Liniment for Varicose Veins & Muscle Pains

Learn to make an all-natural witch hazel + herbal liniment can be used for varicose veins, muscle pains, strains, and aches.

jar of liniment containing chopped herbs

This recipe was kindly shared by Dawn Combs, author of the book, Heal Local. It’s a great book centered around 20 homegrown or regionally sourced herbs that you can use to build a complete home apothecary.

Tucked throughout the pages and paragraphs are great little recipes for everything from heartburn lozenges, to headaches pills, to this liniment for varicose veins and muscle pains shared below.

Heal Local Book by Dawn Combs

Since Dawn is an amazingly nice person, she’s letting me share her recipe on The Nerdy Farm Wife site. (Thanks Dawn!)

Now, on to the recipe!

Some links on this site are affiliate links; I only recommend products I personally use and enjoy. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

basket of St John's Wort and other herbs

Liniment for Varicose Veins, Muscle Pains & Strains

This recipe is given in parts. That means that you can scale it up or down depending on how much you want to make. It doesn’t have to be precise, at all.

You really can’t mess up this recipe by putting a bit more of one ingredient than another.

I used generous pinches, but you can use a measuring cup, tablespoons, small food scoops or whatever you’d like.

Place roughly equal amounts of yarrow, calendula and St. John’s wort in a glass jar and then add the smaller amount of cayenne or ginger.

Dried calendula and yarrow are fine to use, but if possible, use fresh St John’s wort. You can use whole dried pieces or ground spice.

If using fresh herbs, be sure to chop them into smaller pieces before infusing, so that more surface area of the herb is exposed.

Pour witch hazel over the herbs until covered and let it infuse for 2 to 3 weeks. Strain and rebottle. (I didn’t have quite enough witch hazel on hand, so added a bit of vinegar to mine to make up the shortage.)

This liniment can be used for varicose veins, muscle pains, strains, and aches.

Use once in the morning or evening, or at both times of day.

Always rub it towards the heart to help tighten and tone varicose veins and improve blood flow.

Isn’t that a great recipe? I’ve been using it on my family and it really is effective.

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246 Comments

  1. Definitely trying this recipe! I would love to learn more about plantain. Thank you for sharing all your recipes!

  2. i grow several medicinal plants, and I’d love to learn more about how to use them: borage, calendula, sage, melissa, chamomile, comfrey.

  3. I have an herb garden going (live in Michigan) and have so much to learn that I don’t know where to begin! I think my first objective is going to be to learn how to use the lemon balm that is doing so well (besides tea!). Thank you for sharing this recipe!

  4. I LOVE this recipe & definitely will be making it. I would like to learn more about dandelion. It seems you can use the for so many things.

  5. I’d love to learn more about the uses of Sage since it grows wild in the high desert here in Montana and also about Dandelions as they take over my yard every spring.

    Take Care ….. Sandy

  6. I would love to learn about herbal uses. I have a lot of violets and would love to do something with them.

  7. This book sounds amazing! I have just started my journey researching home and historical remedies. I would like to learn how to use the Purple Coneflower in my garden.

  8. Lemon balm is taking over part of my yard and I want to learn how to use every last stem. Thank you for sharing and Have a Fabulous Day!

  9. Oh my I have a several that I would like to learn more about Echinacea, Comphery, Nasturtium and Sweet Alyssum! Thanks for the give away

  10. I would love to learn more about various “weeds” that I am finding are medicinal, like dandelions, plantain, and chickweed! :)

  11. I’d love to learn more about Honeysuckle which grows rampant around our ditches. I refuse to view it as a nuisance and I strongly believe Honeysuckle has some uses I just have to learn all of them. ;)

  12. I would like to learn more about dandelion. Even though I have recently learned that it is useful, it is hard to not still think of it as a weed

  13. Several websites have written of the properties of plantain of late and I still haven’t found an uncontaminated specimen-too many pesticides here. I’m always looking for more information about healing herbs and this book looks so interesting. Thank you

  14. Looks like a cool book. I have started making salves and tinctures so this would come in very handy! Thank you.

  15. I would like to learn more about mullein; it grows all over the place here and I remember it’s a good medicinal but I don’t know for what it’s good. Also Lamb’s Quarters, if you have time.

