Monday, February 28, 2011

Equus Ferus Ibericus and Arctium Lappa



The inspirational wildflowers which grow naturally in our rustic yard at Ravenseyrie
You can be sure Greater Burdock (Arctium lappa) is among them!

Note: Unless otherwise specified, all photos have been taken by Lynne Gerard

"I have learned to feel the pain and hear the voices of all living things. I know that all things are equal and should not be judged on some manmade merit system or evolutionary ladder. Beyond that, I have learned that everything is composed of that spirit: water, earth, sky, and wind. They all contribute to life, every part a piece of an overall puzzle, everything necessary to the whole."--Tom Brown Jr.



Two primitive, yet timeless forms: a vestige of Equus ferus Ibericus and Arctium lappa


Arctium lappa in flower
Photo Credit: Christian Fischer
Available through Wikimedia Commons


Greater Burdock
(Arctium lappa)

Many humans loathe this plant. Not perhaps with the same hysterical hatred reserved for Poison Ivy, but nonetheless with a desire to wish the Greater Burdock plants ill will.

A magnificent Burdock plant in front of magnificent Mistral and friends


But how can you profess to love walking in the the natural world if you carry loathing in your heart and mind for particular plants, animals or insects?

Close up and personal...the dried fruit (achene) of the Greater Burdock which holds the club shaped seeds. Arctium lappa can produce approximately 10,500 seeds per plant. These intrepid seeds can remain viable for three years.

A single seed of the Greater Burdock plant

The seeds are encased in this spiny achene


Countless times, a glorious hike with the dogs has been disrupted when the prickly clinging of burrs have brought our merry troupe to a frantic standstill. So good am I now at detecting when a pooch has become the unwilling host to the hooked bristles of Arctium's ingenious seed dispersal system that they have taken to waiting there on the spot for me to carefully pluck out the offending plant matter. But neither they, nor I curse these pesky hitch-hiking achenes...we simply remove them and return to our hike with a song in our hearts for all the elements of our wilderness landscape (the punitive as well as the pleasurable).



You can imagine, can't you, how frequently the horses of Ravenseyrie play host to the fringed free-riding burrs of Arctium lappa? Curiously, it is our resident "Iberian Tarpans" and their draft mule friends that actively seek out these plants (and wear the burrs in punk-rock like hair styles). Our two domestic horses are much less inclined to tangle with or become entangled by Burdock.

Animado's forelock has formed a "unicorn horn" from the way it has picked up Arctium lappa burrs


I know people who methodically cull and burn whatever Greater Burdock plants should chance to grow in their horse pastures, and I don't think they are whistling a song of thanksgiving while engaged in such labour...it is more like a war. Anyone who has been faced with removing copious amounts of burrs from their horses' forelocks, manes and tails before they can saddle up for a ride is bound to have a desire to rid their horses' environments from such an irritating plant.



You can likely find more articles written on how to best eradicate Burdock from a landscape than those that extoll the plant's virtues. Since I seem to be following a different path than traditional horsefolk, readers won't be too surprised to find me offering Arctium lappa a warm embrace here at Ravenseyrie.



You see, when you have a perception of the world that is animistic, you recognize the unification of spirit and matter and accept the holistic interactions of all things--making it morally inappropriate to extinguish plants simply because they have been determined by humans to be an annoying invasive weed. Maybe the Burdock plants provide something essential to the landscape and to the horses themselves? And, maybe the Burdock plants can provide another avenue of bonding between horses and humans?

These things are precisely what I have come to believe are real and true through my experiences living here in this wilderness region with our free range equines.

Before I share my own interactions with Arctium lappa, I'd like to share a few excerpts from a variety of my herbology books.

In the foreground are the unmistakable forms of dried Burdock and Tansy...in the background is the unmistakable form of the Sorraia Mustang stud colt, Animado.

