Coleman's coffin

Resting on the nature, you, for certain, met a dense green vegetation carpet in meadows or shores of lakes with small round leaves and yellow asterisks - flowers on it. It exudes a delicate, spicy fragrance. This plant is called a coarse verbaine (Lyzimachia nummulatia). In our forests, you can find many varieties of this plant: lily-of-the-valley verteinel, oak grouse, commonweave, but the coin-bearing aurea is the most beautiful and often cultivated artificially decorative culture.

Verbainik coinage description

The plant has a long (up to 50cm) creeping stem and small round leaves on short petioles. Flowers are golden, grow in separate buds without inflorescences, small in size, have small silvery veins. Verbeynik coin or meadow tea, as it is called, loves moisture, so it is more common in reservoirs or in ravines.

Propagation of the Werewolf

A distinctive feature of the plant is a high percentage of reproduction by vegetative means. Most often it is propagated by rooting young shoots. Planting and leaving the werewolf does not require significant effort. The plant is unpretentious, requires only regular moistening, although it tolerates periods of drought normally. Another advantage is the ability to take root even on vertical surfaces and steep slopes.

Coleman's coin aurea in landscape design

Most often, the plant is used for decorative purposes. With the help of a werewolf it is good to create such a symbolic green "carpet" in shaded places. Sometimes, they decorate buildings or sheer flower beds . Since time and special conditions it does not require, growing a vertebra is a pleasure.

Healing properties of a coin collector

Despite the high content of valuable tannins in the plant, it is not used in official traditional medicine. But herbalists brew meadow tea from gout and rheumatism, and also use to stop bleeding internal organs. If a person suffers from skin diseases or purulent wounds, compresses from a werewolf can help him, at least, say the healers.

A recipe for meadow tea, popular in the North:

Mix the leaves of the mallow garden and the coarse wormwood in a 3/1 ratio. Steep the mixture in 250g of boiling water. After a few hours, the broth should be filtered. Such tea is good for colds.