  16. I would love to know more about calendula, as this is the first year I have tried to grow it. A book like this would be a great resource! :)

  17. I love your site and turn to it all the time. I just made your hot process oatmeal and honey soap last week and it is wonderful! You provide so much information and I really appreciate it. Thank you!

    Now, I live in middle TN and would love to know about ways to use queen anne’s lace and would really like to know also if there is a use for curly leaf dock and pig weed.

  18. Goldenseal is a native herb that grows locally (in a friend’s front forested yard and has offered to share some come fall dividing time!) that I would love to learn more about.

  19. The ‘sunny’ plant and herb Calendula and dandelion fascinate me with their potential uses and I’d love to learn more about how I can use them.

  20. I am interested in the book and really appreciate your review of it. I want to know more about yarrow, calendula and so many other herbs. It’s a big herbaceous world out there!

  21. Echinacea is growing in my garden, not only is it pretty, I would like to learn a way to use it!! Love your site.

  22. Thanks for sharing your work. I would love to learn about St. John’s wort and burdock root.

  23. Oh my how can I pick only one? I would like to learn more about elderberry and plantain. Thank you for all the great information you share!!

  24. I would love to learn more about various “weeds”, like dandelions, plantain, and chickweed. I also would like help with identification. I would love to win this book!

  25. What a wonderful idea for a book — to use locally available herbs to make alternative health care products. I would love to learn uses for Kudzu which grows in abundance here.

  26. Thanks for the recipe! I would love to win this book and am interested in learning more about St. John’s wort.

  27. I would love to have this book! I’m interested in finding out more about tarragon and oregano. Thanks for having this give-away.

  28. This book looks wonderful. I just cannot get enough info on herbs. I am learning so much but it just seems like there is SO much I don’t know! I am interested in lamb’s quarters, since I have been pulling handfuls of it as a weed for years. But this year I thought “Hmmm…usually the weeds I find that resow themselves so readily (dandelions, plantain…) are super useful or edible.” So I looked & found that it is edible & figure there has to be some other uses! I would also like to learn more about using basil besides for food…we eat lots of it, but I know it has more to it. Chickory as well (besides for a coffee substitute…yech!) Thanks for all you do.

  29. Love your recipes. I have a few herbs in my flower beds and use most but I haven’t used licorice yet and would love to know what it could benefit. Thanks

  30. Thanks for sharing!! I would like to learn about more uses for aloe. We have lots growing where I live

  31. Would love to learn more about Honeysuckle. I show my kids how to get honey from the flower but know it must have many more properties..

  32. I would love to win. Have you any idea of uses for the Yucca plant or sage brush? Yep I live in a dry area.

  33. Love, love, love your site! Thanks for sharing recipes and info. I am growing bee balm ( it’s coming up really nice) and I would love to learn how to use it in salves. This book looks amazing

  34. This sounds so easy, and I can’t wait to try it on my muscle aches! Thanks for being so generous in sharing your wonderful recipes with the world!

  35. I would like to know more about sweet grass and and the benefits it provides. we Have lots in the area where I live. Thanks. :)

  36. I would like to learn more about Mimosa (Albizia julibrissin). Dawn wrote an article in Hobby Farm magazine about it but I would like to know more about the bark.

  37. I’m interested in using up some yarrow and plantain, but also finding out what local herbs might help keep bugs away (mosquito replants)

  38. Add me to the list for this book, if you would please. It sounds interesting and is not one I’ve seen before.

  39. I am expecting my first baby so i am new to varicose veins..i don’t like them! Thank you for this recipe!!

  40. Violet is most plentiful here in my garden; also Hypochaeris radicata “False Dandelion” – would love to know more about these helpers. Thank you.

