Pennyworts Making Sense

Pennyworts in blossom

A Pennywort For Your Thoughts

It’s one of those practices of civilization that plants with little flavor or calories — lettuce for example — are esteemed and popular, but, plants that can save your life have herbicides heaped on them. Case in point: Hydrocotyle bonariensis (high-dro-KOT-ill-lee boe-nar-ree-EN-sis) above, and its cousin, Centella erecta, (sen-TEL-la ee-RECK-tuh ).

In fact, a report in the Journal of Natural Medicines, 13 Feb 2008, found two new antioxidants in the Centella asiatica, discussed below, and presumably those are also to be found in the Centella erecta, below.

These perky relatives of the celery clan are prime invaders of southern lawns.  You can’t blame them. Florida lawns are nearly perfect conditions: Sunny above, damp below with only decapitated grass for competition. That’s a pennywort’s definition of heaven, or a coinwort’s definition. It’s also the dollar weed’s idea, too.  These “moneyworts” have many names and cash attached to their name, in more ways than one:  You can buy them in powdered form in the health food stores; as tea or soda in Asian markets, or on their produce stand; as a side dish in an Oriental restaurant; or, change under your feet.  In fact, I win a lot of bets with pennyworts: It makes a lot of cents.

I learned long ago at social functions not to mention I’m a writer because someone always thinks their life story is fascinating and will sell millions of books if I would only write it, payment out of the proceeds, of course.  I’ve actually thought of telling people my occupation is robbing banks: I set my own hours, get to travel, I’m home on the weekends, I meet interesting people, the pay is good , I have federal holidays off and the vacations are long…. Anyway, everytime I say I know a thing or two about weeds and can find something to eat in almost anyone’s lawn that is often followed by “prove it.”  In our manicured, raked and landscaped suburbs, the pennywort usually saves the day.  It may also save lives.

Plants are natural chemical factories. These weeds have a chemical, like celery, that helps the aorta and  blood vessels relax. They do that by increasing the amount of nitrous oxide available and that can lower blood pressure.  In India, Centella has been used for that purpose for some 3,000 years. Nice of modern science to confirm it.  The plant has a host of other properties as well from affecting blood cell development to wound care to reducing edema. It’s a little plant that can. By the way, Centella means “little coin” because the leaf surface is shiny and reflects light (and why all of the money names.) Erecta is upright. Hydrocotyle is from Greek meaning flat cup — the leaves can hold water — and Bonariensis translates into “of Buenos Aires” which is another way of saying South America, where they thought it came from originally.

The most common is the native pennywort, the round Hydrocotyle bonariensis, and the main lawn interloper. It’s about the size of a silver dollar under good conditions. Its stem attaches to the center of the leaf. Next is its close cousin, the Marsh Pennywort, or Hydrocotyle umbellata (um-bell-AY-tuh  which means with umbels.)  Equally edible, one often sees wading limpkins running across the top of floating masses of Marsh Pennywort, hoping to turn bug into bird. The Hydrocotyle bonariensis and Hydrocotyle umbellata are similar in appearance except the latter can easily grow far larger.

Centella erecta

The Centella erecta is smaller than either and less common. Its one leaf is shovel- or heart-shaped and the stem is attached off center. This particular wetwort used to be called Centella asiatica (from Asia)  but geneticists say the Centella in the southern United States is not exactly like the Centella in southern Asia, but they are so close only geneticists can tell them apart, or care to.  While not a native, Centella erecta has been in North America for perhaps thousands of years, hitch hiking on the feet of wading birds they think. Incidentally, Hydrocotyle mexicana is also edible.

In Asian cooking the Centella is often called Gotu Kola. It‘s used, for example, as a leafy green in Sri Lankan cooking. As the dish “mallung” it is a traditional accompaniment with rice and curry. It’s also served with vegetarian dishes such as parippu.  Charmaine Solomon, author of the Encyclopedia of Asian Food, says the Centellas:

“… have a slight bitter tang and are good to eat combined with shallots and lightly seasoned. Another way this leaf is taken is as a sweetened beverage. Look in the refrigerator section of large Asian grocery stores and there, among the canned soft drinks featuring tropical fruit juices, you will also find pennywort drink. The canned version does not appeal much in colour or flavour; but the drink made with fresh pennywort leaves is entirely different and very refreshing. Frothy and bright green, its piquant herb flavour sweetened by the addition of sugar syrup and poured over crushed ice, it quenches thirst and does you good at the same time. In Vietnamese areas, certain shops make it to order. If you have a supply of leaves, it is easy enough to make at home.”

