Lillian tilted her head and studied the sage leaf for a long minute of consideration. Finally, she said, "Cadra makes chicken with sage," in fluent Pavi, a little hand rising up to hook fingers down and jump her fist lightly through the air. That was the toddler's personal sign for the gorgeous kelvic girl -- a pouncing cat.
"Cadra seasons chicken with sage," Caelum translated for Lyn'nice in her best language, kontinese.
"Cooks," Lillian corrected.
A chuckle scuffed in the back of Caelum's throat and he repeated, "Cooks," while dropping into a crouch beside another row of bushes. A few brown leaves were tugged from the stalks as he absently occupied himself with pruning the garden. "I'm fluent in Pavi, but I'm just as good in kontinese as I am in with the common language, Lyn'nice." This explanation was provided off hand. "What I want to learn it tukant. Alright --"
And Caelum ducked his chin in a nod toward the plant he was pruning. "This is boneset. Notice the slender stalks and the frond-like leaves. They'll always been narrow, long, and come to a sharp point. As the seasons warms, it will flower into white blossoms. Little clusters, really, with small and rounded petals. I'm pointing it out to you because if you include boneset with sage in a tea then you have one of the best treatments for a cold and bronchitis I've ever seen. You want about two teaspoons of sage to one teaspoon of boneset and steep it in boiling fresh water for at least ten minutes before draining out the leaves. Add lemon juice if you can get your hands on any and also red root --" He jerked his chin an aisle down the garden at the red root plant. "If you have it."
"Sage. Saaaaaage. Sagesagesage." Meanwhile, Lillian practiced saying sage over and over in kontinese, all the while making the Cadra pouncing-cat hand motion.
Caelum smirked fondly at this and unraveled back to his feet, eyes turning toward Lyn'nice. "Teas and tonics are best for internal treatments. If you want to use it for dry scalp and itches, then you can get fresh leaves and macerate them into a prepared lotion or soap wash. I'll be honest, I haven't much had the opportunity or equipment on hand to work with my philters, so I rely a lot on teas, infusions, poultices, and purchasing prepared base ointments. I intend to dig deeper into it now." |