Labrador tea FLOWERS - Ledum groenlandicum - VERY LIMITED QUANTITIES!

Botanical name: Rhododendron groenlandicum / Ledum groenlandicum
Other names: Labrador Tea, Groenland tea, Hudson's Bay tea, Indian tea, shrubs of the heath family, St. James tea
Family: Ericaceae
Distribution: North America, primarily found in Greenland and Canada.

Origin : northern Quebec, Canada

Labrador Tea is named after the swamps of Greenland and Labrador, where it grows in profusion. During the American Revolution, it was one of the several herbs used as a pleasant-tasting substitute for commercial tea. Germans once added the leaves to their beer to make it more intoxicating. Medical literature gives full credit to Labrador tea use in folk medicine, though it has been rarely studied clinically.

Labrador Tea was presumably used as a tonic by First Nations people in North America. It is thought that it was the Europeans who introduced the idea of using the plant more commonly as a tea. In the fur-trading era, the French Canadian "coureurs-des-bois" used Labrador tea to extend their supplies of black tea. The leaves and the flowers are both reported to have been used for tea, either fresh or dried, and the everlasting leaves can be picked all year.

Traditionnal use

The leaves and flowers have been traditionally used as an anti-inflammatory, expectorant, pectoral, diuretic, galactagogue and sudorific. It is useful in coughs, dyspepsia, and irritation of the membranes of the chest. An infusion has been used to soothe irritation in infectious, feverish eruptions, in dysentery, leprosy, itch, etc. The leaves are also used in malignant and inflamed sore throat. Moreover, Labrador tea is said to have sedative and slightly narcotic properties in some people. The plant contains tannins that promote healing. Thanks to its astringent and pectoral properties, its infusion is considered to be effective against broncho-pulmonary conditions. Finally, it is also known to have digestive properties : it is said to cure hangover! It also has emmenagogue properties: it favors the menstrual cycles and helps women during labor.

Our Labrador Tea flowers and tiny leaves clusters

Our Labrador Tea flowers and tiny leaves clusters were sustainably wildharvested in peatlands of northern Quebec, Canada, with love and respect for its habitat. Our Labrador tea flowers come in clusters with tiny leaves, which are more aromatic (the smell is absolutely wonderful!) and higher in essential oils. The taste is reminiscent of balsam fir, with a hint of citrus.

Recent researches found that the newly grown stems contain ursulic acid, which has anti-tumoral properties.This adds up to the several other benefits of Labrador tea mentioned above.

Our Labrador tea flowers are properly stored in the cold and dark.

 

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Our products are of the highest quality but they have not been certified by the FDA neither Health Canada for human consumption. Therefore, we have to specify that they cannot be sold for human consumption. They are sold for incense and soap making purposes, decorative purposes and/or legitimate ethnobotanical research. The information given about the plants is for academic purposes only and not intended to be used medically. TrancePlants, its suppliers, agents, employees and distributors cannot be held accountable for any misuse of the products offered.

 


Collections: Herbal Teas, Super-foods




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