If you are inclined to nibble some pennywort  or Gotu Kola you should do two things. First, make sure you have someone who knows what they are doing identify them, particularly the Gotu Kola. There are a couple of look alikes in Florida that could confuse a novice. And, more than that, as a water-loving plants they’re quick to pick up and store pollution and bacteria or that pesticide you put on your lawn. Collect them from clean places.

And penultimately, in folklore pennywort tea supposedly helped one Chinese master live to 256. It also helped a king fulfill his husbandly duties to his 50 wives….. That should make it disappear from lawns.

Pennywort Salad

From Encyclopedia of Asian Food

By Charmaine Solomon

2 bunches gotu-kola or

about 250 g/8 oz/ 2 cups leaves without stems

3 shallots or

1 small onion, finely chopped

Good squeeze lime or

lemon juice

1 sliced chilli (optional)

75 g/2-1/2 oz/1 cup fresh grated coconut

Salt to taste

1/2 teaspoon sugar

Wash well and strip leaves from stems. Shred finely with a sharp knife, combine with other ingredients and serve immediately. The flavor is slightly sour, slightly bitter. Some people prefer this salad to be lightly cooked, if so bring a tablespoon of water and 1/2 teaspoon salt to the boil in a wok or pan, add all ingredients and toss over heat briefly, stopping before leaves lose their green color.

Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile

IDENTIFICATION: Hydrocotyle bonariensis, very smooth glabrous, stems slender, creeping; leaves on long slender stems, leave scalloped and stem attached in the middle of the leaf.  With the Centella it attaches on the edge.

TIME OF YEAR: Year round

ENVIRONMENT: Any place wet to damp, lawns, parks, any place kept moist. Don’t collect them from ditches.

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Raw or cooked like any other green. Singificant amounts raw can lower blood pressure.

Related Post

{ 94 comments… add one }
  • robert January 11, 2012, 4:53 pm

    Can you find pennyworth in Pennsylvania? and if you can where at and are they all year around in this area?

    Reply
    • Green Deane January 11, 2012, 10:00 pm

      They make it to Virginia. Where the winter is mild they can be eaten year round.

      Reply
      • Karen October 21, 2018, 6:07 pm

        I live in Virginia and I just grow it in pots so that I can bring it inside in the winter to keep it going. Then in spring the pots go back outside.

        Reply
  • Rosemarie February 17, 2012, 11:01 am

    I am planning on letting the weeds grow this year in my Florida Panhandle backyard.
    But I have two problems I don’t know how to handle:

    1) I’m pretty sure I have pennyroyal (centella erecta), which was introduced in my neighbors yard a few years ago. The leaf is according to your descrption, but it is not shiney (yet?) and the stem is only about an inch talll which makes the weed look more like a groundcover and hard to harvest. I’m thinking it’s because it likes a lot of water and is not getting it. Not sure how to proceed with this – will it eventually choke out all the other weeds and grass (what’s left)?

    2) I have a similar problem with oxalis which right now is a rusty brown and it too is spreading like a ground cover taking over large areas.

    Of course I have the other weeds like chickweed which I welcome and eat and hawksbeard. But if you could give me some advice on the above mentioned I’d appreciate it very much.

    Reply
    • Green Deane February 20, 2012, 7:13 am

      I problem I am having is that pennyroyal is not Centella erecta. Centellas are usually called Gotu Kola.

      Reply
  • Rosemarie February 21, 2012, 8:14 am

    I’m sorry I meant to write ‘pennywort’ – I just saw the mistake now after coming back to the site. BTW I’ve signed up for the forum and will ask future questions there to make it more convenient for you and others to answer.

    Reply
  • Joyce March 12, 2012, 10:28 pm

    Thanks for the info. I have a few pennyworts growing in a pot right now. By the way, what other plants in Florida can be confused for pennyworts?

    Reply
    • Green Deane March 13, 2012, 6:36 am

      None that cause great harm. Look for the peltate leaf.

