Tag: Herbal Medicine

  • Saturday, January 17, 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm – The Plant Medicine Connection: The Role of Herbal Medicine in the 21st Century

    Join Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Saturday, January 17 from 1 – 2:30 pm when it hosts a distinguished group of leading experts for an active discussion of the integration of plants into today’s health care regimens and practices. Arthur Gertler, M.D., of D’Arcy Wellness
    Clinic, is board certified in gastroenterology and internal medicine; Guido Masé, RH, is founding co-director of the Vermont Center of Integrative Herbalism and author of The Wild Medicine Solution; Judith Sumner, Ph.D., is a botanist, educator and author of The Natural History of Medicinal Plants; Pamela Weathers, Ph.D., is Professor of Biology and Biotechnology and Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Rachel Ross, MS, is a certified Nurse-Midwife. Snow date is Sunday, January 18. Fee is $15 for THBG members, and $25 for nonmembers. Register online at https://dnbweb1.blackbaud.com/OPXREPHIL/EventDetail.asp?cguid=C7E2C131-AD0F-49AA-B073-5B92F8300A37&eid=50756&sid=C186C1FA-1EF1-46AA-BDE9-ABE465986156.

  • Saturday, January 25, 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm – The Kitchen Apothecary: Making Herbal Medicine the Shaker Way

    The Fruitlands Museum, 102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard, Massachusetts, will present The Kitchen Apothecary: Making Herbal Medicine the Shaker Way, on Saturday, January 25 from 1 – 2:30, in partnership with the Herbal Community of Central Massachusetts.  Fee of $10 (Fruitlands members) and $15 (nonmembers) includes admission to WinterFest.  To register, call 978-456-3924, or email programming@fruitlands.org.

    http://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/ethnobotany/mindandspirit/images/solanaceae/Shakers_ExtractThornApple_lg.jpg

  • Sunday, November 8, 9 am – 4 pm – Natural History and Ethnobotony of Medicinal Plants

    Judith Sumner, Botanist and author of The Natural History of Medicinal Plants, will present a fascinating lecture on Sunday, November 8 beginning at 9 in the morning. Before the time of written records, early people used plants to relieve symptoms and cure disease, forming the basis of the modern study of ethnobotany and the starting point for the history of medicinal plants. During this one session intensive course on the history and current directions of medicinal botany, to be held at Garden in the Woods, we will track the knowledge of medicinal plants from prehistory through the spectacular work of the Renaissance herbalists, the Doctrine of Signatures, and the development of the European medical tradition. New World settlers carried the seeds of medicinal plants with them to North America, where European medical knowledge commingled with Native American lore. The class will consider herbal medicine in nineteenth century America, the field of zoopharmacognosy, and the current ethnobotanical approach to drug discovery. You will gain an understanding of human-plant interactions and botanical cures for human disease and the importance of preserving the diversity of medicinal plants.
    Fee $77 member of either the Arnold Arboretum of NEWFS, $91 nonmember
    Offered in collaboration with the New England Wild Flower Society. To register, log on to www.arboretum.harvard.edu.

    Medicinal plant by Khor Hui Min.