Diary
Mountain Ash - Rowan Tree Sorbus aucuparia Rosaceae
Sorbus aucuparia is a fine tree with pretty fine leaflets that makes a dense rounded tree when mature. This is the native rowan. There are white flowers in summer and big round clusters of juicy red berries in the autumn. The berries are beloved by birds and can disappear quickly. This is a tree of simple fresh charm, unspoiled and natural looking.
The Mountain Ash is not related to the true Ashes, but has derived its name from the similarity of the leaves.
In comparison to the true Ash, it is but a small tree, rarely more than 30 feet high. It belongs to the order Rosacece and is distinguished from its immediate relations the Pear, Crab Apple, White Beam and Wild Service Tree by its regularly pinnate, Ashlike leaves.
All parts of the tree are astringent and may be used in tanning and dyeing black. When cut, the Mountain Ash yields poles and hoops for barrels.
Both the bark and fruit have medicinal properties.
The fruit is rather globose, with teeth at the apex and two to three seeded cells. They are used medicinally in either the fresh or the dried state.
In herbal medicine, a decoction of the bark is given for diarrhoea and used as a vaginal injection in leucorrhoea, etc.
The ripe berries furnish an acidulous and astringent gargle for sore throats and inflamed tonsils. For their anti-scorbutic properties, they have been used in scurvy. The astringent infusion is used as a remedy in haemorrhoids and strangury.
The fruit is a favourite food of birds. A delicious jelly is made from the berries, which is excellent with cold game or wild fowl, and a wholesome kind of perry or cider can also be made from them.
In Northern Europe they are dried for flour, and when fermented yield a strong spirit. The Welsh used to brew an ale from the berries, the secret of which is now lost .
www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/a/ashmo076.html


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