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White Oak Bark
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White Oak Bark

The scientific name for White Oak Bark is Quercus alba. White Oak Bark, as its name suggests, comes from the bark part of the plant. Another name for White Oak Bark is Tanner's Oak. You can use both the leaves and bark of the plant for medicinal purposes. Generally speaking, though, the inner white bark of the plant is best for use.

Interestingly enough, White Oak was vital in wooden ship construction for centuries, from the English ships made from the English Oaks that brought our forefathers to this continent to the gun deck of the famous frigate Constitution and to the keels of World War II minesweepers and patrol boats.

The North American colonists used the White Oak for barrel making because the wood when it gets wet, swells up, and seals the barrel. This enables it to hold liquids, including the all-important rum. Rum at that time represented our foreign trade. Unfortunately the slave trade was tied to rum. Rum, in its own rights, had some medicinal uses as well.

Medicinally, White Oak Bark is the classic example of an astringent. Due to its high calcium and tannins content, it acts by precipitating the tissue protein to tighten the tissues. It also acts as an antiseptic.

White Oak Bark is good for skin wounds, bee stings, burns, diarrhea, fevers and cold, bronchitis, nosebleed, poison ivy, and varicose veins. Hemorrhoids in fact, are said to be an internal version of varicose veins. Also, this particular herb is good for the teeth. It can even be used in enemas and douches.

For external use, one may boil or steam the bark and/or the leaves and apply them over the area needing treatment to relieve bruises, injuries, varicosities, swollen tissues and bleeding. This also helps strengthen the capillaries - a large factor in why this herb is so useful in curing hemorrhoids.

For internal use, the tea normalizes the liver, kidneys, and spleen, also is good for inward tumors and swellings.

Bodily Influences of White Oak Bark: Antiseptic, astringent, haemostatic, parasiticide, tonic.

General Uses For White Oak Bark At A Glance:

Phytochemical Content: (Plant derived chemical compounds…in other words, these are what the herb plant is made up of.)

Beta-carotene, beta-sitosterol, catechin, gallic acid, pectin, quercetin, quercitrin, tannin.

Sources of Information:

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