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English Plantain Seeds – Narrowleaf Plantain Medicinal Herb (Plantago lanceolata)

Original price $4.99 - Original price $4.99
Original price
$4.99
$4.99 - $4.99
Current price $4.99

It grows in every lawn, every meadow, every crack in the sidewalk — and most people walk right past it. But herbalists have known for over a thousand years that English Plantain (Plantago lanceolata) is one of the most versatile and accessible medicinal plants on earth. Named among the nine sacred herbs of Anglo-Saxon medicine in the 10th-century Lacnunga manuscript, ribwort plantain has been a cornerstone of European, Indigenous North American, and Chinese herbal traditions for millennia.

Grow it intentionally. Harvest it generously. Use it confidently.

*For informational and botanical purposes. Consult a qualified herbalist or healthcare provider before using any plant medicinally.*

Medicinal & Ethnobotanical Heritage

  • One of the nine sacred herbs: Named in the Anglo-Saxon Lacnunga manuscript (10th century) as waybread — one of the most revered healing plants of medieval Europe
  • Respiratory herb: Leaf tea traditionally used for coughs, bronchitis, and irritated mucous membranes; contains aucubin (iridoid glycoside) and mucilage with documented expectorant and soothing properties
  • First-aid plant: Fresh leaf poultice applied directly to insect stings, bee stings, minor cuts, and skin irritation — one of the most widely used field first-aid plants in folk medicine worldwide
  • Anti-inflammatory: Aucubin and acteoside have documented anti-inflammatory activity in peer-reviewed research
  • Demulcent: Mucilage content soothes irritated mucous membranes of the throat and digestive tract
  • Astringent: Tannin content supports wound healing and tightens tissues
  • Nutritive: Young leaves are edible — high in vitamins C and K and calcium; used in salads, pestos, and cooked greens across European folk food traditions

Why Grow English Plantain?

  • Extremely cold-hardy: Zones 3–9 — one of the most adaptable medicinal perennials available
  • Low-maintenance: Thrives in poor, compacted, clay, or dry soils — drought-tolerant once established
  • Continuous harvest: Leaves harvested throughout the growing season; seeds harvested when spikes turn brown
  • Four-season value: Evergreen rosette in mild climates; early spring growth provides one of the first medicinal harvests of the year
  • Open-pollinated: Save seeds year after year — self-seeds modestly in the garden
  • Pollinator value: Wind-pollinated but visited by bees collecting pollen from the distinctive ringed flower spikes

Growing Notes

  • Type: Hardy perennial; Zones 3–9
  • Germination: 10–21 days at 65–70°F
  • Sowing: Surface sow — seeds need light to germinate; press firmly into soil surface, do not cover with soil
  • Stratification: Cold stratification (30 days at 35–40°F) improves germination; or direct sow in fall for natural stratification
  • Light: Full sun to part shade
  • Soil: Highly adaptable — tolerates poor, compacted, clay, or dry soils; performs well in average garden soil
  • Spacing: 20–30 cm (8–12 in) apart
  • Harvest: Pick young leaves throughout the season for fresh use or drying; harvest seed spikes when they turn brown

In the Herbal Kitchen & Medicine Cabinet

Infuse dried leaves into a simple tea for respiratory support. Blend fresh young leaves into a green pesto with garlic, olive oil, and lemon. Apply a bruised fresh leaf directly to a bee sting or insect bite for immediate soothing relief — the classic field first-aid use that has served herbalists for centuries. Tincture the leaves in alcohol for a shelf-stable preparation, or dry and powder for use in capsules or salves.