Other Uses
This section includes some non-edible as well as common domestic and commercial plants with useful properties.
The plants are listed with only basic details but may be researched further or experimented with.
Names appear as they do in the main plant list. Plants which are not featured in detail in the main list include the botanical name where it is was given by the original author.
Animal Repellant
Army Worm
Dandelion (growing plant)
Insects
Bracken (fonds)
Chamomile Chamaeleum nobile (plant, growing and dried)
Daisy (leaf)
Elder (leaf)
Nettle, Stinging (tea on plants, dried plant to deter flies)
Ramson (plant)
Tansy
Walnut (leaf)
Yarrow (plant)
Moles
Ramson (plant)
Moths
Ramson (plant)
Woodruff, Sweet (plant)
Building
Insulation
Bulrush (dry leaf and stem, female flower)
Reed, Common (plant)
Plaster lath
Bramble (thorny canes)
Thatch
Bracken (dried plant)
Bulrush (leaf)
Reed, Common (plant)
Cleansing
Soap
Plants high in saponins:
Chestnut, Horse
Plants of Goosefoot family
Bracken (root)
Campion species
Ivy Hedera helix - Caution - contact with sap may cause alergic reaction
Shampoo
Bracken (concoction of root)
Chestnut, Sweet (leaf, bark and seed husk)
Skin cleansing lotion
Silverweed (plant)
Companion Planting
- Root crops store better when grown near Foxglove Digitalis purpurea
- Yarrow repels bad insects and attracts good, may also have healing effect on nearby sick plants
Disinfectant
Ramson (plant)
Scurvy-grass
Thyme species
Oregano/Marjoram species
Dye
Black
Oak (galls, with iron salt)
Walnut (ripe seed husk) if iron implement is used
Blue-purple
Elder (fruit)
Brown
Bracken (fonds)
Dock (root)
Hop (leaf, flower)
Oak (galls with alum)
Plantain (leaf)
Walnut (leaf, ripe seed husk [no mordant needed])
Green
Bilberry (leaf)
Blackthorn (leaf)
Dock (root)
Elder (leaf with alum)
Nettle, Stinging (leaf, stem)
Reed, Common (flower)
Grey
Dock (root without mordant)
Plantain (root)
Grey-blue
Sorrel species (leaf)
Grey-green
Woodruff, Sweet (leaf, stem)
Magenta-brown
Dandelion (root)
Red
Cleavers (root)
Woodruff, Sweet (root)
Tan
Woodruff, Sweet (leaf, stem)
Variable
Bilbery (fruit) - blue or black
Bramble (fruit)
Meadowsweet (root) - grey to black brown with copper mordant
Raspberry (fruit) - purple to dull blue
Sorrel species (root) - dark green to brown without mordant
Yarrow (flower) yellow or green
Yellow
Balsam, Himalayan (plant)
Blackthorn (bark) - boiled in an alkali
Clover, red (flower)
Currant, Red (leaf)
Dock (root)
Knotweed, Japanese (root)
Meadowsweet (leaf)
Mustard, Garlic (plant)
Nettle, Stinging (root, boiled with alum)
Oak (galls with tin salt)
Walnut (leaf, unripe seed husk [no mordant needed])
Fibre
Baskets and mats
Bulrush (leaf)
Reed, Common (plant)
Cordage
Bindweed, Hedge (stem) - not strong - temporary use
Nettle, Stinging (stem)
Reed, Common (plant)
Paper
Nettle, Stinging (stem)
Raspberry (stem, after fruiting)
Reed, Common (plant)
Yarn
Hop (stem) - similar to Hemp, but weaker
Nettle, Stinging (stem)
Filter
Fuel
Alcohol
Reed, Common (plant)
Dry matter
Bulrush (leaf)
Lighting
Balsam, Himalayan (oil from seed)
Bulrush (oil-soaked pith of stem)
Nettle, Stinging (oil from seed)
Fungicide
Chamomile Chamaeleum nobile
Elder (leaf)
Garlic
Horsetail species:
Recipe 1 - boil stems for a few minutes, leave for a day, strain, dilute 1:2 with water
Recipe 2 - place 1 kg horsetail in 10 liters of water for 24 hours, boil 15-20 minutes, leave 12 hours, strain, dilute 1:5
Nettle, Stinging
Thyme species
Glue
Bracken (root)
Garlic
Hair Colorant
Walnut (ripe seed husk) - brown
Ink
Bilberry (berry) - blue or black
Oak (galls with iron salt)
Insecticide
General
Elder (leaf)
Walnut (leaf)
Mosquito larvae
Shepherd's Purse (seeds thrown in water where they breed)
Insect Shelter
Help nature and attract beneficial insects to your garden by providing them with shelters.
