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European Cranberrybush (Viburnum
opulus LINN.) Click on graphic for
larger image |
Guelder Rose
Botanical: Viburnum opulus (LINN.) Family: N.O.
Caprifoliaceae
---Synonyms---Cramp Bark. Snowball Tree.
King's Crown. High Cranberry. Red Elder. Rose Elder. Water Elder. May
Rose. Whitsun Rose. Dog Rowan Tree. Silver Bells. Whitsun Bosses. Gaitre
Berries. Black Haw. ---Part Used---Bark.
---Habitat---The 'Gaitre-Beries' of which Chaucer makes mention
among the plants that 'shal be for your hele' to 'picke hem right as they
grow and ete hem in,' are the deep red clusters of berries of the Wild
Guelder Rose (Viburnum Opulus, Linn.), a shrub growing 5 to 10 feet
high, belonging to the same family as the Elder, found in copses and
hedgerows throughout England, though rare in Scotland, and also indigenous
to North America, where it is to be found in low grounds in the eastern
United States.
---Description---It resembles the Common Elder in
habits of growth, hence in some districts we find it called Red Elder or
Rose Elder. The conspicuous, large, nearly flattopped heads of snow-white
flowers are 3 to 5 inches across, the inner ones very small, but with an
outer ring of large, showy, sterile blossoms, containing undeveloped
stamens with no pollen and an ovary without ovules. Only the inner,
complete flowers provide the nectar for the attraction of insects who are
to fertilize them. The resulting fruits, which ripen very quickly, form a
drooping cluster of bright red berries, shining and translucent, perhaps
the most ornamental of our wild fruits, the tree presenting a very
beautiful appearance in August, when they are ripe, especially as the
leaves assume a rich purple hue before falling. But although edible, the
berries, in spite of Chaucer's recommendation, are too bitter to be
palatable eaten fresh off the trees, and when crushed, smell somewhat
disagreeable, though birds appreciate them and in Siberia the berries used
to be, and probably still are, fermented with flour and a spirit distilled
from them. They have been used in Norway and Sweden to flavour a paste of
honey and flour.
In Canada, they are employed to a considerable extent as a substitute
for Cranberries and are much used for making. a piquant jelly, their
sourness gaining for them there the name of High Bush Cranberry, though
the tree is, of course, quite unrelated to the true Cranberry.
The name Guelder comes from Gueldersland, a Dutch province, where the
tree was first cultivated. It was introduced into England under the name
of 'Gueldres Rose.' The garden variety, Viburnum sterile, with snowball
flowers, does not produce the showy fruit of the wild species.
The berries have anti-scorbutic properties. They turn black in drying
and have been used for making ink.
The wood, like that of the Spindle Tree and Dogwood, is used for making
skewers.
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---Medicinal Action and Uses---The bark, known
as Cramp Bark, is employed in herbal medicine. It used formerly to be
included in the United States Pharmacopoeia, but is now omitted though it
has been introduced into the National Formulary in the form of a Fluid
Extract, Compound Tincture and Compound Elixir, for use as a nerve
sedative and anti-spasmodic in asthma and hysteria.
In herbal practice in this country, its administration in decoction and
infusion, as well as the fluid extract and compound tincture is
recommended. It has been employed with benefit in all nervous complaints
and debility and used with success in cramps and spasms of all kinds, in
convulsions, fits and lockjaw, and also in palpitation, heart disease and
rheumatism.
The decoction (1/2 oz. to a pint of water) is given in tablespoon
doses.
The bark is collected chiefly in northern Europe and appears in
commerce in thin strips, sometimes in quills, 1/20 to 1/12 inch thick,
greyish-brown externally, with scattered brownish warts, faintly cracked
longitudinally. It has a strong, characteristic odour and its taste is
mildly astringent and decidedly bitter.
---Constituents---The active principle of Cramp
Bark is the bitter glucoside Viburnine; it also contains tannin, resin and
valerianic acid.
---Preparations and Dosages---Fluid extract, 1/2
to 2 drachms. Viburnin, 1 to 3 grains.
Its constituents are identical with the species of Viburnum that
is more widely used and is an official drug in the United States, viz.
Viburnum Prunifolium or Black Haw, though Cramp Bark contains 1/3
the resin contained in Black Haw and its similar properties are considered
much weaker.
Fluid Extract of Cramp Bark has a reddishbrown colour and the slight
odour and somewhat astringent taste of the bark.
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