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Calendula Uses and Plant Profile

Calendula Uses and Plant Monograph

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Calendula is a common garden flower in the Aster family that now grows in temperate climates all over the world. It generously blooms in bright orange and yellow blossoms throughout the summer and often reseeds itself, returning again every year. Besides offering beauty wherever it grows, calendula has been used for thousands of years for myriad medicinal applications.

Here’s a look at the many ways we can employ this brilliantly blooming plant for the skin.

 

Itches, Rashes, and Scratches

Think of calendula as an all-purpose plant for any manner of skin problems. Do you have itchy dry skin? Use some calendula cream or body butter. Have a mysterious rash? While figuring out the root cause of the rash, reach for calendula to soothe the discomfort.

For minor scratches or wounds, try a calendula salve or poultice. It promotes wound healing by stimulating proliferation and migration of fibroblasts.1 It is also mildly antimicrobial, helping to prevent infection.2

Calendula is one of my favorite herbs for dealing with diaper rash. I recommend it as a salve or cream and it can be used as a preventive as well. When tested on the bottoms of 33 children under the age of 3, calendula was found to be both safe and effective for diaper dermatitis.3

 

Bug Bites

Calendula can soothe many bug bites, including the bites of mosquitos and the stings of bees. Herbalist and aromatherapist Jade Schutes even uses it for those super-itchy chigger bites.

 

Skin Health

Herbalists have long used calendula for skin health, including it in luscious creams or even herbal steams. Science has further validated this use by showing that calendula improves elasticity and skin hydration.4 I recommend frequently using calendula creams on your skin to keep it healthy, soft, and pliable.

Calendula can also be used to promote skin health after the skin has been damaged.

Calendula creams, oils, and body butters can be used to soothe the skin after a sunburn. It helps to relieve inflammation and pain while promoting new tissue growth.

Calendula can protect skin after it has been exposed to the side effects of radiation therapy. One study showed that calendula worked better than the regularly prescribed pharmaceutical. In the study, 254 patients were given either trolamine (TEA) or calendula cream to apply after receiving radiation treatments. The researchers found, “The occurrence of acute dermatitis of grade 2 or higher was significantly lower (41% v 63%; P<0.001) with the use of calendula than with trolamine. Moreover, patients receiving calendula had less frequent interruption of radiotherapy and significantly reduced radiation-induced pain.”5

 

Skin Burns

In addition to supporting skin that has been burnt by the sun or radiation, calendula also helps to heal tissues that have been burned by fire or by heat in the kitchen. Fresh poultices and hydrosol washes are two of my favorite ways to use calendula for this purpose.

 
 

“It is especially applicable to severe burns, to promote healing and to prevent the formation of a contracting scar.”

- Finley Ellingwood, American Materia Medica, 1919

 
 

Prevention of Scars

Calendula can be used to decrease scar tissue whether it is from wounds or from surgical scars. I like to apply it regularly as an infused oil combined with St. John’s Wort oil and rose hip seed oil.

 

Varicose Veins

Calendula can be used both externally and internally to support blood vessel health and decrease varicosities, including hemorrhoids and varicose veins. I like to recommend it internally combined in a tincture or tea with yarrow and horse chestnut when using it for this purpose.

 

Ulcers and Wounds

As a vulnerary, Calendula promotes the healing of wounds, even serious ones. In one study, patients with venous leg ulcers were divided into two groups. One group was treated with a calendula ointment twice daily for three weeks. The other group of people were treated with saline solution dressings. After three weeks, those being treated with the calendula ointment had a statistically significant acceleration of wound healing over those being treated with saline solution.6

Calendula’s wound healing, antimicrobial, and inflammatory modulating effects will also work well for internal ulcers. It works best as a long infused tea for these gastrointestinal “wounds.”

 

Chicken Pox

I first learned from Lesley Tierra that calendula tincture can be applied to chicken pox sores to decrease the pain and itching. I’ve since seen it work wonders in this application!

 

Dandruff

Regular applications of a calendula based ointment can help to decrease dandruff. This may be due to its antimicrobial effects (dandruff can be caused by fungus) or to its vulnerary and inflammatory modulating effects.

