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Home remedies

(71 Posts)
frida Sun 05-Jun-11 20:37:53

What is your favourite one ? My grandmother used to make 'soap and sugar' poultice if we had a splinter, to draw the splinter out. She took an elastoplast and rubbed damp soap on the lint, then she dipped the soapy lint into the sugar bowl (!) and applied it to the affected area for a few hours, it always worked.

anma Sat 29-Sept-12 14:11:05

My dad used Grasshopper Ointment on splinters. It was a disgusting green goo, but it worked

absentgrana Sat 29-Sept-12 12:44:56

My mother used wintergreen for strains and sprains, not chilblains to which I was prone. We used to buy some kind of chilblain ointment, but my aunt swore that the only way to relieve the itching and pain was to soak the affected toes in pee. grin

annodomini Sat 29-Sept-12 12:28:26

Correction - Thermogene.

annodomini Sat 29-Sept-12 12:17:45

We used to have our wheezy chests covered with Themogene wadding which was like pink cotton wool impregnated with something that smelt like Vick. Nowadays when I have a cold with an irritating cough, my preferred solution is sipping iced water. Rightly or wrongly, I believe that the traditionally prescribed hot liquid, though comforting, actually increases the inflammation in the throat whereas cold water calms it down. Sneer if you like, but try it.

jeni Sat 29-Sept-12 11:43:59

gallywas it wintergreen?

jeni Sat 29-Sept-12 11:42:56

I remember children seen into their undies for the winter with brown paper and goose grease underneath.
An old sock tied round the throat for a sore throat.

peaches41 Sat 29-Sept-12 11:31:12

My mum used to cut a strip of brown paper, soak it in vinegar, and place it on our foreheads if we got a headache. Don't know if it worked, but it left a brown stripe on the forehead!

For any stomach problems we had Dr Collis-Browne's Mixture, consisting of peppermint oil and morphine, it was lovely and soothing and worked every time. I still use it to this day, but they have taken nearly all the morphine out so it's not half so effective lol!

For a sore toe with a fungus infection Vick's Vapour Rub is a surprising remedy, and it really works.

During the war most of us kids got styes, and mum's remedy was to rub it with her wedding ring.....huh???

JessM Sat 29-Sept-12 11:20:01

Ah that makes sense nighowl a bit like fancy dressings for leg ulcers - stop them scabbing in an unhelpful way.
I guess the sad truth was there was nothing you could do for chest infections other than rest and cross your fingers. But the poultices may well have worked on near-the-skin infections so they thought them worth a try on the poor chests.
I wonder if poultices would be good for persistent MRSA infections.
Re arnica - there is a lot of difference between a herbal remedy containing arnica which is reputedly good for bruising. And homeopathic arnica which contains no arnica. Just sugar and hocus pocus.

MDougall Fri 28-Sept-12 20:50:10

Gargling with sea salt in hot water works wonders for sore throats as does using a "Neti Pot"!! Look it up on Amazon...you can buy these odd little containers very cheaply.

If you get the first signs of a cold, you tip the "NetiPot" (with warm salt water inside it) up your nostrils......and then afterwards gargle with hot as you can bear it, salt water.......works nearly every time in stopping the cold from spreading to your chest. You can watch people using these neti pots on You tube .......they really do flush out the nostrils!!

I use this method on all the family and they all now swear by it!

harrigran Fri 28-Sept-12 20:00:21

We used to make Kaolin poultices on the ward in the 60s. My father was prone to bad chests and when he had pleurisy he was prescribed poultices. Muslin nappies were used because there were plenty at home Mum had last baby at 47. We stood the tin of kaolin in boiling water and then spread it on the muslin, added a thicker pad of cotton and then bandaged the lot round the chest. Placebo effect I think, I really don't think it healed anything.

nightowl Fri 28-Sept-12 19:27:25

Jess I can't pretend to know the technicalities of how poultices worked but my impression was that as you say, the warmth increased the blood flow but also the moisture prevented the wounds closing up thereby allowing all sorts of pus to get out. I remember using one on a horse's leg where the wound had started to heal but there was a lot of inflammation and heat. The poultice softened the scab and the pus was drawn out onto the cloth - voila! The leg healed beautifully. Far cheaper than vets' bills.

johanna Fri 28-Sept-12 19:22:19

littlenell I remember capsicum tissue.
Boots used to sell capsicum wadding to put on your chest at night.
Good stuff it was.
Wonder if Boots still sell it.