  41. I would love to learn more about fever few and white willow bark. My daughter has terrible migraines. I would like a recipe for a rub for her head. Thank you..

  42. I have a huge problem with varicose veins so I would love to try this-just need to get some dried yarrow! ty!

  43. Plaintain grows everywhere here in Florida and I would love to learn all I can about it! Thanks for the opportunity to win a copy of such an awesome sounding book!!!

  44. Thank you for the recipe. I enjoy making my own salves and natural cures with essential oils and herbs. Just recently I learned how to make a wonderful plantain salve and made up a batch. I would live to win the herb book!

  45. I have recently come across your website and have fallen in love with it. I have purchased some of your books for my Kindle and just finished reading the one on Lemon Balm. Currently I have a batch of Lemon Balm, from my herb garden, hanging as we speak. I am anxious to make Lemon Balm Tea and cannot wait to incorporate it into some of the many recipes that you wrote about.

    Having always been a wanderer of nature I am constantly curious about the things that can be made from what I surrounded with. You have been a great inspiration….Thank You!!!

  46. New to you site all so new to hearbs would liketo learn more about bonage there about 3′ tall and flowering I try to make a tea it was ok butt I know there more? Thank you

  47. I really enjoy reading about different uses for plants and their helpfulness in healing. Have made some soaps to help with dry skin. Would like a copy of this book!

  48. Just this morning I thought ‘must research a herbal remedy for varicose veins’. Logged on to your site for something else, and there was my answer just waiting for me. Will be trying it out this weekend. Fingers crossed for the book! Thanks for everything you share with us :-)

  49. i can’t wait to mix up a batch and try this. Love to learn new ways to naturally heal this aching old body. Thanks a bunch

  50. I would love to learn more about anise-hyssop and how to use it. I planted some last year by my front door and it’s become as large as a small tree!

  51. would love this book, would like to expand my knowledge of the use of herbs and flowers as well as oils.

  52. What a wonderful opportunity to receive such a book for our daily use. Looks informative. Can’t wait to see if I win!

  53. I’d love to learn about uses for chamomile, rosemary, lavender. I would love to win this book and learn more about the benefits of herbs.

  54. I have suffered worth anxiety attacks for over 30 years. Traditional meds don’t always work. I’d love to know, how to use lemon balm to aid me. Thanks!

  55. This is very interesting. I started checking into natural cures a couple years ago when I made myself a Fibroid Tea instead of opting for surgery(like my Dr. recommended). I would enjoy learning more by winning the book you’ve recommended.

  56. I would like to learn more about Yarrow and try this recipe for varicose veins – it seems to be a curse in my family :)

  57. My full time work is as a gardener so I always seem to have loads of aches and pains. This wonderful recipe is now on my list for next weekend … just need to gather a couple of the ingredients that I don’t have in my own backyard.

  58. I have used catnip and would like to learn more specifically about it, especially since it’s so prolific.

  59. I’m a budding herb-nerd (and proud of it!) and would love to learn more about using broad-leaf plantain, horehound and borage, as they all are growing like mad here just now. :)

  60. thank you for the recipe. i try to stay very active but now with getting older I am often a little stiff. would live to win the book as i am always trying to further my education regarding herbs.

  61. Thanks so much for this recipe- st johns wort and yarrow are prolific here- and needed a recipe for those veins. I have that same curse…

  62. I would love to learn how to use herbs to treat a variety of aliments that aren’t helped by western medicine, including St. John’s Wort. Thank you for the opportunity to win the book.

  63. This looks like a fantastic book. Thanks for doing this giveaway. I would like to learn more about using sage.

  64. I would love to know more about ways to use my rugosa rose and rose hips and love a chance to win such a gem of a book.