 

Postpartum Care

Calendula is one of my favorite herbs for mothers in postpartum care. The flowers can be made into a strong tea for a sitz bath to heal the perineum (I often combine this with plantain and Uva-Ursi). The fresh flower poultice or salve can be used on tender nipples. I’ve seen the tincture applied topically for successfully eliminating severe mastitis. Even babies can benefit from calendula as a diaper rash cream or a gentle wash for their skin. It can also be used for cradle cap, a type of seborrheic dermatitis that affects the heads of infants.

 

How does calendula address so many different issues in the skin and mucous membranes?

Calendula is filled with flavonoids and antioxidants including carotenoids, quercetin, and lutein. But calendula is more than the sum of its isolated constituents. For example, one study shows that when compared to the isolated constituent of quercetin, calendula as a whole plant works better to decrease human gingival fibroblast mediated collagen degradation.7

Another way of assessing how calendula might work is its herbal actions. Some herbs may be either astringent or demulcent. Calendula does it all! Its vulnerary action heals wounds. It modulates inflammation. It is antimicrobial and immune stimulating. This is one dynamic and helpful plant!

As I wrote earlier, if you were to only learn one thing about calendula, it is that it shines as an herb for the skin. But, it has several other important uses as well.

 

Leaky Gut (Intestinal Permeability)

Leaky gut, sometimes referred to as intestinal permeability, is essentially a wound of the intestines. Your intestines are covered in small fingerlike projections called villi. Herbalist jim mcdonald likens the appearance of the villi to shag carpet and I think that’s pretty accurate. These villi can become damaged by pharmaceuticals (both prescribed and over-the-counter), excessive alcohol consumption, food allergies or intolerances (a major issue with people who have celiac disease), processed foods, imbalanced gut flora (called dysbiosis), and even infections.

Leaky gut can lead to many digestive problems and is thought to be a root cause of many autoimmune disorders.8 While addressing and removing the root cause of the problem is key, herbs can be concurrently used to repair and heal the gut lining. Calendula and plantain are a favorite pairing for this effect and are most often recommended as a tea for healing the gut.

 

Liver Support

Although the ability to heal wounds is often the most popular way to use calendula, it also offers mild liver support. A strong calendula infusion has a decidedly bitter taste, which can give us a clue to its affinity for supporting the liver and clearing liver stagnation. Matt Wood says it can be used to decrease elevated liver enzymes.9 Herbalists also use it to promote delayed menses as well as painful menstrual cramping, both of which can be part of a liver stagnation pattern.

 

Diaphoretic Action

Though it isn’t especially strong, calendula tea, when taken as a warm infusion has a diaphoretic effect that can be used to support the fever process.

 

Cancer and Stagnant Lymph

Calendula has been used in several in vitro studies for its effect on cancer cells and has been shown to be effective against the cells of colon cancer, leukemia, and melanoma.10 The results are promising, but human clinical trials are needed to confirm its beneficial effects.

We do know that calendula stimulates the immune system. It contains polysaccharides similar to marshmallow (Althaea officinalis), which is also known for this effect. Calendula is used to stimulate lymphatic drainage and is used for all sorts of stagnant lymph conditions, such as swollen glands, breast cysts, pelvic cysts, and intestinal bloating.11

“Calendula acts to mobilize white blood cells, stimulate lymphatic drainage, decrease inflammation of the lymph nodes, and generally support lymphatic circulation.”

- Paul Bergner, Medical Herbalism: Clinical Articles and Case Studies

 
 

Antimicrobial Action

Calendula also has antimicrobial effects and herbalists use it for fungal infections and preventing bacterial infections as it heals wounds.

Calendula is commonly used for fungal infections, mastitis, thrush, gum disease, urinary tract infections (UTIs), and conjunctivitis (pink eye). Some herbalists report that when using it as an antimicrobial, it works best as a tincture, although you would want to use a tea if you were making an eye wash.

 

As Food

In addition to being used as medicine, calendula has also been used as a flavoring and food for hundreds of years. It was popularly added to rice to impart a saffron-like color and was also historically used in soups and broths. It is also a beautiful addition to a summer salad topped with flowers! When using it as food, it is the petals that are most commonly used (rather than the entire flower heads).

