Alder Bark: Eases toothaches.
Bindweed: Used to make splints.
Blackberry Leaves: Used to heal bee stings.
Borage Leaves: Used to help mothers produce more and better milk. Also brings down fevers.
Broom: Poultice for broken legs and wounds.
Burdock Root: Used for rat bites.
Burnet: Keeps a cat's strength up. Travelling herb.
Catchweed: Keeps poultices from rubbing off.
Catmint: Used for greencough and whitecough.
Celandine: Soothes damaged eyes.
Chamomile: Strengthens the heart and soothes the mind. Travelling herb.
Chervil: Used for bellyaches and infected wounds. Also helps with kitting.
Chickweed: Lesser treatment for greencough.
Cob Nuts: Used for ointments.
Cobwebs: Soaks up and/or stops bleeding.
Coltsfoot: Eases breathing and kitten-cough. Also used for sore or cracked pads.
Comfrey Root: Repairs broken bones, soothes wounds, used for wrenched claws, itching, inflammation, eases stiff or wrenched shoulders.
Daisy Leaf: Eases joint pain. Travelling herb.
Dandelion: Used for bee stings and as a painkiller.
Dock: Soothes scratches, sore pads, and wounds. (stings when applied)
Fennel: Eases pain in the hips.
Feverfew: Used for fevers.
Goldenrod: Used to heal wounds.
Hawkweed: Lesser treatment for greencough.
Heather Nectar: Makes swallowing easier and sweetens mixtures.
Honey: Soothes throats, infections, coughing, and can be used to help swallow concoctions and give energy.
Horsetail: Treats infections and helps stop bleeding.
Ivy Leaf: Used for storing herbs.
Juniper Berries: Used for bellyaches, to calm cats, help troubled breathing, and give strength.
Lamb's Ear: Gives a cat strength.
Lavender: Cures fever and chills. Used to smother the scent of death.
Mallow Leaves: Soothes bellyache.
Marigold: Stops infection, stops bleeding, used for inflammation.
Mint: Used to smother the scent of death.
Mouse Bile: Used to remove ticks.
Dried Oak Leaf: Prevents infection.
Parsley: Stops a queen from producing milk and cures bellyache.
Ragwort Leaves: Keeps a cat's strength up. Treats aching joints.
Ragweed: Gives a cat extra strength and energy.
Raspberry Leaves: Possibly eases pain or stops bleeding.
Rosemary: Used to smother the scent of death.
Rush: Used to make a splint.
Snakeroot: Thought to heal poison.
Sorrel: Travelling herb. Can build up appetite.
Stick: Distracts cats from pain.
Stinging Nettle: Induces vomiting, brings down swelling, mixed with comfrey to heal broken bones, helps with wounds, and chewing the stem helps stop infection.
Sweet-Sedge: Eases infection.
Tansy: Cures coughs, wounds, poisons, and stops a cat from getting greencough. Soothes throats.
Tormentil: Root is good for treating wounds and extracting poison.
Thyme: Calms nervousness, anxiety, and helps with shock.
Watermint: Eases bellyache.
Wild Garlic: Helps prevent infection, particularly for rat bites.
Willow Bark: Eases pain.
Willow Leaves: Stops vomiting.
Wintergreen: Treats some wounds and poisons.
Yarrow: Extracts poison from wounds. Induces vomiting. Ointment softens and heals cracked pads.
Bindweed: Used to make splints.
Blackberry Leaves: Used to heal bee stings.
Borage Leaves: Used to help mothers produce more and better milk. Also brings down fevers.
Broom: Poultice for broken legs and wounds.
Burdock Root: Used for rat bites.
Burnet: Keeps a cat's strength up. Travelling herb.
Catchweed: Keeps poultices from rubbing off.
Catmint: Used for greencough and whitecough.
Celandine: Soothes damaged eyes.
Chamomile: Strengthens the heart and soothes the mind. Travelling herb.
Chervil: Used for bellyaches and infected wounds. Also helps with kitting.
Chickweed: Lesser treatment for greencough.
Cob Nuts: Used for ointments.
Cobwebs: Soaks up and/or stops bleeding.
Coltsfoot: Eases breathing and kitten-cough. Also used for sore or cracked pads.
Comfrey Root: Repairs broken bones, soothes wounds, used for wrenched claws, itching, inflammation, eases stiff or wrenched shoulders.
Daisy Leaf: Eases joint pain. Travelling herb.
Dandelion: Used for bee stings and as a painkiller.
Dock: Soothes scratches, sore pads, and wounds. (stings when applied)
Fennel: Eases pain in the hips.
Feverfew: Used for fevers.
Goldenrod: Used to heal wounds.
Hawkweed: Lesser treatment for greencough.
Heather Nectar: Makes swallowing easier and sweetens mixtures.
Honey: Soothes throats, infections, coughing, and can be used to help swallow concoctions and give energy.
Horsetail: Treats infections and helps stop bleeding.
Ivy Leaf: Used for storing herbs.
Juniper Berries: Used for bellyaches, to calm cats, help troubled breathing, and give strength.
Lamb's Ear: Gives a cat strength.
Lavender: Cures fever and chills. Used to smother the scent of death.
Mallow Leaves: Soothes bellyache.
Marigold: Stops infection, stops bleeding, used for inflammation.
Mint: Used to smother the scent of death.
Mouse Bile: Used to remove ticks.
Dried Oak Leaf: Prevents infection.
Parsley: Stops a queen from producing milk and cures bellyache.
Ragwort Leaves: Keeps a cat's strength up. Treats aching joints.
Ragweed: Gives a cat extra strength and energy.
Raspberry Leaves: Possibly eases pain or stops bleeding.
Rosemary: Used to smother the scent of death.
Rush: Used to make a splint.
Snakeroot: Thought to heal poison.
Sorrel: Travelling herb. Can build up appetite.
Stick: Distracts cats from pain.
Stinging Nettle: Induces vomiting, brings down swelling, mixed with comfrey to heal broken bones, helps with wounds, and chewing the stem helps stop infection.
Sweet-Sedge: Eases infection.
Tansy: Cures coughs, wounds, poisons, and stops a cat from getting greencough. Soothes throats.
Tormentil: Root is good for treating wounds and extracting poison.
Thyme: Calms nervousness, anxiety, and helps with shock.
Watermint: Eases bellyache.
Wild Garlic: Helps prevent infection, particularly for rat bites.
Willow Bark: Eases pain.
Willow Leaves: Stops vomiting.
Wintergreen: Treats some wounds and poisons.
Yarrow: Extracts poison from wounds. Induces vomiting. Ointment softens and heals cracked pads.