      Reply
    • Helen Palmer August 31, 2022, 10:03 pm

      hi, Joyce-

      I too have dollarweed growing in pots- the original plant was grubbed up on Tybee Island. I live in Aspen, Colorado at about 8000 feet, so the pots come inside for most of the year. one pot has blooms on it! nice to know someone else loves this beautiful plant. Helen Palmer

      Reply
  • Six April 18, 2012, 6:56 pm

    Thanks! I have a yard full and in my garden. I was hoping this thing was edible…Yeah! My daughter just went to eat some and liked it.
    Again thanks

    Reply
  • Jamie May 12, 2012, 10:55 am

    I am in a lot of confusion how penny wort (hydrocotyle bonariensis) can be Gotu Kola (centella asiatica). I thought I had Gotu Kola which is what I was hoping for, but rather I find that it is the pennywort. Are these related and interchangeable? I am looking to use them for medicinal herbs.

    Reply
    • Green Deane May 13, 2012, 9:42 pm

      Hydrocotyle bonariensis is not Centella asiatica or Centella erecta. They are, however, closely related and used in similar ways.

      Reply
  • Mary Meyer May 21, 2012, 10:37 pm

    What do you know about Obolaria Virginica – I don’t recall seeing any leaves on this pennywort.

    Reply
    • Green Deane May 22, 2012, 7:28 am

      Don’t get confused by the common name. Obolaria virginica is a different genus than the Hydrocotyls. The common name has nothing to do with the identification or use of a plant. There are some 18 “pigweeds” in the United States, some edible some deadly. Go by the scientific name, always.

      Reply
  • RICHARD June 23, 2012, 9:20 pm

    if you boil pennyworts befor eating them do they still lower blood pressure or do you have to just pick them and eat them.

    Reply
    • Green Deane June 30, 2012, 7:17 am

      Cooking reduces their medicinal qualities.

      Reply
  • jamie morgan August 7, 2012, 3:14 pm

    Is there a place I can buy Asian Pennywort seeds? I’ve been reading about the help benefits of this plant am am interested in growing some in my garden.

    Reply
    • Green Deane August 7, 2012, 5:02 pm

      Where to you live. They are found in nearly every lawn locally.

      Reply
  • richard August 28, 2012, 7:08 am

    how many pennyworts do you need to eat a day to lower blood pressure. thanks

    Reply
    • Green Deane August 29, 2012, 12:25 pm

      My herbalist friend Darryl Patton says: “I would recommend taking the dried leaves and steep a teaspoon of the leaves in boiling water for 10 minutes (one cup of water covered with a saucer) and drink three to four times a day. Just be aware that some people will occasionally have a mild allergic reaction to this. I would also consider combining it with Gingko for better results. If you want something even better, you might want to consider the use of Winter Huckleberry. It is very fast and effective…”

      Reply
      • Francis Sherman December 7, 2016, 3:41 pm

        I heard To lower blood pressure The cranberry Flavor like tea Hibiscus sabdariffa (roselle)
        (flor de Jamica which can be found in Mexican grocery stores )
        Is supposed to reduce it
        (If you pick it yourself The calyx not the flower which surrounds the flower)

        (it is listed on this site as Florida cranberry , but think up North (Of FL) You can harvest it , but have to replant every year) unless I am mistaken, and doesn’t flower early enough)

        Reply
  • Virginia Lawhorne November 13, 2012, 11:22 am

    My husband and I bought a home this summer and found what I now know is hydrocotyle bonariensis growing profusely, thanks to your youtube video. We feel very fortunate to have this very useful “weed”! Thank you for your very specific information.

    Reply
  • Ariana November 27, 2012, 6:18 pm

    Hi, I see what i believe is dollarweed all over the place. It gets really big, about as big as my hand, and has these long stems that are easy to pull out of the ground and are purple at the end. I noticed the big ones have these really stringy fibers when you pop part of the stem off. They smell super strong when I pick them. The leaves are slightly translucent, and the stem is smooth and shimmery. You can see spots of green on it (the stem). There is a yellow/white spot at the center where the stem grows on the bottom. There are about 17 veins that run outwards from the stem with little veins that offshoot and connect with the other veins. It eventually reaches the perimeter. I noticed that the vein ends in the center of each frilly edge. It looked a little bit like a runner when I picked it, but not much. It is really shiny on top. It ranges from light green to dark green, and it is kind of rough. As it dies, it gets these speckles of yellow and then turns a complete gold. Is this dollarweed? Also, what look alikes are there? The only ones I’ve heard of is Ponyfoot, and I read it was edible. Thanks!