"Burdock with its huge leaves and clinging fruits, was considered a true 'bear' plant by the Celts and Germanic peoples, sacred to the mighty thunderer and hammer-slinging Thor. And because the "heavenly bear" (Asenbar, or Osbjorn), who scared off the giants and the 'thurses' who were antagonistic to humans, reigned over the fierce summer storms, the plant was also gathered in midsummer. It was placed in the gables of houses to protect against lightening strikes and the machinations of giants. A brew of the roots was used as a shampoo to make the hair as beautiful and as full as that of the divine bushy-bearded, long-haired god. As late as the Enlightenment, farmers hung burdock over their doors and braided it into their hair or a cow's tail to ward off evil."--Wolf-Dieter Storl in Witchcraft Medicine


Sorraia Mustang filly, Segura has Arctium lappa burrs in her forelock, enhancing her overall prehistoric horse form. While our Sorraia and Sorraia Mustang horses are not pure genetic examples of the Iberian Tarpan, their physical characteristics demonstrate that some of the genes of Equus ferus ibericus have nonetheless survived.

"The burdock plant always conjures up thoughts of the prehistoric."--Tom Brown Jr.

In his fantastic book, Tom Brown's Guide to Edible and Medicinal Plants, the renown survivalist gives a glowing documentation of how this plant is of immensely esteemed for its food value and medicinal merit as well as being handy in a number of pragmatic uses, the most obvious of which is the "Velcro"-like qualities of the burrs.

Photo taken by Kevin Droski


"Burdock is a "deep food" and alterative that moves the body to a state of well-nourished health, promotes the healing of wounds, and removes the indicators of system imbalance such as low energy, ulcer, skin conditions, and dandruff. As a diuretic and alterative, it works through the liver and kidneys to protect against the build-up of waste products and is considered to be one of the best tonic correctives of skin disorders. Burdock is a classic remedy for skin conditions which result in dry, scaly skin and cutaneous eruptions (eczema, psoriasis, dermatitis, boils, carbuncles, sties), as well as also being helpful in relieving rheumatism and gout. As a mild bitter that stimulates digestive juices and bile secretion, it aids appetite and digestion and is well used in anorexia. Externally, it is an exceptional fomentation or poultice to promote the healing of wounds and ulcers, especially when also taken internally on a regular basis."--James Green from THE HERBAL MEDICINE-MAKER'S HANDBOOK


The long, slender root of Arctium Lappa
Photo Credit: Michael Becker

Available through Wikimedia Commons


The Japanese grow Burdock commercially as a root vegetable which they call "Gobo". When we lived back in Michigan I experimented with using Burdock root from the farm yard in stir fry dishes. It reminded me of a better, earthier version of the water chestnuts so common in Chinese cuisine. I have not yet been successful in harvesting Burdock root from the wild growing plants here at Ravenseyrie--with their amazingly deep tap roots (12-24 inches) and our concrete-like soil, there is no removing them by the root! I may try one day to get Kevin to grow a few plants (on purpose) in his market garden where we should have better luck coaxing the root out of the ground.

"Though growing in its wild state hardly any animal except the ass will browse on this plant, the stalks, cut before the flower is open and stripped of their rind, form a delicate vegetable when boiled, similar in flavour to Asparagus, and also make a pleasant salad, eaten raw with oil and vinegar.--Mrs. M Grieve from A MODERN HERBAL


So, we see that historically and even today Arctium lappa is not loathed by everyone.


I confess that while I do not have hardness in my heart for Burdock, I am repulsed by how dreadful the horses look when their otherwise free-flowing hair becomes adulterated by the tangle of burrs. Horses that roam around with burrs in their hair always look like they suffer from neglect. In addition to the irritation the horses must feel from the prickly burrs, their manes and tails loose their capacity to swish away biting insects when knotted up and weighted down by these clinging achenes. And, of course, aesthetically, its much more difficult for a horse to strike a noble pose when his hair is natted up with burrs.