Use hollow dead and dry stalks. Cut or break into short sections and bundle into a sheltering container with openings on vertical side. Create some shelters with small tubes and some with larger, but avoid bundling different sizes in one shelter to prevent insects of different species mixing. Place at different heights for insects with varying requirements.
Some suitable plants:
Angelica
Knotweed, Japanese
Willowherb, Rosebay
Litmus Testing
Elder (sap of fruit) turns green in alkaline solutions and red in acid solutions
Paper
Bulrush (leaf, stem)
Burdock (stem)
Pollution Cleaner
Search term: Phytoremediation
PCBs in SoilNightshade, Deadly - Atropa belladonna (growing plant)
Nightshade, Black - Solanum nigrum (growing plant) Indoor chemical vapours (formaldehyde, benzene and ammonia)
Crysanthemum (growing plant)
Ivy Hedera helix (growing plant) A number of plants may be useful in absorbing radioactivity. Grazing animals must be excluded and the biomass carefully disposed of. Hemp Cannabis sativa has been used at Chernobyl and Sunflowers at Fukushima to absorb some of the radiation after the nuclear plant accidents. Other plants which may be used are barley, alfalfa, fennel, sugar beets, spinach, lettuce and mustard. As Hop is a close relative to Hemp it may also be useful.
Poultry Feed
Nettle, Stinging (seed) - increases egg laying
Preservative
For cut flowers
Foxglove Digitalis purpurea (infusion of plant in water of flowers)
Currant, Black (leaves) possibly by storing together
Rooting Hormone
Poplar species
Rubber
Canadian Goldenrod Solidago canadensis scabra
Dandelion (root) - inferior quality
Dandelion, Russian or Rubber, Taraxacum kok-sanghyz (root) - quality comparable to the latex from Rubber Trees
Goldenrods - Solidago species. - latex of leaves - low quality
Sow Thistle Sonchus oleraceus
Scent
Linen scent
Woodruff, Sweet (plant)
Potpourri
Meadowsweet (plant)
Woodruff, Sweet (plant)
Scour, Polish
Pots scourer
paste of ash of hardwoods and water
Plants containing silica:
Horsetail species
Samphire, Marsh Salicornia europaea
Wood sanding
Horsetail species
Metal polish
Horsetail species
Sorrel species (leaf)
Wood polish
Walnut (seed)
Sewage and Grey-water Treatment
Reed, Common (growing plant)
Soil and Plant Care
See also Pollution Cleaner
Braking dense, heavy soil
Dandelion (growing plant)
Compost
Bracken (plant) high in potash
Bulrush (leaf, stem)
Dock (plant) roots and seeds must be well macerated in water to prevent spreading of plant
Comfrey (leaf)
Nettle, Stinging
Reed, Common (plant)
Yarrow (plant)
Conditioning
Mustard, Hedge (growing plant) - sweetens acid soil
Desalinate
Shepherd's Purse (growing plant)
possibly other members of the cabbage family, as well as from the goosefoot family
Liquid plant food (plant macerated in water)
Comfrey
Couchgrass
Horsetail species
Nettle, Stinging
Yarrow (plant)
Mulch
Bracken (fonds)
Nitrogen fixing
Clover and other legumes (growing plant)
Alder Alnus glutinosa (growing plant)
Potassium
Bracken (ash of burnt root) - collect in early summer for maximum potash content
Repair
Shepherd's Purse (growing plant)
Stain Removal and Bleaching
Dock (leaves)
Knotweed, Japanese (leaf, stem)
Lords and Ladies Arum maculatum (plant)
Wood-sorrel (leaf)
Stuffing
Buoyancy
Bulrush (dry leaf and stem)
General
Bulrush (female flower)
Willowherb, Rosebay (seed down)
Insulating
Bulrush (female flower)
Nappy lining
Bulrush (female flower)
Tanning
Blackthorn (bark)
Chestnut, Sweet (leaf, bark and seed husk)
Oak (leaf, bark, galls);
Timber
Durable
Chestnut, Sweet
Oak - heart wood
Furniture
Beech
Birch
Maple species
Walnut
Gun stocks
Walnut
Pea trellis
Hazel (branched stems of first growth - regrowth is often straight)
Turnery, carving
Blackthorn
Maple species
Tinder
Bracken (dried fibers from root, dry fonds)
Bulrush (down of female seed head and pollen from female flower - highly flammable)
Thistle species (seed down)
Willowherb, Rosebay (seed down)
Tubes
Flutes, blow pipes, casing
Elder (branches) contains pith which needs to be hollowed out
Varnish, Paint Medium, Thinner
Pine species (resin and its distillates)
Spruce species (resin and its distillates)
Walnut (oil form seed) - non-yellowing paint medium
Wrapper and Bedding for Produce Storage
Bracken (fonds) also repel insects and prevent rot
Maple species (leaf)