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Ash
Tree
By alien
Ash Tree
Irish Fuinnseog (Family - Oleaceae)
Description: Magnificent large deciduous tree with distinctive black
buds in spring. Can be coppiced. Height 45m. Age up to 200 years.
An ash can be any of four different tree genera from four very distinct
families (see end of page for disambiguation), but originally and most
commonly refers to trees of the genus Fraxinus in the olive family
Oleaceae. The ashes are usually medium to large trees, mostly deciduous
though a few subtropical species are evergreen. The leaves are opposite
(rarely in whorls of three), and mostly pinnately-compound, simple in a
few species. The seeds, popularly known as keys, are a type of fruit
known as a samara.
Uses of Ash Tree
The wood is hard (a hardwood), tough and very strong but elastic,
extensively used for making bows, tool handles, quality wooden baseball
bats, hurley sticks and other uses demanding high strength and
resilience. It is also used as material for the bodies of guitars,
known for its bright, cutting tone and sustaining quality. It also
makes excellent firewood. The two most economically important species
for wood production are White Ash in eastern North America, and
European Ash in Europe.
Government and virtues.
It is governed by the Sun: and the young tender tops, with the leaves,
taken inwardly, and some of them outwardly applied, are singularly good
against the bitings of viper, adder, or any other venomous beast; and
the water distilled there from being taken, a small quantity every
morning fasting, is a singular medicine for those that are subject to
dropsy, or to abate the greatness of those that are too gross or fat.
The decoction of the leaves in white wine helps to break the stone, and
expel it, and cures the jaundice. The ashes of the bark of the Ash made
into lye, and those heads bathed there with which are leprous, scabby,
or scald, they are there by cured. The kernels within the husks,
commonly called Ashen Keys, prevail against stitches and pains in the
sides, proceeding of wind, and voideth away the stone by provoking
urine.
I can justly except against none of all this, save only the first, viz.
That Ash-tree tops and leaves are good against the bitings of serpents
and vipers. I suppose this had its rise from Gerrard or Pliny, both
which hold that there is such an antipathy between an adder and an
Ash-tree, that if an adder be encompassed round with Ash-tree leaves,
she will sooner run through the fire than through the leaves. The
contrary to which is the truth, as both my eyes are witnesses. The rest
are virtues something likely, only if it be in Winter when you cannot
get the leaves, you may safely use the bark instead of them. The keys
you may easily keep all the year, gathering them when they are ripe.
Alien writes for medicinal
herbs. He also writes for
natural remedies and you can get more information on
herbal medicines .
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