Often times, after the Burdock plants have naturally begun to die back, I roam around with my loppers, pruners and wheel barrel and harvest the Burdock that grows in the places where the horses have regular trails and loafing locations. I typically will put the drying plants on the opposite side of the roadside fence, in the ditch so that they remain available for whatever wilderness creatures use the seeds as a source of nourishment but are no longer able to connect with the hair of the equines as they pass by. There still remains, of course, hundreds of these plants out in the wider landscape which I do not disturb, and in due time the horses will all in one degree or another accumulate burrs in their hair.

One early winter, while hanging out near the equines, I was mesmerized when the big draft mule, Jerry, walked over to the fence and stretched his neck over the woven wire to deliberately retrieve a large stalk of the dried Burdock and began eating it. While he did consume the prickly achenes, he mainly devoted his attention to eating the stalks.



Though I have never seen either of the domestic horses, Zeus (Thoroughbred) and Mistral (Arabian) dine on the offerings of Arctium lappa, I have witnessed the Sorraia Mustangs and mules sampling portions of the broad Burdock leaves in summer as well as eating the dried plant matter in the autumn and winter. Apparently its an acquired taste which the domestic horses have determined they can do without.

It is this type of interaction with the wild environment that may trigger particular genes to "switch on" a more primitive/wild phenotyical and morphological expression than they might otherwise. The mingling of chemical reactions that occur between what equines eat (as well as their overall relation to their environment) and how it affects them on an epigenetic level must have the potential for an infinite array of combinations. How intriguing to imagine that the consumption of the Greater Burdock plant may have an effect on the way primitive genetics play out in our Sorraia and Sorraia Mustang horses, perhaps further enhancing their vestigal relatedness to "Equus ferus ibericus" the "Iberian Tarpan". (Greater Burdock is native to the temperate regions of the Old World. Arctium lappa is known as Bardana in the Iberian Peninsula.)

But aside from all the science...what about the spirit of Arctium lappa? For me and the horses, especially the "wild" ones, Burdock has served as a means of strengthening our bond of trust and appreciation for each other. Because the horses live a semi-wild existence in an expansive environment where hitch-hiking seeds are a regular feature, my de-burring services are required virtually all year round.

Even in wintertime (I believe it was around -26°C on the day of this photo) it is my task to remove burrs and detangle manes and tails. Photo credit: Kevin Droski


But how does one get a "wild" untrained horse kept at liberty in the big wide open to submit to standing patiently while the labor intensive task of removing burrs and detangling manes and tails takes place?

Animado hoping to impress, and he does!

Animado, in a more mellow moment


I am fortunate that I can live here and be with the horses on a daily basis. They have come to accept my touch, largely because I can itch them in places they cannot take care of themselves. From this starting point we advanced to grooming and the handling of legs, etc. (To read an interesting article my friend Kris wrote about how well the art of itching brings horses and humans together, please check out the entry "Scratching an Itch" on Kris' "Words About Horses" blog site.)


But as accomodating as they are for these interactions, they do not particularly like having me remove those burrs, especially the youngsters whose attention spans are so limited. Here is where the spirit of Burdock comes in. It is the nature of plants to have unlimited patience, to be in the moment and to take advantage of particular features of the day, and the horses themselves have a similar "go with the flow" manner of being.

There are times when the horses are approachable and willing to engage with me, and other times when they prefer I leave them to themselves. I never attempt a burr removal session during a time when they do not want me around. Instead, I have discovered which times of the day they are absorbed in grazing and which times of the day they take their naps. During both of these periods of their day, the horses become extremely mellow, as if they have been drugged (and I'm convinced that eating grass has a drugging effect). When they are absorbed in the fine art of grazing, they readily accept me performing my burr removal activities on their tails. And, when they are ready for their naps--well that is a golden time for She-Who-Pulls-Burrs!

Before and after photos of Encantara. She had taken up a sternum nap position and remained snoozy during the entire burr removal process.

