When is a weed more than
a weed? Yesterday, on my daily walk, I
saw a huge burdock plant growing alongside the trail. Oh, how my father despised burdocks. He placed that tall, miserable weed, as he
called it, right up there with bull thistles, which he hated with a passion.
I stopped to look at the burdock
plant (arctium). Could it be as
bad as my dad had me believing? I had watched him pull burdock burs from our
farm dog many times. And cussing the
plant with every bur he pulled loose. I
pulled a good many Burdock burs from my pants over the years as well. But as I looked at the plant, I
wondered. Could such an attractive plant
be all bad?
After a bit of research,
I found some interesting information. First burdock is native to both Asia and
Europe and was accidently introduced to North America in the 1600s. Burdock was the inspiration for the hook-and-loop
fastener, Velcro. According to what I
read, a Swiss inventor, George de Mestral in the early 1940s, was pulling Burdock
burs from his dog, and he was struck by how well the bur worked—and voilà, he came up with the Velcro fastener.
Burdock, historically has
served as a food—both roots and shoots are edible, as well as a medicine. In
Asian cuisine, burdock root is usually sauteed in a pan with soy sauce and sesame
seed. Burdock flowers and leaves and be used to make
tea. The roots can also be used as a
medicine. Supposedly, burdock root is a liver
detoxifier, aids digestion, is anti-inflammatory, as well as a diuretic and treatment
for eczema.
The lowly, often despised,
burdock has an interesting positive history—including the inspiration for Velcro
that we all take for granted today.
THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Be careful
about dismissing a plant as a weed before you have more of its story.
WHERE TO BUY MY BOOKS
My latest book, MEET ME ON THE MIDWAY: A HISTORY OF WISCONSIN FAIRS, is available later this month. You can order it at your local bookstore. order online from the Wisconsin Historical Society bookstore, https://shop.wisconsinhistory.org/books, bookshop.org, or purchase from the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library in Wild Rose—a fundraiser for them. Phone: 920-622-3835 for prices and ordering, or contact the librarian: barnard@wildroselibrary.
Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division Street
Wild Rose, WI 54984.
www.wildroselibrary.org
If you live in the western part of the state,
stop at Ruth’s home town, Westby, visit Dregne’s. and look at their great selection of my books.
Order a book from them by calling 1-877-634-4414. They will be happy to help
you. If you live in northcentral
Wisconsin, stop at the Janke bookstore in Wausau (phone 715-845-9648). They have a large selection of my books.
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