Klip Dagga Seeds Leonotis Nepetifolia

Not ‘Wild Dagga, but the real deal Klip Dagga.

Though both cultivars of Dagga are delightful. It’s Klip Dagga, Leonotis Nepetifolia, that most folks are looking for when they think of growing Dagga for personal and recreational enjoyment.

Grown right here in the Missouri Ozarks on our homestead. Absolutely NO pesticides or cross pollination. Large 30 or more count seed packs of FRESH, first year after harvest seeds.

Please visit Little Poppy Mama on Instagram for more information on getting the MOST from your Klip Dagga.


Leonotis nepetifolia, A member of the mint family, it is native to Southern Africa and is used as a folk medicine among the native peoples for treating numerous ailments, and has shown some promise in studies. Tall, evergreen tropical plant produces loads of stunning peachy-orange flowers. Caution: this plant is a mild narcotic.


Klip Dagga in a nutshell


This literature survey of the phytochemistry, pharmacological and traditional applications of Leonotis leonurus L. R. has shown that the plant has diverse activities such as anticonvulsant, antinociceptive, anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic, antibacterial, anti-oxidant, anthelmintic activities and hypoglycemic properties, which justifies the herb use in the management and control of pain, arthritic, diabetes, dermatological, hypertension, anti-inflammatory and wound healing properties. Thirty seven secondary metabolites were reported, which includes 21 labdane diterpenes which are chemotaxonomic markers for the Leonotis genus and the mint family, Lamiaceae. The leaf, flowers and sepals essential oils are mostly constituted by monoterpenoids and sesquiterpenoids. The isolation of metabolites responsible for extracts activities is recommended and the data on clinical trials about the Leonotis leonurus herb and its extracts is of fundamental importance.



Traditional uses of the Klip Dagga


L. leonurus has many reputed traditional medicinal applications and is mainly taken orally or per rectum and as a topical application. Hottentots were particularly fond of smoking it instead of tobacco and used a decoction of the leaf as a strong purgative and as an emmenagogue. Early colonialists employed it in the treatment of leprosy. The leaf tea has a hypnotic effect, is diuretic and relieves headache. The leaf and stem decoction or inhalations have been used internally for cough, common cold, influenza, bronchitis, wound healing and asthma. The fresh stem juice is an infusion drunk for ‘blood impurity’. The infusions made from flowers and seeds, leaves or stems are widely used as tonics for tuberculosis, jaundice, muscular cramps, high blood pressure, diabetes, viral hepatitis, dysentery, and diarrhoea. Tea made from the whole plant is used for arthritis, piles, bladder and kidney disorder, obesity, cancer and rheumatism. The leaves and stems decoction are applied topically as a treatment for eczema, skin infections and itchiness. The leaves, roots and bark are widely used as an emetic for snakebites, bee and scorpion stings. The L. Leonurus smoke has marijuana-like effects.-pungent odour and is occasionally mixed with flowers and fruits. In ethnoveterinary the roots and leaves water drink is used in poultry, against cattle gall sickness and eye inflammation. Generally the plant is a general tonic, having reputed dermatological, hypertension, anti- inflammatory, pain and wound healing properties.


On the island of Trinidad the leaves are brewed as a tea for fever, coughs, womb prolapse and malaria. Sense it contains compounds that produce sedative effects it is utilized as a sedative in alternative medicine. This species is also known for its antispasmodic effects and appears to inhibit acetylcholine and histamine which is why it’s considered a natural anti-histamine. Antispasmodic is a term that refers to herbs, substances, drugs, compounds, or medicines that suppress muscle spasms.


Wild dagga is also much respected in the treatment of animals. The Tswana, Zulu and Xhosa make a strong brew of leaves, flowers and stems to use as an enema in sheep, goats and cattle, as well as humans. This brew is given to animals with respiratory problems and applied as a lotion to sores on stock and dogs, and as a wash for wounds, scratches, bites and stings.


The Zulu people use the root for snakebite and they sprinkle a concoction of the plant around their houses to keep snakes away. The Zulu and Xhosa make a strong brew of the leaves and use as a poultice for snakebites. They also use a tincture of the root bark internally for snake bite.


Anti-inflammatory


Cyclooxygenase (COX-1) inhibition was consistent for up to 1 year (92% inhibition) of plant material storage, while the inhibition deteriorated rapidly when the plant ageing process was accelerated. The flowering parts ethanol and chloroform extracts show strong hepatoprotective and anti- inflammatory activities in rats. The leaf and stems extracts (methanol and water) and essential oils also indicated anti- inflammation activity using the 5-lipoxygenase assay. The inflammatory cascade is complex and diverse, hence the need to do bioactivity guided fractionation to establish simpler fractions that exert COX-1, 5-lipoxygenase and antioxidant activity rather than isolating molecules that show a singular property. It is also common phenomena to find extracts that exert better activities than their purified components. Therefore, simple fractions would enable other pharmacological effects on a number of targets involved in effective trans-membrane drug delivery and place high concentrations of the active agent at the pathophysiologically relevant site. The dose ranges for the anti-inflammatory and analgesic properties are 25-75 mg/ml.