ბოტანიკა / Botanica
Sosna / Scots pine

Sosna / Scots pine

Pinus sylvestris

Edible plant
Slavic

Photo credit: Mickaël Delcey (Silverkey)

Safety information

Safety information

Toxicity: Mild. Pine essential oil must not be ingested undiluted (irritant; aspiration risk if it enters airways); needle/bud teas are mild.

Contraindications: Asthma/whooping cough/bronchospasm — avoid inhaled/applied essential oil near the face of infants and small children (laryngospasm caution for volatile oils); essential oil not for internal use; pregnancy/lactation (essential-oil caution).

Interactions: None well-characterised for the teas.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Essential-oil caution in pregnancy/lactation.

Evidence level

Traditional (systematized)

Documented in systematic traditional medicine literature.

Preparations

inhalation; resin salve · resin

Part used: resin

Traditional use: steam inhalation, salves

Dosage note (descriptive only): essential oil must not be ingested undiluted

Evidence:Traditional (systematized)
bud decoction/syrup · buds

Part used: buds

Traditional use: expectorant for cough and bronchitis

Proposed mechanism: buds/needles rich in essential oil (alpha-pinene, limonene), vitamin C, resins

Evidence:Traditional (systematized)
needle infusion (vitamin tea) · needles

Part used: needles

Traditional use: vitamin-C/scurvy tonic

Evidence:Traditional (systematized)
green-cone syrup/honey (folk) · young green cones

Part used: young green cones

Traditional use: cough and immune remedy(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Edibility

Edible parts: Needles (vitamin tea), buds and young green cones (syrups/jams) used as food/flavouring; pine nuts of Pinus sibirica/cembra are the edible seed (different species).

Toxic lookalike warning

Never confuse Pinus with the highly toxic yew (Taxus baccata) — yew has flat soft dark-green needles and red arils and is deadly; identify true pine (paired/bundled needles, woody cones) with certainty.

Nutritional notes

Needles are a notable vitamin-C source (anti-scorbutic); pine-nut seeds (other spp.) are nutrient-dense.

Healing traditions

Slavic
Sources (1)

  1. EMA/HMPC Pini aetheroleum monograph

All sources →

Not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any plant or preparation.