Littlenellie Fri 28-Sept-12 19:17:02

Worked in pharmacy most of my early teenage /adult years kaolin poultice boiled as suggested.
Magnesium sulphate paste to draw out whit lows and infections.
kaolin poultices,and capsicum tissue,where common place in my early years.
As where douches and things that are banned now,my innocence was definitely compromised confused

JessM Fri 28-Sept-12 18:57:21

Gosh fascinating. I have a vague memory of a tin of kaolin poultice I think.
I guess they might help by increasing blood flow to an infected area - this would bring additional immune cells and proteins with it - exaggerating the positive effects of inflammation. So could work with a bacterial infection near the surface of the skin - but probably not with a bad chest - the heat would not penetrate into the lungs!
I wonder if they might be useful for things like cellulitis?
Mystified as to the bread though. Cold wet bread? Or hot wet bread is that it?

baublesbanglesandb Fri 28-Sept-12 18:14:05

I remember kaolin poultices, my mother used them if we got very deep cuts or grazes to 'draw out the poison'. I also had a poultice of some sort applied, in hospital, to an infected wound after having my appendix removed. That was in 1976.

crimson Fri 28-Sept-12 18:12:13

I've got a bottle of 'tincture of arnica' in my medicine cabinet. The bottle looks really old. Someone brought it into work for disposal but I was so fascinated by it I couldn't throw it away. It smells gorgeous [probably the acohol]but big sign on the front says 'external use only'. My mum was always putting bread poultices on me. And, when she had a headache [which seemed to be most of the time] I'm sure she used to put a rag soaked in vinegar on her forehead.

annodomini Fri 28-Sept-12 18:05:20

Sulphur powder is the 'brimstone' in 'brimstone and treacle' which was one of my mother's many remedies for constipation. It was disgusting. My grandmother almost always smelt of something called 'wintergreen' which was a liniment for her lumbago. May have also been used for horses!

Gally Fri 28-Sept-12 17:35:57

For bruises, my Mum put on tincture of arnica. I seem to bruise more easily these days and have recently bought arnica cream - it's amazing - really works. Do you remember the dreaded chilblains? I can't remember what was put on them, but it certainly didn't work!

nightowl Fri 28-Sept-12 17:22:31

No anno I remember bread poultices and kaolin poultices very well. My parents didn't use them but I was introduced to them at the riding stables where I spent all my time. The owner of the stables (my mentor) showed me how to use them on horses and she used them on me a time or two when I got any kind of dog bite or injury around the stables. (Yes I know antibiotics had been invented then but hey ho). They are absolutely brilliant at drawing out infection. She also used goose grease on a bad chest.

I have used a bread poultice on minor wounds quite recently - I just put bread on a clean cloth then pour boiling water onto it and put it on the wound with another clean cloth or bandage on top. My daughter thinks I'm bonkers but they really are fantastic.

Grannyknot Fri 28-Sept-12 17:22:22

My grandad used to rub yellow sulphur powder in my hair because I had bad dandruff as a child smile how weird! I just googled it and the advice still holds.

annodomini Fri 28-Sept-12 17:12:34

Have just Googled kaolin poultices and they are still available! Unbelievable - you might as well consult a witch doctor!

annodomini Fri 28-Sept-12 17:10:34

Don't believe I'm the only one who was treated with kaolin poultices! Kaolin was bought in tins and heated up - in the tin - in boiling water before being spread on a piece of cloth - I think old muslin nappies were in use in our household. Then, steaming hot, they were plonked on a wheezy chest or an inflamed area. Don't know why I'm not scarred. I think bread was soaked in water before being bound onto a splinter or an inflamed finger, for example.

PRINTMISS Fri 28-Sept-12 16:40:03

When I was a child, I suffered quite badly with ear-ache, and the favourite to help sooth that was a hot salt sack. I was lovely, just a small pillow of salt, warmed in the range, and so comforting, didn't cure the ear ache, but eased it. Grew out of ear-aches eventually. I am a great believer in Vic to help with coughs, but I remember Musterole was my Mum's favourite, and it was awful, made the eyes run, the nose run, the head hurt, nearly choked you but "It'll do you good" (if it didn't kill you first).

Greatnan Fri 28-Sept-12 16:35:18

My dash under a cold shower when I spilt near-boiling porridge on my chest saved me a lot of pain and disfigurement. The hospital said I had done exactly the right thing.

JessM Fri 28-Sept-12 16:22:20

Tell us more anno about the kaolin poultice experience - sounds like a great big face pack? kaolin is clay isnt it? Was it hot? Cold? Smelly? How long did they use them for?
Anyone know the recipe for a bread poultice - and how did they stay on?
I'd noticed that styes less common. Ditto teenage spots. (I know they treat bad ones with antibiotics, but still). Kids better nourished these days?
Cold water still recommended for burns isnt it.