  65. I would love to learn more about rasberry leaf and the borage which is taking over part of our property!

    1. Hi Sharon G! Your comment number was chosen as the winner for this book – congratulations!! Check your email for a message from me! :)

  66. I enjoy reading your web page and all the info you share. This book looks pretty awesome and would fit in nicely on my bookshelf :)

  67. What a wonderful giveaway. This is our first summer in our new house and I am trying to learn as much as I can from the wild plants around me (Vermont) as well as from the small herbal garden I am tending. I would love to learn more about mugwort, which I have noticed popping up around the garden. Thanks for sharing.

    1. Hi Fredrika! I infuse witch hazel with fresh herbs and flowers sometimes, so believe you could here too. The only drawback that I see is that the witch hazel would be more diluted from the water content in fresh plants, so it wouldn’t have as long of a shelf life.

  68. I recently found your site, and have become inspired. Thank you! I live in Alaska, and would love to learn more about Fireweed and Devil’s Club.

  69. Just found my way here for the first time and am excited to see so much wonderful information. Thank you so much for sharing! I would love to learn more about the uses of dandelion and elderberry.

  70. I love growing herbs! I have really good luck with basil sage and lemon balm and lemon verbena!! I would love to use them to make my own remedies! I already use them in recipes and for tea! Would live a copy of this book to learn more! Thanks for the recipe too!

    1. Thanks so much for the recipe! Sounds like this book will be added to my wish list. I love learning all I can about herbs and making my own remedies. Thanks again!

  71. I grow Calendula in my yard for it’s skin healing properties. I currently use it as a main ingredient in my Organic Lip Balms but I would LOVE to learn more of it’s uses! =) Thank you

  72. Thanks for all the great recipes! I will definitely have to try this one as varicose veins get painful. Plus that book sounds lovely! I would love to learn more about Mullen.

  73. Pick me! I would love to learn more about wormwood. I love getting your newsletters. I have 4 children and all your information has helped me tremendously. Thanks so much.

  74. I would love to learn more about natural home remedies. I’m just getting started and have so much to learn.

  75. I would love to learn more about yarrow and catnip I know you can use these but need more information . I have these and several others growing in my garden

  76. Oh my goodness? What plant DON’T I want to know more about?! I think that if I had to pick, I would want to know more about henbit/dead nettle

  77. I would love to learn more about calendula! Or different herbs to help with the boils my children sometimes get :-(

  78. I am very interested in learning about healing herbs, and would like to learn more about Comfrey.

  79. I am literally just starting to grow my own herbs and would like to learn more about calendula and rosemary as well as many many more! Winning the book would help me use these and others in the best way.

  80. Hi man,
    This recipe for varicose veins sounds good. I’ve been using your Violet leaf and dandelion salves also.
    The book would be a very welcome addition to any person library and herbal remedies .
    Thank you for the chance to win it.
    Sincerely ,
    Ruth

  81. I have began making the majority of all bath, body and home supplies this year. I would love to have this book as a reference to try new recipes and to learn more about incorporating different herbs.

  82. Thank you for sharing your Herbal Liniment recipe. I can’t wait to make it and give it a try.
    Also, thank you for the opportunity at a chance to win “Heal Local” by Dawn Combs. This book sounds amazing and I would love to add it to my herb book collection.

  83. I am very excited to try this recipe. I am a waitress (almost ready to retire as I’m 66 years old) and my legs do give me some grief. I will make this up tomorrow to start the 2 week wait. Thank you so much for sharing this with us.
    Janet

  84. I can’t wait to try out this liniment on my varicose veins. I make most of our bath & body products and would love learn more recipes, especially those using herbs.

  85. I would love to have this book. I have been trying to switch to a more natural way of life, buy buying & making some of our products. We have noticed a big difference with our skin & health in general with eliminating all of the chemicals in our life.

  86. Love the book and thank you for sharing the recipe! I always make soaps for my family, friends and relatives. Love growing and using herbs.

  87. Wonderful post. I always enjoy your practical and sustainable approach to herbal healing and home apothecary. This book sounds amazing and I would feel blessed to win a copy.