 Botanically Speaking

Calendula is an herbaceous perennial, summer annual, or winter annual (depending on climate) that grows up to two feet tall. It may have originally been from southern Europe, but now grows, especially in gardens, all over the world.


By Fanghong [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

The flower heads are orange or yellow or a combination of the two. I’ve also seen ornamental calendula flowers with even more color variations. As is typical in the Aster family, there are both ray and disk flowers. The ray flowers (“petals”) have two little notches at the end.

By André Karwath aka Aka [CC BY-SA 2.5], via Wikimedia Commons

The flowers have significant bracts which are fragrant and resinous.

The flowers bloom generously through the growing season and thrive in full sun.

The oblong-lanceolate leaves are hairy on both sides and grow about 2-7 inches. The leaves are also fragrant and resinous.

Calendula seeds are a curved achene that look like a small, knobby worm.


By H. Zell [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Using Calendula

If you can grow your own calendula, do it! It is easy to grow and even does well in containers. Having calendula around is a delight! The bright sunny blooms are beautiful and easy to harvest. Your freshly harvested calendula will be much stronger than anything you buy dried. If stored well, dried calendula is best used within 6 months to a year.

 

Harvesting Tips

Once calendula starts blooming, harvest the entire flower heads daily (including the bracts and petals). This will inspire new flower heads to emerge. I like to harvest the flower buds as they are just opening. I learned from Cascade Anderson Geller that this is when the flower is the most potent. Fully opened flower heads can be used as well. I strongly prefer the orange flowers to the yellow.

Harvest in the morning after any dew has burned off and the flowers are completely dry. You will quickly notice that a slightly aromatic sticky resin covers your picking hand. That’s great – you’ve got good medicine!

Calendula flowers can be tricky to dry. I place them on a drying rack and spread them out so that individual flowers aren’t touching. A dehydrator may be necessary in hot/humid climates. Once they are completely dry, I store them in a paper bag. I have lost a couple of batches of calendula flowers that I stored in glass jars.

 

Preparation Tips

Calendula can be prepared in a variety of ways.

The tincture is said to be the strongest preparation for calendula’s antimicrobial properties. It can be diluted to use on chicken pox or as a cleansing wash for wounds and fungal infections. I like to wilt the flower heads overnight before infusing with alcohol.

It infuses very nicely into oil, which can then be used in salves, creams, soaps, body butters, facial serums, and many other preparations. I recommend drying the flower heads before infusing into oil.

Calendula makes a wonderful hydrosol that can be spritzed on sunburns, varicose veins, acne, eczema, or simply to maintain healthy skin.

It is also made into a succus, which is a pressing of the fresh plant juice that is then preserved with alcohol.

Many texts recommend using it as a strong infusion. To make this, infuse 1 ounce of calendula flowers into a quart of just boiled water. Let it steep for 4-8 hours. Strain and drink within a day. This is a fairly bitter blend that will most likely need to be sipped during the day. Although not entirely pleasant to drink, this is the best preparation for healing internal wounds and supporting the liver, immune system, and lymphatic circulation.

 

Special Considerations

Some people are allergic to members of the Aster family and may also have a reaction to calendula. If you know you are allergic to chamomile, treat calendula with caution.

Summary

Calendula is many herbalists’ first choice for any number of skin issues, whether it is healing wounds, soothing rashes, or simply promoting healthy skin. It is also incredibly helpful in healing the “internal skin,” which is the mucous membranes. In addition to being a skin-healing wonder, calendula also stimulates the immune and lymphatic systems, supports liver health, and is antimicrobial. It’s a delight to grow, fun to harvest, and can be made into a multitude of herbal potions, from teas and tinctures to creams and salves. This is a beautiful and useful herb to nurture and enjoy.

 

 
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Written by Rosalee de la Forêt

Rosalee de la Forêt is an herbalist and author of the bestselling book Alchemy of Herbs: Transform Everyday Ingredients Into Foods & Remedies That Heal and co-author of Wild Remedies: How to Forage Healing Foods and Craft Your Own Herbal Medicine. She’s a registered herbalist with the American Herbalists Guild. Explore Rosalee's website and podcastAll content and photos in this article are © Rosalee de la Forêt.

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