Plants
Black Elder
Basil
Black Sage
Belladonna
Berggarten Sage
Bog Sage
Broadleaf Sage
Clematis
Calendula
Chives
Cress
Chamomile
Cider Vinegar
Dill
Eucalyptus
Fennel
Ginseng
Gold Sage
Green Tea
Grape Sage
Hawthorn Tea
Horseradish
Lavender Oil
Lemon Balm
Lemon Oil
Linden Flower
Malva Tea
Natrum
Parsley
Pepper Mint
Purple Sage
Red Sage
Rose Hips
Rose Sage
Sage Properties
Saffron
Swedish Bitters
Tarragon
Valerian
White Sage
Sage Vervain
Vervain Eurasian sage with blue flowers and foliage like verbena; Middle English verveine, Old French, from Latin verbna, leafage; The plant was called Holy plant (Hiera Botane) by the Druids people who considered it a sacred herb.
The Wild English Clary, or Vervain Sage, is a native of all parts of Europe and not uncommon in England in dry pastures and on roadsides, banks and waste ground, especially near the sea, or on chalky soil. It is a smaller plant than the Garden Clary, but its medicinal virtues are rather more powerful. Sage vervain