Borage Leaves: To be chewed and eaten. The plant can be distinguished by its small blue or pink star-shaped flowers and hairy leaves. Great for nursing pup-watchers as it helps increase their supply of milk. Also brings down fever.

Burdock Root: A tall-stemmed, sharp-smelling thistle with dark leaves. A shaman must dig up the roots, wash off the dirt, and chew them into a pulp, wich can be applied to rat bites. Cure infection.

Camint (also known as catnip): A delicious-smelling, leafy plant that's hard to find in the wild; often found growing in Twoleg gardens. The best remedy for greencough.

Chervil: A sweet-smelling plant with large, spreading, fernlike leaves and small white flowers. The juice of the leaves can be used for infected wounds, and chewing the roots helps with bellyache.

Cobweb: Spiderwebs can be found all over the forest; be fareful not to bring along the spider when you take the web. Shamans wrap it around an unjury to soak up the blood and keep the wound clean. Stops bleeding.

Coltsfoot: A flowering plant, a bit like a dandelion, with yellow or white flowers. The leaves can be chewed into a pulp which is eaten to help shortness of breath.

Comfrey: Identifiable by its large leaves and small bell-shaped flowers, whick can be pink, white, or purple. The fat black roots of thins plant can be chewed into a poultice to mend broken bones or soothe wounds.

Dock: A plant similar to sorrel. The leaf can be chewed up and applied to soothe scratches.

Dried Oak Leaf: collected in the autumn and stored in a dry place. Stops infections.

Feverfew: A small bush with flowers like daisies. The leaves can be eaten to cool down body temperature, particularly for wolves with fever or chills.

Goldenrod: A tall plant with bright yellow flowers. A poultice of this is terrific for healing wounds.

Honey: A sweet, golden liquid created by bees. Difficult to collect without getting stung, but great for soothing infections or the throats of wolves who have breathed smoke.

Horsetail: A tall plant with bristly stems that grow in marshy areas. The leaves can be used to treat infected wounds.

Juniper Berries: A bush with spiky dark green leaves and purple berries. The berries soothe bellyaches and help wolves who are having trouble breathing.

Lavender: A small purple flowering plan. Cures fever.

Marigold: A bright orange or yellow flower that grows low to the ground. The petals or leaves can be chewed into a pulp and applied as a poultice to wounds. Stops infection.

Mouse Bile: A bad-smelling liquid that is the only remedy for ticks. Dab a little moss soaked in the bile on a tick and it'll fall right off. Wash paws thoroughly in running water afterward.

Poppy Seed: Small black seeds shapen from a dried poppy flower, these are fed to wolves to help them sleep. Soothes wolves suffering from shock or distress. Not recommended for nursing pup-watchers.

Stinging Nettle: The spiny green seeds can be administered to a wolf who's swallowed poison, while the leaves can be applied to a wound to bring down swelling.

Tansy: A strong-smelling plant with round yellow flowers. Good for curingcoughs, but must be eaten in small doses.

Thyme: This herb can be eaten to calm anxiety and frayed nerves.

Watermint: A leafy green plant found in streams of damp earth. Usually chewed into a pulp and then fed to a wolves suffering bellyache.

Wild Garlic: Rolling in a patch of wild garlic can help prevent infection, especially for dangerous wounds like rat bites.

Yarrow: A flowering blant whose leaves can be made into a poultice and applied to wounds or scratches to expel poison.

NOTE!!!!!

Deathberries: Red berries that can be fatally poisonous to pups and elders. They are NOT medicine. Known to hunters as yew berries. BEWARE!


Information from Warriors Field Guild-Secrets of the Clans