When these "wild" horses are dozing, they allow me to remove and untangle even the most deeply embedded burrs and knots. In fact, what seemed to be such an irritating and unacceptable inconvenience for them during their awake times becomes a soothing, pleasant intimacy when I become part of their grazing and dozing periods.


Ciente, our Kiger Mustang mare of good Sorraia type has a very long mane requiring attention quite frequently, as you see in the top photo. I had begun with her tail while she was grazing, but she soon decided to stand and nap, so I was able to devote my attention to her mane and forelock. In no time at all she looked gorgeous once again, but remained napping for another ten minutes or more.
I have come to love the job of removing the burrs of Arctium lappa from our equines. The de-burring sessions provide opportunity for quality one-on-one time between me and each of the horses and when I proceed on their terms, during the most advantageous times, there is such a sweet "togetherness" that results!

Encantara on a different day...here she was so comfortable in her nap she laid her head right in my lap. How much better to perform these necessary grooming tasks when the horses enjoy such ministrations, rather than forcing them to stand tied while we grumble and fight to get the job done?


I have realized that this togetherness is not just experienced between me and the horse, but between me and the sun, me and the wind, me and the earthy fragrances as I, too, become mellow and drugged by the elements. Who would have imagined that a plant loathed by so many, could serve such an exquisite opportunity for unity?

Addendum:
While this article is featuring Arctium lappa as the primary seed hitch-hiker, I would be remiss to not also mention the lovely Hound's Tongue (Cynoglossum officinale) plant which also grows in great profusion here at Ravenseyrie. Their burrs are smaller and more disc-like but do their own part for creating unusual hair styles and tangled knots among the equines. Unlike Burdock, however, I haven't witnessed much in the way of these animals selecting Hound's Tongue for ingestion. If they do eat it, they do so in secret.

Hound's Tongue (Cynoglossum officinale)


Zorita with Hound's Tongue burrs in her forelock


Encantara has picked up some Hound's Tongue seeds

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

peter_be :

arctium is a fantastic plant with very nice flowers, it grows over here in my non-standard (but expensive Oh yes) grassland to. My horses don't eat it. The burrs can be removed easily by pouring on some vegetable oil, let it soak for some minutes and comb them with a dog-furminator (great tool too !).
The oil can get a little rancid, but that doesn't last long, it's cheap and absolute organic.

Hounds tongue is toxic for horses, it contains pyrrolizidine alkaloïdes just like in senecia jacobaea (and other sen.var.). They culminate in the liver and can at a certain amount be lethal.

Lynne Gerard said...

Peter wrote:
"The burrs can be removed easily by pouring on some vegetable oil, let it soak for some minutes and comb them with a dog-furminator (great tool too !)."

I used to use baby (mineral) oil in the manner you described, but now I use Absorbine ShowSheen in which I mix some Cedarwood essential oil. Even though I say I'm "pulling burrs", my present technique is to actually pull strands of hair away from the burr until it is free. The ShowSheen mixture makes the hair nice and slippery. Typically then there is less breakage of the hair and I can extract the burrs entire and my overall "touch" is gentler and better accepted by the horses. In the event that the burrs are already degraded and breaking apart, I will use my fingers and brush to get the broken filaments out.

I had to look up what a "dog-furminator" is. I'll bet they do work really well with the method of burr removal you practice, Peter. Boy howdy, though, those furminator brushes are pricey!

ShowSheen is pretty costly too, but since I'm only using it to help detangle manes and tails and not as a body shine product, it lasts a long time. It's not a natural organic product, so doesn't really fit in with the wilderness concepts Ravenseyrie espouses, but...oh well, I've checked and it is at least considered a benign synthetic.

Maybe someday Kevin and I will concoct our own organic alternative to ShowSheen. I think we should put some bug repelling essential oils in it while we are at it! ;-)

I used to know a farrier who recommended spraying burred and knotted manes and tails with the lubricant WD-40! Imagine how that made the horses smell!

