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Friday’s Flower….. Marigolds

Marigolds
This is a post I did a few years ago…Marigolds truly are my favorite flower of all.

OranmarigNow, I know that there are a few out there that balk at orange….and I can’t for the life of me understand why.

Orange is such a happy color…..so rich and sometimes complicated.  

Today’s Friday Flower is my
all~time favorite flower in the garden.  As fall approaches, these
babies just get better and better.

How can you not love these happy colors?

Some interesting Marigold tidbits of olde,

Orangoldmarig—Medicinal Action and Uses—
Marigold is chiefly
used as a local remedy. Its action is stimulant and diaphoretic. Given
internally, it assists local action and prevents suppuration. The infusion of 1
ounce to a pint of boiling water is given internally, in doses of a
tablespoonful, and externally as a local application. It is useful in chronic
ulcer, varicose veins, etc. Was considered formerly to have much value as an
aperient and detergent in visceral obstructions and jaundice.

It has been asserted that a Marigold flower, rubbed on the affected part, is
an admirable remedy for the pain and swelling caused by the sting of a wasp or
bee. A lotion made from the flowers is most useful for sprains and wounds, and a
water distilled from them is good for inflamed and sore eyes. 

An infusion of the freshly-gathered flowers is employed in fevers, as it
gently promotes perspiration and throws out any eruption – a decoction of the
flowers is much in use in country districts to bring out smallpox and measles,
in the same manner as Saffron. Marigold flowers are in demand for children’s
ailments.

The leaves when chewed at first communicate a viscid sweetness, followed by a
strong penetrating taste, of a saline nature. The expressed juice, which
contains the greater part of this pungent matter, has been given in cases of
costiveness and proved very efficacious. Snuffed up the nose it excites sneezing
and a discharge of mucous from the head. 

The leaves, eaten as a salad, have been considered useful in the scrofula of
children, and the acrid qualities of the plant have caused it to be recommended
as an extirpator of warts. 

A yellow dye has also been extracted from the flower, by boiling.

—Preparations and Dosage—
Fluid extract, 1/4 to 1
drachm.

Goldorange_1From Eleanour Sinclair Rohde’s Old English Herbals:
undefined marygold we learn that Summe use to make theyr here yelow with the
floure of this herbe, not beyng contet with the naturall colour which God hath
geven the. 

 Yellorustmarig_3Dodoens-Lyte (A Niewe Herball, 1578) says:

undefined hath pleasant, bright and shining yellow flowers, the which do close at
the setting downe of the sunne, and do spread and open againe at the sunne
rising.’

All quotes are from: http://botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/m/marigo16.html

Thinking ahead to Autumn
Pumpkin_yarn
With the summer marigolds in full autumn like color, my mind has turned to the fall fairs that although seem far away, are not really.  It’s hard to believe that autumn is just around the corner, isn’t it?
Yarn

Last year I made little pumpkin hats with yarn I purchased, but this year, I have decided that I will dye my own yarn for those little hats……it will be fun to see how many different shades of pumpkin,rust, orange and green I can come up with 🙂
Have a great weekend!!!

14 thoughts on “Friday’s Flower….. Marigolds

  1. Marigolds are easy to grow too. Why didn’t I plant some this year? Friday’s Flowers has me interested in gardening again. Next year my flower beds will look like they used to.

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  2. I LOVE marigolds! Have you thought of incorporating marigolds into your soap making?? That would be cool! I primarily grow the Safari types that you show- butterflies love them as does the resident baby bunny. Funny I have exactly the same colors as you.

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  3. I love a bit of orange in the garden, it just perks up all the other colors. One of my favorite-ever combos was an area next to my garage at a prior house that had huge dark orange daylilies at the back, with massive amounts of lavender in front. The orange, purple, and green were just stunning.

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  4. As a child the Marigolds were my favorite flower. They are bright, happy and ubiquitous flowers that still today bring a smile each time I see one. Thank you for such a great post and the memories it evoked.

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  5. I share your appreciation for the humble marigold! Even when I was a little kid, I loved collecting the seeds after they had finished blooming. 🙂
    In India, they’re considered to be very auspicious flowers. We had garlands and garlands of them at our wedding!

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  6. Oh, you got me now! I LOVE marigolds as well! What a wonderful post about them! Also, in the Mexican culture Marigolds are very significant in Day of the Dead…honoring their past loved ones. I shall attempt to photograh mine now!

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  7. I love the hues of fire in marigolds…yours are so lovely. Your autumn yarn is so yummy. You’ve got me thinking of pumpkin spice and blueberry tarts… 🙂

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  8. Orange! I love orange!
    Now I have this song in my head:
    “Two and two are four
    Four and four are eight
    Eight and eight are sixteen
    Sixteen and sixteen are thirty-two
    Inchworm, inchworm,
    Measuring the marigolds,
    You and your arithmetic,
    You’ll probably go far.
    Inchworm, inchworm,
    Measuring the marigolds
    Seems to me you’d stop and see
    How beautiful they are.”

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  9. Love the marigold pix as the “old fashioned” flowers are my favorites!! When Everett Dirkson was Speaker of the House in Congress he wanted to make marigold the national flower. Would have gotten my vote! This year the bunnies have eaten all that I planted except 1 variety. Any ideas for bunny deterents?

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