    Reply
    • Green Deane December 11, 2012, 12:04 pm

      There are several species of Dollarweed in Florida, they can be used the same way. Got a picture?

      Reply
  • Sarah January 26, 2013, 6:23 am

    Oh hip hip horay! I live in Sydney, Australia, on the Northern Beaches and have tried in vain to start a vegetable patch but it kept being overrun by Hydrocotyle bonariensis. Its prolific on our sandy and ocasionally boggy block. We were at a complete loss and have even invested in a couple of piglets to clear out the patch (its a big patch, 25 x 25m). But something told me to google pennywort again to see if it was ok for the pigs and bazinga! It’s fantastic for us too! Thank you for the informative article, guess what we’re juicing tomorrow morning!

    Reply
  • deekeath May 4, 2013, 9:00 am

    Hi, getting ready to put pennywort into a couple “goldfish” ponds. I gather it is edible for humans but just want to double check that it is not toxic in any way for a dog or cat if they eat some as well? Thanks!

    Reply
  • Travis May 16, 2013, 2:18 pm

    Located dollar weeds in the yard, but also something like it.
    Uncertain of type for it is more like centella for a smooth stem comes up from rhisome and attaches to oval leaf to the side and at the end of a narrow notch. From the attachment, there seems to be several veins radiating with smaller divisions. Leaf texture smooth with top glossier than reverse side.
    Thumb sized leaf is green but the scalloping is more pointy at apex than round.
    Roots at nodes of rhisome with 1 to 5 stems growing from nodes. No seen flowering at this time. Rhisome is white with purple tints at nodes. Thin roots. Environment is yard, partial shade to sunny, damp soil, slight incline. NE Florida. 1 week since the long rain. May 15th.

    Reply
    • Green Deane May 16, 2013, 4:27 pm

      Another lowly that grows with them is Dichondra carolinensis .

      Reply
      • Travis May 16, 2013, 8:27 pm

        Thanks Deane.
        I found a good photo of Centella asiatica. It’s notch is wider I think. – I may have to watch it grow a bit longer. I may just plant the sample I took and watch it so that the mower isn’t always getting it.

        Reply
  • Nina July 30, 2013, 7:26 pm

    Can you eat the stem as well ?

    Reply
  • Nina July 31, 2013, 3:07 pm

    Green Deane you are awesome !

    Reply
  • Stanley August 19, 2013, 8:17 am

    Dear Green Deane, thanks very much for your informative website and info about the hydrocotyle species. We have a lot of floating pennywort ( hydrocotyle ranunculoides) in our local lake here in Uganda, can I use this species the same way Hydrocotyle Asiatica is used in Herbal medicine ? Whilst I am a trained herbalist myself I just thought your input would be useful…?

    Reply
    • Green Deane August 19, 2013, 3:18 pm

      As far as I know they can all be used the same way.

      Reply
  • Tisha August 19, 2013, 10:01 am

    Hi There,
    I wanted to know where do I get Asian Pennywort seeds in Boston, MA.

    Reply
  • Jeremy September 28, 2013, 6:43 pm

    I’m at the beach in Texas right now. I see what I believe to be pennywort, but some of the leaves are a few are a couple inches (perhaps larger) in diameter. Can marsh pennywort grow in coastal areas away from water?

    Reply
    • Green Deane September 29, 2013, 8:48 pm

      If there is enough fresh water, yes. Why not send a picture or post it on the Green Deane Forum on the UFO page.

      Reply
  • Don Nguyen September 30, 2013, 5:53 pm

    I have grown Asian pennyworts for a while for my family daily consumption. It indeed cures my borderline high blood pressure. The only way I have been doing is to make a drink out of it, the way Vietnamese people have been doing for hundreds of years. Use a blender and with a bowl full of pennyworts. Blend then well with a cup or two and filter out the juice. Mix a tablespoon of sugar then put it refrigerator for couple hours. It is very refleshing and healthy drink.

