Cupster
GOLD MINE

What You Can Do With Calendula

From free moves this week up to the deep plays.

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Sow it among the vegetables

  • Ecological
  • Companion planting

Scatter calendula through the vegetable beds. It draws pollinators in and lures aphids and whitefly onto itself, away from the crops you want.

Let it self-seed and it will turn up in the right places on its own next year.

Cook with the petals

  • Culinary
  • Free food

Pick fresh petals and stir them into rice, butter, soup, or salad for a warm golden colour. It is the cheap stand-in for saffron's colour, if not its flavour.

Pull the petals from the green base. The base is bitter.

Save the seed

  • Economic
  • Self-sufficiency

Let some flowers dry to curved, claw-like seeds, then collect them. One packet becomes a lifetime of calendula, resown for free each spring.

Store dry seed in a labelled envelope somewhere cool and dark.

Make a calendula salve

  • Medicinal
  • Home craft

Dry the flowers, infuse them in oil over gentle heat, strain, and set with beeswax into a salve. A simple, gentle skin balm for cuts, chapping, and dry hands.

Dry the petals fully first. Any water left in them will spoil the oil.

Grow it as a cut flower

  • Economic
  • Cut flower

Calendula crops heavily for a small cut-flower patch or stall, and the more you pick, the more it flowers. Pair the blooms with the dried-petal and salve lines.

Cut just as the flowers open and keep picking to keep the plant producing.