Prickly ash herb extract, benefits, health, effects, plant, supplements, side effects Prickly ash

What Prickly ash herb Is:

In the 1800s, prickly ash was often prescribed for toothaches, giving it the popular name toothache tree. In this regard, nineteenth-century practitioners took their cue from Native Americans, who used to chew on the bark to alleviate dental pain. Some 20 or 30 similar prickly ash species grow throughout the world, all of them unrelated to the plain old ash family. In the United States and Canada, two species predominate: northern prickly ash (Z. americanum) and southern prickly ash (Z. clava-herculis). Both are shrublike trees with sparsely thorned trunks and branches, delicately serrated leaves, white green flowers, and round red berries. It's not easy to tell the two apart. From Quebec south to Georgia and west to Oklahoma, you'll probably encounter northern prickly ash in woods and along rivers. From around Delaware south to Florida and west to Texas, southern prickly ash predominates. In the overlapping area, you'll find both.

Prickly ash herb extract, benefits, health, effects

 
 
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