North American herbal equivalents

I’d like to find the North American equivalents to your core protocol herbs for lyme. I just found the sedge species listed by you, a neat addition for Northern midwest and Northeast states. Are there any alternatives to smilax and polygonum on the West coast? Is bistort okay to substitute for knotweed? I haven’t been able to find the andrographis genus in any plant books for North America—are there any alternatives other than Southeast Asian jungles?
Big questions I know, I just figure we as humans are going to need to deal with lyme and such buggers with local stuff some day, and andrographis is a Southeast Asian jungle vine. Since there is tons of lyme in California, there must be effective plant healers there. The ceonothus red root is the only one I know for sure out West, astragalus maybe. In the Southeast knotweed, smilax are everywhere, teasel is in the Midwest.
I have been eating plants for a long time, never needed them much to heal as straight medicinal friends until recently, and the price of herbs I can handle for now, but in the future I would like to be able find them close by. Thanks.
Eleutherococcus has escaped and is becoming naturalized on the West coast, just not sure how far it has spread. I am not much up on invasives on the West coast but most of them are very strongly medicinal. You might try googling the California Invasive Plant Council for a list of West coast invasives and then doing Google searches on each of them. It takes time to do this kind of thing but the rewards are fruitful.
posted on June 3, 2008 in CORE PROTOCOL, Herbs
338 views
Trackback URL: http://buhnerhealinglyme.com/herbs/north-american-equivalents/trackback/