Where is Crimson?
by Wild Thing
Title
Where is Crimson?
Artist
Wild Thing
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
I couldn't resist titling this the way I did ... but red clover is a fond childhood memory as well. As a child I wandered all over the place. While not growing up on a farm, we did live in a rural area, surrounded by pastures & fields. They were my playgrounds. So these plants were more familiar to me than the ones found in gardens in the city.
Trifolium pratense (red clover) is a herbaceous species of flowering plant in the bean family Fabaceae, native to Europe, Western Asia and northwest Africa, but planted and naturalised in many other regions.
It is a herbaceous, short-lived perennial plant, variable in size, growing to 20�80�cm tall. The leaves are alternate, trifoliate (with three leaflets), each leaflet 15�30�mm long and 8�15�mm broad, green with a characteristic pale crescent in the outer half of the leaf; the petiole is 1�4�cm long, with two basal stipules that are abruptly narrowed to a bristle-like point. The flowers are dark pink with a paler base, 12�15�mm long, produced in a dense inflorescence.
It is widely grown as a fodder crop, valued for its nitrogen fixation, which increases soil fertility. For these reasons, it is used as a green manure crop. Several cultivar groups have been selected for agricultural use, mostly derived from T.�pratense var. sativum. It has become naturalised in many temperate areas, including the Americas and Australasia as an escape from cultivation.
Red clover is commonly used to make a sweet-tasting herbal tea. It is an ingredient in some recipes for essiac tea.
Medical uses
Trifolium pratense is used in traditional medicine of India as deobstruent, antispasmodic, expectorant, sedative, anti-inflammatory and antidermatosis agent.
In alternative medicine, red clover is promoted as a treatment for a variety of human maladies, including coughs, disorders of the lymphatic system and a variety of cancers. However, according to the American Cancer Society, "available clinical evidence does not show that red clover is effective in treating or preventing cancer, menopausal symptoms, or any other medical conditions".
Dietary amounts of red clover are safe, but medicinal quantities may cause rash-like reactions, muscle ache, headache, nausea, vaginal bleeding in women, and slow blood clotting.
Red clover contains coumestrol, a phytoestrogen. Due to its activity on oestrogen receptors, red clover is contraindicated in people with a history of breast cancer, endometriosis, ovarian cancer, uterine cancer, uterine fibroids or other oestrogen-sensitive conditions, although some authors have suggested the high isoflavone content counteracts this, and even provides benefits in these conditions.
Due to its coumarin derivatives, T.�pratense should be used in caution in individuals with coagulation disorders or currently undergoing anticoagulation therapy.
It is metabolised by CYP3A4 and therefore caution should be used when taking it with other drugs using this metabolic pathway.
Diseases:
Red clover is subject to bacterial as well as fungal diseases, including the red clover rust, Uromyces trifolii-repentis var. fallens. Other problems include parasitic nematodes (roundworms) and viruses.
Symbolisms:
Trifolium pratense is the national flower of Denmark and the state flower of Vermont.
Uploaded
June 17th, 2015
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