    Thank you again for your wisdom and creativity.

  88. So many plants grow in my area… it is hard to just choose one! I would like to learn more about yarrow and its benefits. Both types of plantain would be great to learn about too. Thanks for letting us know about another resource.

  89. Wow! What a great recipe to use with herbs you can grow yourself! I am fascinated by herbalism and would love to learn more about it. I am currently growing sage, echinacea and lavender in my garden, and would love to know more about various ways to use them! =)

  90. Our new greenhouses will be full of herbs come spring. I’m definitely going to read the book. Thanks for the recipe. Good luck with your ventures.

  91. Now this is right up my alley!! I love natural remedies! There are so many things growing wild around here that I would love to learn more about…dandelion, comfrey, violet leaves, plantain. Too many to list! More information on this stuff is always a good thing!! Keep blogging!!!

  92. I would love to own a copy of this book, there are so many things in the garden that we could be using but don’t. All natural I say that’s the way to go.

  93. I am interested in learning more about herbs, any herbs, and what they do and am seriously considering taking an online course. Would love to have this book as an addition to the small herbal reference library I have. Love your blog! Thanks!

  94. Thank you for sharing you liniment and Echinacea Salve recipes!!!! I would love to win the book as I know it will have lots of other recipes. Thanks for the opportunity!

  95. This recipe looks amazing, and I have all the ingredients so I’ll be making it soon. The book sounds great. I would like to learn more about bee balm and yarrow. Thank you for all your valuable information!

    1. Hi Mia, Yes, you sure can! I have one on the back of my leg that I got from sitting too much at the computer (when I was a video game addict!) and it is visibly reducing the signs of it. Love this recipe!

  96. Ohio surely hides a great deal of treasures! thank you for sharing this!! I’m a newbie and thrive on the information and recipes! it’s even better knowing its local!

  97. This would be amazing to win! I’ve in the past year or so, gotten interested in essential oils and I’d also love to be able to use/learn about herbs. thanks for the chance

  98. Thank you for the opportunity to receive this book. There is so much to be learned. This would be a great resource.

  99. I am moving into a house at the beginning if August and cannot wait to start gathering seeds to start my “healing garden” what I can’t grow I will buy. I have been looking forward to this for quite some time. It would be wonderful to have this book as I start on this new journey in my life.

  100. Well I hope I win because this is just the sort of remedy book I need, I suffering right now with varicose vein pain. This recipe looks easy and I hope to give it a try. I’m using some essential oils, and some blood remedy tablets. I am intrigued about the rest of the remedies. So if I don’t win, I’ll buy the book. Thanks for the chance too.

  101. Just started making soap. have made tinctures and herbal vitamins. doing some basic soaps, we are wanting to do herbal soaps this winter. i would love to win this book!!

  102. I am really into medicinal herbs, and their recipes. This book sounds very exciting. I cannot wait to read this!!

  103. After having breast cancer ,both of my breast were removed , I get lots of pain in my breast area because of scar tissue. I feel God gave me a second chance in life and I now I make my own soaps , lotions,etc I control what’s in my products. I would love to have these book to learn more new things .. Good luck to all the ladies..
    Thanks

  104. Just made a batch and can’t wait to use and share. Thank you so for the recipe! The book looks great too. So want to read and use it right now.

  105. What a great recipe – love that they are all herbs that are easy to find either by wildcrafting/foraging or growing your own. Looks like a terrific book!

  106. Exciting book. Who doesn’t want a book with natural easy to follow recipes for common ailments. Am interested in a recipe with comfrey. I was given a small sample from a friend of a friend and it helped my plantar fasciitis pain a lot. Thank you! Kris

  107. I just found my first blooming yarrow plant in my yard two days ago, and would love to learn as much about it as I can.

  108. Right now, I have a ton of chamomile and would like to do more with that. I have lobelia growing all over, also. Would love to have this book!!! Thanks.