    Reply
  • David November 7, 2013, 8:11 am

    This is the first southern wild edible that I have contradictory confidence in my identification of, thanks to you Green Deane, and your excellent ability to impart knowledge clearly and concisely without ever being pedantic. I can hardly wait to attend a spring class. Thanks again for a great class in Jacksonville.

    Reply
  • Christopher de Vidal January 24, 2014, 11:29 am

    We have oodles of hydrocotyle bonariensis in Jacksonville, but I couldn’t find any recipes for making the tea and/or cold drink. Can someone help?

    Reply
  • Christopher de Vidal January 24, 2014, 11:33 am

    I found this warning: “PLEASE NOTE: Ingesting large quantities of this herb is not advised as it can cause headaches and may also interfere with hypoglycemic medication.”
    http://www.ageless.co.za/pennywort.htm

    Reply
  • una harrison February 3, 2014, 3:38 am

    c
    Can anyone please tell me how to make Pennywort Tea.
    I have been diagnosed with arthritis of the neck spine.
    I have Pennywort growing in my garden and regularly eat fresh leaves, but I would like to know how to make Pennywort Tea.
    Thank you
    Una Harrison Perth. W.Australia

    Reply
    • Green Deane February 3, 2014, 5:50 am

      They just dry them into a tea material. Usually that is in the sun on a hot dry day or on low heat in an oven.

      Reply
  • Bigoledude April 27, 2014, 5:09 am

    Do you like the flavor of RAW dollarweed? If I had the time and the money for postage, I’d send some to whoever wanted some to start. I suppose drinking the tea is not the most effective way of using dollarweed to combat high blood pressure?

    Reply
  • Loretta June 19, 2014, 6:58 pm

    Can marsh pennywort be used in the same manner as Asian pennywort (Gotu Kola)?

    Reply
  • Lysa July 27, 2014, 7:38 pm

    Are the dollar weed blossoms also edible?

    Reply
  • Lysa July 28, 2014, 12:33 am

    Cool! They look yummy, but wasn’t sure.
    Thanks GD!
    Would love to attend a class in Jax if you ever have a later one. (2nd shifter and 20 miles from the usual spot)

    Reply
  • Paul November 11, 2014, 9:03 pm

    According to USF plant atlas the accepted name for the Centella is asiatica- http://www.florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/Plant.aspx?id=709&syn_name=Centella+erecta. Curious on the source you mention how geneticists have separated them. I’ll be sure to take a nibble next time I’m out in the field!

    Reply
    • Green Deane November 12, 2014, 8:29 pm

      Botanical names are like the tide, they ebb and flow and eddy around with each new edition.

      Reply
  • Lindsay January 2, 2015, 2:25 am

    I take or eat two leaves a day and drink water at least two glasses a day and my arthritis has gone. Thanks to this herb. Nothing else has worked for me.

    Reply
  • jd March 18, 2015, 3:50 pm

    So, how do you get rid of these weeds?

    Reply
    • Green Deane March 19, 2015, 7:55 pm

      Eat them… and or water your lawn less.

      Reply
  • Ross April 7, 2015, 11:31 pm

    Could the leaves of Gotu kola be preserved for a period of approx 3 months ……….if so how could it be done ?………reason being to have a supply while on holidays…………
    Ross……..

    Reply
  • debby boots December 30, 2015, 6:59 pm

    can you use (pennywort) hydrocotyle bonariensis same as centella, ie raw in drinks? Please send your address as I don’t like the process of donating on line. I also wrote little book, Cattail Cakes and
    Chickweed Snakes, in 80’s and have Florida’s Incredible Wild Edibles by Richard Deuerling and Peggy Lantz. You have expanded the very needed appreciation and use of common plants way more than Euell Gibbons. I lived on Sanibel and New Smyrna Beach and now in Hilton Head, SC. Am continuing to search and fix weeds and by luck found you. Absolutely great stuff you’re doing. I’m putting in little nature id trail where I live and have used your site for each native plant describing how used. Thanks so much. Debby Boots

    Reply
    • Green Deane December 31, 2015, 6:44 am

      Yes, you can use Centela for the Hydrocotyle but the flavor is different, far more bitter. Most don’t like the taste and prefer the pennywort.

