Tripple Brook Farm

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Common Names: N

nannyberry
Viburnum lentago
narrow-leaved cat-tail
Typha angustifolia
needle, bear grass, Adam's
Yucca smalliana
nemagari-dake; chishima-zasa
Sasa kurilensis
nettle, stinging
Urtica dioica
nettle, wood
Laportea canadensis
New Jersey tea; red root;wild snowball
Ceanothus americanus

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Catalog as of April 01, 2008

Urtica

(Urticaceae - nettle family)
About 50 species of annual or perennial herbs, of wide distribution.

dioica peren • ht 3-6' • zones 3-10

stinging nettle

Urtica dioica


edible, sun
Eurasia

A vigorous, upright perennial, spreading by rhizomes. Stems are covered with stinging hairs. Contact with these hairs causes intense itching, usually of short duration. The plants can usually be handled comfortably by the leaves, which generally lack stinging hairs. Young shoots gathered in spring, or tender new growth at stem tips during the summer, are good as a cooked vegetable or, especially, as an addition to soups or stews. (Cooking quickly inactivates the stinging hairs.) Nettle greens are unusually high in protein, as compared with most other leafy vegetables. The mature stems of nettles contain a strong fiber which has been used to make fabrics.

cat # 2B9D
$7.95 each / 3+, $7.50 ea