Peter again: "Hounds tongue is toxic for horses, it contains pyrrolizidine alkaloïdes just like in senecia jacobaea (and other sen.var.). They culminate in the liver and can at a certain amount be lethal."

I was unfamiliar with Hounds Tongue until moving here. It is just one of many potentially harmful plants that the horses live among. I have to trust that they will avoid toxic plants or ingest them only as a medicinal in rare instances.

One wouldn't want these types of plants growing in limited, overgrazed pastures where horses have a habit of eating them because all good grazing is long gone.

And then, of course, even in wilderness settings with ample good grazing one reads about horses that have developed a "taste" for the toxic plants and eat them anyway, much to their detriment. Sharron Sheikofsky of Caballos de Destino (where Belina and Bella came from) had a mare who developed a taste for Bracken Fern (Pteridium aquilinum) and died from the accumulated toxicity.

Ravenseyrie has Pteridium aquilinum growing here (as well as senecia jacobaea) but so far, I've never witnessed the horses dining on these two plants.

Thank you for reading and leaving your always-interesting comments, Peter!

Annemiek said...

O yes the Furminator! I love that thing! VERY expensive yes, but I am addicted to it. I just got mine out this week because Rudolf started shedding his winter coat for serious now. All the horses are very itchy, so when we go out for a walk and Rudolf starts grazing somewhere I get out my Furminator and start to brush him with it. Indeed it feels as if we go into some sort of trance after a while. Standing in the sun, Rudolf grazing and I working to get all that loose hair of him, it feels as if every sensation intensifies; the spring breeze, the sound of the birds, the smell of the trees, it’s really wonderful.

Anonymous said...

Janet says. . .

How important is it to remove noxious weeds from the environs where horses will be kept? Do domestic horses know how to avoid noxious weeds or will they eat them anyway?

I am under the impression that you must have clean areas free of potentially noxious weeds in order to keep horses.

Is this a misconception?

Anonymous said...

Janet says. . .

The Furminator 'people' are building their dream home near here -- Maybe we will see their new home some day in Architectural Digest.

Anonymous said...

Janet says,

Here's an article about the Furminator developer's new home project:

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/columns/deb-peterson/article_7a1ac28a-091b-5d72-9bcc-1086f1f6dd42.html

Anonymous said...

peter_be :

fweet... what did I started !
well, my furminator is not a real one,
costed me no more than a fist full of dimes and works really well !
I 'don't use expensive oils nor wasted motorlubricants, what fits my salad, fits my horses....

and I'm sowing my own wild plants back between my remuda, what was once fertile cropland, is back again flowering weedland.....
what is toxic usually doesn't taste well, only take care once it's cut for hay or to get rid of, that's the moment horses will eat it ....

June said...

Hmm. Think I might have to cook up some burdocks.

Monica Bretschneider said...

Hi Lynne,

It's nice to read all the interesting comments ! I added "furminator" to my vocabulary now.

Lynne wrote: "It is this type of interaction with the wild environment that may trigger particular genes to "switch on" a more primitive/wild phenotyical and morphological expression than they might otherwise. The mingling of chemical reactions that occur between what equines eat (as well as their overall relation to their environment) and how it affects them on an epigenetic level must have the potential for an infinite array of combinations."

I have domesticated horses and I see this in them too since we gave them the opportunity to roam on our land free. I could not agree more!

Lynne wrote: "Here is where the spirit of Burdock comes in. It is the nature of plants to have unlimited patience, to be in the moment and to take advantage of particular features of the day, and the horses themselves have a similar "go with the flow" manner of being.
There are times when the horses are approachable and willing to engage with me, and other times when they prefer I leave them to themselves."

Same here too. I could not agree more! My horses too have their own lifestyle and this is important to recognize and understand.

Just wonderful writting Lynne!
Thank you.

Monica

eva said...