      Reply
  • Brad March 22, 2016, 7:36 pm

    Hey, i have a large infestation of pennywort in my yard in NC.I live on a small lake and they love it.When I pull the plants I always see beautiful large roots ,and have often wondered if they are edible. I hope they are.

    Reply
    • Green Deane March 22, 2016, 9:16 pm

      I have never read anything about the roots being edible, so I don’t know.

      Reply
  • Leslie April 11, 2016, 10:29 pm

    Hi Deane, What can I do if I suspect the penny wort has been sprayed with pesticides. Can I transplant the new growth, kinda like seeding? Thanks Deane.

    Reply
    • Green Deane April 12, 2016, 5:36 pm

      Yes… but usually if they are growing they have not been sprayed.

      Reply
  • Suzanne Troub July 18, 2016, 11:30 pm

    I have a potentially silly question. Is the nutritional food quality the same for the centella asiatic(gotu kola) as the dollar weed? There are noteable differences as far as physical descriptions go. So I was wondering if the full round leaves were different from the shovel shaped leaves nutritionally as well.

    Reply
    • Green Deane July 19, 2016, 1:46 am

      No, there are differences but in general use herbalists view them as similar. While Dollar Weed has the ability to reduce blood pressure gotu kola has a chemical that stabilizes arterial plaque.

      Reply
  • cherie grant September 15, 2016, 7:06 am

    Hi, I found a leaf in an asian grocery the other day that stated it was pennywort. it looks like the pictures, but it is intensely bitter. Not at all edible. I couldn’t get past three leaves and that was a push. But I see people saying it’s edible. I mean no way a kid likes this stuff. Could the leaves I purchased be mislabelled?

    Reply
    • Green Deane September 15, 2016, 7:59 pm

      Translation can be wrong. It was probably gotu kola, or Centella erecta (aka C. asiatica.)

      Reply
  • Green Deane February 22, 2017, 5:47 am

    They are used the same but the two species are slightly different genetically.

    Reply
  • Makayla May 18, 2017, 3:20 pm

    Is everything edible including the roots? I noticed the roots are incredibly long and stringy looking. Not deep, but they grow straight across just below the surface of the ground.
    I was wondering if even the roots were edible because I thought about experimenting with them in the kitchen. They look like they could be a great substitute for noodles or something, but I want to make sure first.

    Reply
    • Green Deane May 22, 2017, 8:46 pm

      I’ve never seen the roots mentioned as edible. The truth is I do not know.

      Reply
  • gary December 31, 2017, 10:15 pm

    I’ve seen Hydrocotyle americana growing along small streams in my area in Canada. I suspect this plant should also be edible. Any experience or thoughts on Hydrocotyle americana?

    Reply
    • Green Deane January 1, 2018, 7:00 pm

      Probably not a problem. My local Hydrocotyle is not listed anywhere as edible but we eat it all the time.

      Reply
  • vincent lee February 27, 2018, 8:53 am

    Can someone tell me if it is safe to give to dogs. thanks Vinny

    Reply
  • James Cobb May 26, 2018, 10:11 pm

    So, I’ve read virtually everything here, but really want to make sure. I’ve had massive gardens my whole life and never came across anyone talking good about Dollar Weed. It’s everywhere in my yard and I’m always pulling it up and cursing it. Now maybe I will change. Am I right in saying this plant has very long root like runners? I can pull up very long runners in bunches. If it’s real damp, they grow closer to the surface and can be pulled up easily by the hand full. If it’s dryer, they tend to grow lower and deeper in the dirt. This is Penny Wort? The knowledge to be gained is never ending. Thanks.

    Reply
  • Kayce Cover September 17, 2018, 11:12 am

    Does anyone know of any lookalikes that are to be avoided? In other words, how careful do we need to be when picking to eat, and what might we eat instead that we need to be aware of? Is dichondra okay to eat, for example? Thanks

    Reply
    • Green Deane October 12, 2022, 3:06 pm

      Dichrondra carolinensis certainly is edible.

      Reply
  • B February 20, 2019, 1:41 pm

    Love your website Green Deane, it prooves useful time and time again for plant information even I’m not in your country!

