COWS UDDER 15 Seeds Solanum Mammosum Sacred Shaman Ornamental Weird Exotic Plant
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We currently have available:
COWS UDDER 15 Seeds - Solanum mammosum
These Australian grown Cows Udder seeds possess a high quality medicinal profile and are 100% organic.
ABOUT COWS UDDER
Solanum mammosum is a shrub growing from a single stem that is around 4cm in diameter at the base. It usually branches near the base, growing around 50cm - 200cm tall. Plants are usually strongly armed with broad based prickles up to 20mm long, though there are occasional forms without prickles.
The plant is harvested from the wild for local use as a medicine and source of materials. It also has potential for use as a pioneer species when establishing native woodlands and is widely cultivated as an ornamental curiosity for its unusual fruits with their resemblence to a cows udder.
Solanum mammosum is probably originally native to the Caribbean and Central and South America but is now grown through much of the tropics and subtropics.
HOW TO GROW COWS UDDER FROM SEED
STEP 1 - Surface sow the seeds onto Seed Raising Mix.
STEP 2 - Sprinkle some mix over the seeds to hold them in place but not bury them as they need light in order to germinate.
STEP 3 - Lightly mist daily. Use of a humidity dome speeds up the process. Germination generally occurs in around 2 - 4 weeks.
STEP 4 - Transplant into the garden when they reach 10cm tall. Prefers a full sun position and moderate watering.
KNOWN HAZARDS OF COWS UDDER
Although providing many well known foods for people, including the potato, tomato, pepper and eggplant, most species in this genus also contain toxic alkaloids. Whilst these alkaloids can make the plant useful in treating a range of medical conditions, they can also cause problems such as nausea, vomiting, salivation, drowsiness, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, weakness and respiratory depression. It would be unwise to ingest any part of this plant.
MEDICINAL USES OF COWS UDDER
The fruit is cooling and purgative. It is used to treat coughs and loss of appetite. The burnt fruit is used in the treatment of liver problems. When bruised with vinegar, the fruit is used as a poultice on abscesses and cracked nipples.
Extracts of the leaf and fruit are taken in order to lose weight and to lower high blood pressure and high cholesterol levels. Applied topically, they are used for treating mouth infections and skin wounds.
The leaves are anodyne and narcotic. A decoction is used as a remedy for diseases of the kidneys, bladder and stomach problems. A decoction of the leaves is used for cleansing wounds and teating haemorrhoids. The peduncle when burned is used as a treatment for piles, toothache and intestinal hemorrahges.
The seeds are stimulant and said to be used as a remedy for colds. A decoction of the roots is taken as a general stimulant and in the treatment of asthma. Boiled with sour milk and grain porridge, it is used to treat syphilis. Juice of fruit, combined with the pounded leaves and roots, is used to treat a variety of skin diseases. The plant is said to be narcotic.
The species has been used to treat athlete's foot among hunter groups in Belize and Trinidad. In Peninsular Malaysia, the plant is used to heal caterpillar rash and the Malays drink the leaf sap to treat fever.
In Sarawak, fresh fruit juice is used to treat
sore eyes in children. In Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam, the plant is used
to induce narcosis.
The plant is a source of solasodine, a poisonous,
teratogenic, alkaloidal compound that is a precursor to pharmaceutical
production of the contraceptive pills and has also been the subject of
recent research for its diuretic, anti-cancer, anti-fungal, cardiotonic,
anti-spermatogenetic, anti-androgenic, immunomodulatory and antipyretic
effects on the central nervous system.
AGROFORESTRY USES OF COWS UDDER
This plant will regenerate quickly, especially on bare ground. It is also found in areas of secondary growth and so, with its prickly habit, could be of use as a pioneer species that helps to exclude grazing animals as the young forest trees become established.
OTHER USES OF COWS UDDER
An extract of the fruit is used as an ingredient in commercial cosmetic preparations as an antioxidant. The mashed fruit is mixed with tobacco or Mansoa alliacea and rubbed on the feet in order to ward off sand fleas. The Kofan people of Colombia and Ecuador employ the plant as an insect repellant, especially against cockroaches. The powdered fruit is considered to be an effective, specific poison for cockroaches and has also been used against leaf cutter ants. Before soap was common in villages, the juice was used as a detergent to wash clothes.
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SPECIAL NOTE
We do not advocate the use of any plant in any particular way. We aim to support and encourage education around the traditional use of sacred plants. All information herein is provided for historical, educational and research purposes only.
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