Lynne, i love this post and how this velcro plant's propensity for creating wondrous dreadlocked hairdos in the horses becomes an opportunity for intimate slumber grooming sessions. The pictures of Encantara allowing herself being groomed while napping speak volumes about the relationship between you and these animals.

Lynne Gerard said...

Annemiek wrote:
"Standing in the sun, Rudolf grazing and I working to get all that loose hair of him, it feels as if every sensation intensifies; the spring breeze, the sound of the birds, the smell of the trees, it’s really wonderful."

It would seem that Rudolf helps you leave behind the world's troubles and appreciate the enchantment of the "Now". I wouldn't be surprised one day if science determines that being with horses, relaxed and in tune to their way of life releases beneficial endorphins. When that day comes, medical practitioners will write out prescriptions that their patients go to the great outdoors and connect with horses. Just think of it, there could be "horse spas" springing up all over the world!

Lynne Gerard said...

Janet inquired:
"How important is it to remove noxious weeds from the environs where horses will be kept? Do domestic horses know how to avoid noxious weeds or will they eat them anyway?

I am under the impression that you must have clean areas free of potentially noxious weeds in order to keep horses.

Is this a misconception?"


I addressed this in my response to Peter, and also Peter provided his own helpful comment.

Do you have your answer now? If not let me know and I will elaborate.

Lynne Gerard said...

June wrote:
"Hmm. Think I might have to cook up some burdocks."

Let us know if you do, June. Be sure to read up on which plants to harvest...it is the first year plants (those that don't send up flower stalks) that one uses if you are going for the roots.

Arctium lappa and its edible uses are featured in most herb books as well as many online articles.

Lynne Gerard said...

Monica wrote:
"It's nice to read all the interesting comments ! I added "furminator" to my vocabulary now."

I did too, Monica...up until now, I was completely ignorant of the word and the tool.

"I have domesticated horses and I see this in them too since we gave them the opportunity to roam on our land free."

If you and Michael haven't written about this already, I urge you to do so. (It might make a nice guest article for the Journal of Ravenseyrie...)

Lynne Gerard said...

Peter wrote:
"and I'm sowing my own wild plants back between my remuda, what was once fertile cropland, is back again flowering weedland....."

I see you are doing your own part for "rewilding" landscapes. Europe is much farther ahead with such projects. Two are underway (one in Spain and one in Portugal) which are looking to be stocked with Sorraia along with the Red Deer and Heck cattle, similar to what has been done with the Koniks.

Eva...your kind words made my day.

Thank you everyone for reading and responding!

Anonymous said...

peter_be :

don't get to excited about europe Lynne ! You can easily fly around the world with googlemaps and zoom in and out to see what a devastating influence man has on the whole world ! Yes I'm rewildering my surroundings, but' do'nt think to much of that either, it's all so restricted here...vegetable country in very small parcels with constant overharvesting the same patches with the same veggies, using vast amounts of pesticides, fungicides, insecticides... it's a real horror.

Rich Lowlands like flanders and the Netherlands have known a fast urban developement just because of the rich and wet croplands yielding enough to feed a growing population until a certain point...

The whole of europe is in fact an agri-cultural landscape molded by ages of farming and urban and industrial development, nature is far gone .
Yes, 20 ha (50acres)of on farming recovered land is here (.be) called "a wood", and for once I'm not being sarcastic !!!

Fly over Spain and Portugal (with GMaps) and you'll notice how arid it is, and it's getting worser, the northafrican sahara is moving north !

Good job if they are developping a natural reserve there, and it's a very good idea about the restocking with sorraias, but the Heckcattle, they shouldn't !!!! Its a complete unstable re-breed of a nazi-fantasma ; they'd better go for the nearest descendant of the aurochs, and that's scientifically proven native spanisch (and portugese) fighting bull stock (toros de lidia, reses de corrida ).
But of course of the right colour : bulls should be black or almost, with lighter eyeshadows, a creamy nosering and a creamy dorsal stripe ; cows schould be reddish with a darker head, and of course most important : no white !