    Reply
  • B February 20, 2019, 1:51 pm

    Does anyone know anywhere you can get seeds for Centella erecta? Internet searches just come up with seeds for Centella asiatica. I’m looking for seeds specifically of Centella erecta as I’m wondering if its slightly hardier than Centella asiatica. Its range is recorded as going quite north, so seems like it might be hardier, as Centella asiatica is frost tender and is killed off if temperatures get much lower than freezing

    Reply
  • Jess February 26, 2019, 8:29 pm

    In NZ we have H. moschata, tripartita, heteromeria, novae-zeelandiae, and lately bowlesioides. Are these edible and medicinally useful?

    Reply
  • Liz nwfl May 13, 2019, 11:17 pm

    Hi Deane,
    I live in northwest, fl. I basically have what i believe is dollarweed all over my yard and garden. In the past I gave used chemicals on my yard, which i no longer do. Two questions, one, how long will it take the chemicals to get out of my yard, making it safe to eat my dollarweed? Two, is there anything i could mix up with dollarweed that could harm me? Im terrified to just pick some and try it, but i really want to. It kills me that it’s so healthy and all these years ive been trying to get rid of it. I do pull it out of my garden by hand still, so it doesn’t rob my other plants of nutrients. Is that necessary? Thanks for your time!
    Liz

    Reply
  • Emily Lorenzo June 8, 2019, 6:48 pm

    A lot of what you wrote here, I also read on another site (WildThingsGrow). They didn’t give you credit for the writing, though. I don’t know if you would want to know this.

    Reply
    • Green Deane June 18, 2019, 5:22 pm

      Thanks. I get copied a lot.

      Reply
  • Sunny August 28, 2020, 4:53 pm

    Which leaf or root can cure hypertension permanently

    Reply
  • Sunny August 28, 2020, 4:54 pm

    How to make use of pennywort plant for high blood pressure

    Reply
  • Tom Mcardle December 16, 2020, 7:07 pm

    I eat the pennywort plant all the time. Several years ago I just bent over and gave it a try. No taste, no reaction. The following adage comes to mind, What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, it didn’t kill me and I feel great. I had some yesterday when I started pulling weeds. It didn’t kill me.

    Reply
  • Danielle Tavano June 27, 2021, 2:17 pm

    In the gulf region of Florida we have one that grows from long rhizomes that run horizontally underneath the surface of the sand, out in the dunes. The rhizomes can grow to be meters long! People call it “dollarweed.” Is that the Hydrocotyle bonariensis, or a different species?

    Reply
    • Green Deane July 9, 2021, 12:42 pm

      There are about 10 different species of Hydrocotyle in FLorida. You can send a picture to GreenDeane@gmail.com

      Reply
  • corina July 30, 2022, 1:04 pm

    wondering if the above applies as well to verticillata.
    it seems some of these look really similar to eachother. or maybe it’s just that enough people who post pictures on the internet think they do. so, i’m not sure if what i have in my 10a South Florida lawn is verticillata or bonariensis. is there much of a difference in usefullness, or are there subtle but known distinguishing traits?

    Reply
  • Carmen August 5, 2022, 9:56 pm

    I have the Marsh Pennywort in my backyard – Umbellata. Does that plant also lower blood pressure?

    Reply
  • robert October 11, 2022, 5:02 am

    Dear Master Green Deane, is my local backyard Louisiana dollar weed of superior potency to the Gotu Kola of Li Ching-Yuen longevity lore in it’s beneficial herbal effects on the body, or do I need to seek out the variety that Li Ching-Yuen used if I expect to live to be 256 years old?

    Reply
  • Green Deane October 12, 2022, 3:01 pm

    In research it has…

    Reply
  • Jae April 25, 2024, 10:26 pm

    I have found what looks like centella erecta or centella asiatica in my yard growing amongst the pennywort. The centella erecta or centella asiatica is very fuzzy on the back and stem so does this determine which centella i have growing? If so which one do i have?

    Reply
    • Green Deane April 25, 2024, 10:29 pm

      Most likely it is both. Locally it was thought to be C. asiatica but was then renamed C. erecta. Be careful witl scientific papers out of China on Centella or Hydrocotyle. They often get the botanical names mixed up.

      Reply
      • Jae April 25, 2024, 11:08 pm

        Well is there a difference I should know about between the centella vs hydrocotyle? Are they both edible?

        Reply

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