Goats Rue
Tephrosia virginiana
Other Names: American Garden Rue, Catgut, Devil's Shoestring, Rabbit-pea, Horey turkey
peas, Virginia Pea, Virginia Tephrosia
Habitat: Perennial herb native to Eastern N. America from New Hampshire to Florida,
west to Texas and Manitoba. Found growing in dry sandy woods, openings, fields, and
roadsides. Cultivation: Goats Rue is fairly easy to grow, it is a deep rooted plant,
requiring a moist, deep, light or medium very well-drained soil in a sunny position.
Goats Rue has a symbiotic relationship with soil bacteria, these bacteria form
nodules on the roots and fix nitrogen. Some of this nitrogen can be used by other plants
growing nearby. Goat's Rue is 1 to 2 ft. tall, covered with silky silver hairs. Root is
long and tough, stems erect and branched. Leaves are alternate, compound (pinnately) and
divided into 8-14 pairs of narrow oblong leaflets and one leaflet at the tip. Flower
clusters are terminal racemes atop the plant. Each of the large flowers is pea like, 1/2
to 3/4 in. long, yellowish at the top, and purplish-pink below. When cultivated there may
be 20 to 30 flowers per raceme and up to 200 flowers per plant. The flowers have a faint
but definite pleasant aroma and bees visit them often for nectar. Flowers blooms from May
through August. The root is a source of the natural insecticide 'rotenone', especially
effective against flying insects but relatively harmless to animals. Cattle do graze on it
but the plant is said to be toxic in large or strong doses. Gather after flowers bloom,
dry for later herb use. Plant is not edible.
Properties: Goats Rue was much used by Native Americans who considered it to be
an aphrodisiac and most useful in restoring manhood to those with impotency and as a
female herb to restore a womans beauty and health. The root is used in alternative
medicine as an antirheumatic, anthelmintic, diaphoretic, diuretic, emmenagogue, febrifuge,
galactagogue, pectoral, restorative and tonic. A medicinal herb tea is used to treat
rheumatism, bladder problems, fever, hard coughs, impotency, to expel intestinal worms,
irregular menstruation and to increase the flow of breast milk. Goats Rue is used
cosmetically in hand and foot bathes. Experimentally, the root has shown both anticancer
and cancer-causing activity. Research on this herb and its chemical constituents is
ongoing and early results are proving to show it may be useful in Diabetes, Alzheimer's
and many other disorders. The root is a source of the insecticide 'rotenone' found to be
especially effective against flying insects but appears to be relatively harmless to
animals.
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Folklore: Used by Indians to poison fish. A medicinal tea made from the roots is said
to make children muscular and strong. A cold herb tea was used for male potency.
Goats Rue earned the names Devil's Shoestring and Catgut from its tough rootstocks.
A decoction of the roots has been used as a hair shampoo to prevent hair loss.
TRY THIS RECIPE
Medicinal herb tea: To 1 tsp. dried root add 1 pint boiling water steep 15 to 20 min.
take ½ cup 3 to 4 times a the day and at bedtime. |