  109. I would love to learn more about all plants, specifically plantain. Thanks for the opportunity. :)

  110. I have just started making herbal tinctures for my family. Me and my daughter are do sensitive to chemicals. I would love to win this

  111. Im a outdoorsman and trying to learn lots of new things and i love the giveway and would love to win the book for my bug out bag for when shyf prepping

  112. Waw! Right in time: one of my best friends has some varicose veins and I’d love to help him. I’ll give it a try! Of course. I’m looking forward to learning some more simple and efficient remedies! <3

  113. I have just started making my own homemade products. I plant yarrow and lavender, would love to learn ways to use it. Looking forward to planting other things to use, this book would be a great help.

  114. Would absolutely love this book! -and – learn more unique combinations and ways to use what already grows on our little parcel of paradise :)! Thank you for this recipe. I am making this liniment today and can not wait to use it:).

  115. I have an abundance of Yarrow, Voilets and Salvia growing in my yard, as well as many herbs in my garden. This book looks like a great resource for my family. Thank you.

  116. Wild oregano is found in my area and it is but one of many medicinal herbs that I wish to study since I have been harmed by modern medicine and am trying to eliminate it from my life.

  117. Thank you for the recipe. I am going to order the materials and try it as soon as possible. I would love to win the book. I gave started using herbs and have a lot to learn.

  118. I’d love to learn about more ways to use sage, echinacea, and calendula thank you also for the recipe

  119. Herbal remedies are my passion. Since finally finding our little piece of heaven in the country I’ve been reading everything I can find about homemade remedies and soaking up info like a sponge. I’d love to add this book to my collection. Thanks for the introduction.

  120. Brilliant receipy I’d love to learn more about lemon balm and camomile something I bought a little of and now have plenty! X

  121. Lol – I was going to say plantain but I see that is taken! How about Ginko, or oregano, or lemon balm, sage…juniper? I have these all in my garden and would love to put them to use!

  122. Am really enjoying your newsletters. I am on Long Island for the summer and and impatiently waiting for the rosehips to ripen and woudl love to learn more about them.

  123. Willow Creek Farm
    I have Chamomile growing and it has a lot of wonderful uses and would love to learn more about it.

  124. Thanks for sharing your experiences and recipes. I would like to learn more of catnip. I have a lot growing in our pond area. I do mix it in with herbal tea mixture and tastes great.

  125. Would love to learn more about Calendula flowers and mullein. Can’t wait to get a copy of your book. Thanks for all that you do and share.

  126. Thank you for all the wonderful recipes. This definitely sounds like a book I need to check out! I would love to learn more about basil.

  127. I’d love to learn more about mullien.. I let them grow in my town yard.. neighbors just dont know what to think about them.. but I think they’re lovely. :)

  128. Looking forward to trying this recipe since I am getting older and am now developing those unsightly varicose veins. Always get some great ideas from your newsletter and am interested in learning more about herbal remedies. Thanks for sharing.

  129. This recipe sounds just the thing for my Mom, sister and me. I can ‘t wait to try it. I would like to learn more about arnica and willow.

  130. I would love to learn about nettle and marshmallow, I would like to use both in a soap recipe and learn about other herbs that can be used to help people.

  131. Thank you for sharing about this book. I’ve been learning a new herb every few weeks. I’d like to set my sights next on yarrow. And with soon will be elderberry harvest time so that one will be after this. So much to know!!

  132. This sounds like a book I need! We’ve recently moved to a house in a rural area and I’ve been learning about all the interesting plants that grow around us!

  133. What a godsend this is! I have been struggling with very painful varicose veins (and can’t afford surgery). I am certainly going to try this liniment!
    I would like to learn more about comfrey.

  134. This liniment looks awesome! I have a ton of yarrow growing around my yard and would love to learn even more uses for it!

  135. We have lots of lemon balm that I would love to know what else I can use it for- besides keeping mosquitos away:) We are very much into finding natural cures, and to win this book would be a blessing:) Thanks for the chance to win!!

