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  1. Curled Dock, Yellow Dock. Scientific name: Rumex crispus. Abundance: plentiful. What: very young leaves, seeds. How: leaves may be eaten raw; roast seeds or grind seeds into flour. Where: fields, disturbed areas, stream and pond banks. When: summer, fall, winter, spring.

  2. 3 lut 2020 · Curly dock gets its other common name (yellow dock) from its yellow root, which gets its color from the compound anthraquinone. This compound has a laxative effect, making yellow dock root an excellent remedy for constipation. Furthermore, it stimulates the flow of bile, which aids digestion.

  3. Rumex crispus, the curly dock, [1] curled dock or yellow dock, is a perennial flowering plant in the family Polygonaceae, native to Europe and Western Asia. [2]

  4. 16 mar 2019 · There are a number of rumex species, but the most common and well-known is Rumex crispus. It goes by the common names Yellow Dock and Curly Dock. Other common rumex species include: Rumex obtusifolius – Bitter Dock or Broad Leaf Dock, as the name suggests, this type is generally quite bitter and has large broad leaves.

  5. 23 kwi 2024 · Also commonly known as curly dock, yellow dock’s botanical name is Rumex crispus (Rumex meaning sour, crispus meaning curly). Yellow dock is a wild, weedy plant that can be found growing along roadsides, on edges of paths or fields, in waste areas, or in other open areas.

  6. Curly dock (Rumex crispus) is one of the many wild edible invasive plants we have in North America. It's toxic to horses, cattle, and sheep, and the seeds are poisonous to poultry, so it's not something you want in your pasture. And if you do have it, it's not easy to get rid of.

  7. Curly dock is found virtually everywhere in the world, naturalized and in some places invasive. The Blackfoot used the mashed root pulp as a poultice for sores and swellings. This plant has medical uses in European herbal medicine as well.

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