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Bee sting remedy

Posted By: humptulips

Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 05:45 AM

All this talk of bees on here makes me think I ought to share a natural bee sting remedy, Also works for bug bites.
Google Plantain weed. It is a very common weed introduced from Europe. It likes compacted soil, so I find it along the road literally everywhere I go. There is a broad-leafed variety and a narrow-leafed variety. Both are equally effective.
When stung look around and get some leaves from the plant. You can chew it or just crunch them up a little. Rub the moist leaves on the sting location. It both relieves pain and reduces swelling.
I have bees and it is my go-to when stung. If applied right away I won't even swell at all and the relief from pain is immediate.
There are bee sting remedies on the market, but the beauty of plantain is when you get stung and have nothing for it you can usually find it at your feet.
Posted By: Doug Lee

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 07:37 AM

Good to know, thanks for sharing!
Doug
*
Posted By: run

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 11:55 AM

Burdock is supposed to help with beestings too. Not intending to be a know-it-all, just wanted to share my worthless 2 cents.
Posted By: Leftlane

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 01:21 PM

Just rub some Copenhagen on it was the only advice I'd ever gotten. Thanks for the tip.
Posted By: Providence Farm

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 01:49 PM

I knew it could be eaten but didn't know it was a sting remedy. I will have to try it Monday when I'm working bees. Normally I just ignore the stings and they are a minor irritation any more. I don't sell much like I used to. My boys will be glad to try it.

Used red man last week on my 10 year olds face yellow jackets lit up.
Posted By: Sharon

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 01:59 PM

Does anyone have a picture of it ? Just so I can be certain what I'm seeing around here.. ?
Posted By: Providence Farm

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 02:04 PM

Originally Posted by Sharon
Does anyone have a picture of it ? Just so I can be certain what I'm seeing around here.. ?

No picture handy but it's broad leafs that like to lay close to the ground and sends up several seed stems as thick as a 1/8" 7018 welding rod.. boy if that's not a hick description.

https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-att-us-rvc3&sxsrf=AB5stBhFy7TGUjby4UhsjU-Y_w6JYnOJ0A:1689429933654&q=plantain+weed+edible&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiu0MX48JCAAxUckWoFHVFPCgYQ0pQJegQIChAB&biw=412&bih=785&dpr=1.75

If that works is a Google image search lots of pictures.
Posted By: Jingles

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 02:12 PM

As long as I can remember make a paste of baking soda and place it on the sting, if baking soda not available a simple mud paste, seemed to work as a kid, many many years ago, how every does not work so well when nailed 26 times by yellow jackets, that take an epi shot
Posted By: Sharon

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 02:18 PM

Thanks, PF, I stopped being lazy and looked it up. Those are all over the place, just as mentioned. Nice info to know.
Posted By: Guss

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 04:25 PM

Try corn starch
Posted By: Ridge Runner1960

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 07:00 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJJqT_7lrFM&t=1s
Posted By: danny clifton

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 07:04 PM

The whole plant is edible but the seed thing sticking up is delicious. People make salve with them too. Cook the plant in olive oil then add bees wax

[Linked Image]

[Linked Image]
Posted By: danny clifton

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 07:06 PM

Eat the small seed stems. They get big and they are not as good. great in stir fry
Posted By: Dillrod

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 07:16 PM

We mix a Jewel Weed / Plantain in beeswax salve.
Haven't seen a need to look for anything better.
Posted By: Kansas Cat

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 07:46 PM

A little time.
Posted By: TurkeyWrangler

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/15/23 09:01 PM

The time I tried it, it tasted like dog pee.
Posted By: Average Joe

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/16/23 01:09 AM

How/why do you know what dog pee tastes like??
Posted By: Oreamnos

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/16/23 07:28 PM

Alrighty, decided to test this today.

The culprit: Apis Mellifera - the European honey bee

The aftermath - about 10 min after the sting:
[Linked Image]

The plantain/solution:
[Linked Image]

Crushed it up until it let out some water/juice and rubbed it on.
[Linked Image]

I read you are supposed to leave it 15-30 min but I had to get in the shower about 10 min application as I was running late.

Four hours later:
[Linked Image]

Does it work? I don't know lol. No swelling and no itching. Barely a raised bump at the sting sight. However, I got the stinger out quickly and my reaction to stings varies from gone in 15 min without intervention to localized swelling and itching that lasts a few days. Usually places that swell and itch are the back of my calf or the back of my arm. Usually places with more tissue mass. This part of the hand is mostly skin and tendon. Not as much blood flow for histamine accumulation. Regardless, the plantain really was right by my feet after the sting. I grabbed some leaves and crushed it as I walked.
Posted By: Trapper7

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/16/23 08:11 PM

Originally Posted by TurkeyWrangler
The time I tried it, it tasted like dog pee.


Could it have been "seasoned" before you picked it? wink grin
Posted By: HayDay

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/16/23 08:32 PM

Originally Posted by Jingles
As long as I can remember make a paste of baking soda and place it on the sting, if baking soda not available a simple mud paste, seemed to work as a kid, many many years ago, how every does not work so well when nailed 26 times by yellow jackets, that take an epi shot



X2

make a wet paste out of rubbing alcohol and baking soda and rub that on the sting. Once as a kid, I got popped 5 times after running over a bumble bee nest while raking 2nd cutting red clover hay. Farmer and his wife fixed me up then gave me a small bottle with screw on lid for the alcohol and a pill bottle for the baking soda, taped together. Put it in my pocket to have in hay fields. I think I still have it.
Posted By: bearcat2

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/17/23 03:19 AM

Used mud paste as a kid, my grandma would always put bleach on our beestings if we got stung at her place. Haven't done anything but suck it up in years. I became allergic to yellowjackets and hornets on the coast after being stung too many times as a kid and would have to take Benadryl after being stung and would be as rummy as if I drank a fifth of whiskey. Have never had a reaction to any bees here and have been stung probably a hundred times in the last twenty years. I know half a dozen other people who were allergic to them on the Pacific coast also (a couple of them deathly so) none of them have an allergic reaction to the local bees either. Not sure what the difference is, maybe what they eat?
Posted By: Giant Sage

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/17/23 04:46 AM

Hot shot cattle prod so I've been told.
And a low dose from a taser for a rattle snake bite.
Just hear say.
Something about the electrical shock neutralizing the venom.
Posted By: Giant Sage

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/17/23 04:47 AM

Hot shot cattle prod so I've been told.
And a low dose from a taser for a rattle snake bite.
Just hear say.
Something about the electrical shock neutralizing the venom.
Posted By: T-Rex

Re: Bee sting remedy - 07/26/23 04:35 PM

Yesterday I got hammered by a bunch of yellowjackets.

I thought about this post and started looking for some plantain. I found jewelweed first. I broke open some stems, and rubbed a bunch of juice (sap) on each sting.

The pain was gone in five minutes, and after about 20, I had forgotten all about it. There is not even any residual swelling.
'
I have used jewelweed for poison ivy in the past, and I make a salve from it. This, though is the first time I've used it fresh out of God's container, and I couldn't be more impressed.
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