  136. Thank you for the chance to win such a wonderful book. I want to know more about anything, & everything! I’am so fascinated by ethnobotany.

  137. I am new to herbs. I need this book ;) I would love to learn more about dandelion, plantain, clover and anything and everything about herbalism. Have a great day. Thank you for all your useful information! :)

  138. Thank you so much for the recipe. I would like to know more about dandelion. I try to use any natural remedies that I can for my family, so I appreciate anything you have to offer.

  139. I’d like to learn more about bee balm/bergamot. I love the flavor of the petals of the red flowers and think they would make a very nice seasoning for meat. I know the leaves of the red and purple flowering plants can be used for tea but that’s about all I’m familiar with.

  140. I love your site and how you make everything so clear and simple for us. Thank you. I would like to learn more about just about everything, but what I have growing free on my place that is useful is elderberry, lemon balm, violet and mullein.

  141. I’d love to learn more about Yarrow!
    I see it in this recipe, but I don’t have any, and I’m wondering if there might be a suitable substitute? Not knowing anything about yarrow makes me wonder what its purpose is in the recipe. Thank you for this opportunity and for any information you can give!
    Smiles, marli

  142. Many herbs and ‘weeds’ grow in Oregon…I’m even growing Ginger and Turmeric but…what uses are there for the dried head (after the bloom is done) of Calendula?

      1. Hi Jan
        Thank you for your suggestion and thank you for the free ebook. I see projects I’d like to do…such a great book to have at my fingertips! :)

  143. I have only begun using herbs and essential oils the last year, so I’m verry green (pun intended). I mostly have to use dried herbs. I would like to learn more about using them for natural salves, medicine, and remedy’s. I currently am trying to grow echinacea, lemon balm, and lavender.

  144. What an awesome birthday present this would be. I am set out to relearn what mother nature has to offer us and being able to use what she has given is always a welcome book in my hands. Thank you, I can’t wait for the read.

  145. Pingback: Why You Need Yarrow | The Homesteading Hippy
  146. Hello Jan, I’d like to substitute Chamomile flowers and Peppermint instead of the Calendula flowers and St. John’s wort as I have them at home. Want to use the liniment as well for restless leg syndrome. Do you think that would work?

    1. Hi Silke! You could give that a try, though you might get a little bit different results. If you do try it out, keeping the yarrow in and a pinch of ginger or cayenne would be good!
      Something that works wonderfully for restless leg syndrome is magnesium oil. I like to make it in a lotion like this:
      https://thenerdyfarmwife.com/make-lotion-leg-cramps-growing-pains/
      but you can also buy a plain bottle of it and rub it directly on your legs. (It can irritate sensitive skin when used directly though, which is why I like it in lotion.) It works so nicely for a few people that I know!

  147. Hi Jan, Thank you for your quick response. I read about the lotion first and will try it for sure. Have all the ingredients I need and infused the oil already. Wanted to try infusing the oil and let it sit for some weeks. So know I have to wait a bit longer…..
    For the liniment I have the yarrow and cayenne and will make no changes in that. Don’t have the ginger but now I am thinking if should order it too. Thanks for the help! Love reading your posts.

  148. Hi Jan. I am loving your website! I’m a newbie to the realm of DIY home remedies and looking to formulate for the markets. It’s all been overwhelming…so much research, trial and error (and money) but reading through your site has given me a massive hit of excitement and confidence again. Anywhoos…how does this recipe assist with Vericose Veins?

    1. Hi Gina, I’m happy you’re enjoying the site!
      The chosen herbs have specific traditonal properties:
      yarrow – circulatory stimulant, astringent, tightens tissues
      calendula flowers – helps strengthen capillaries & veins, promote circulation & is anti-inflammatory
      St. John’s wort – decreases swelling, helps speed healing of bruises, varicose veins, etc
      cayenne or ginger – both will increase circulation
      witch hazel – helps shrink enlarged veins (which is one reason it’s often used for hemorrhoids)

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