Brickbeard I'll retry posting the one you tried to post:

Name: Whitestar
Gender: Tom
Age: 3
Nickname: Leader
Species: Tabby
Mate: None
Kits: None
Inventory: A healing herb
Bio: Escaped the shelter while I had my chance
House: Deep Forest
Currently at: Deep Forest clearing
"I will act as leader AND medicine cat until we have an actual medicine cat."
For anyone who's interested, here's a list of all the herbs and what use they have:
Adder Bark: Used to treat toothaches.
Beech Leaves: Used to carry other herbs in.
Blackberry Leaves: Used in a pulp to ease the swelling of bee stings.
Borage Leaves: Used to treat fevers and help queens produce milk.
Burdock Roots: Used to treat cuts, especially rat bites.
Burnet: Used as a traveling herb to keep up strength.
Catchweed: The burrs are put a cat's pelt where poltices are to stop it the poltice from being rubbed off without hurting the skin.
Catmint/Catnip: Used to treat blackcough, whitecough, and greencough, or to relax a cat.
Celandine: Juice is trickled into the eye to treat ailments there.
Chamomile: Used to calm cats and give them physical strength.
Chervil: Used to treat infected wounds, while the root is used to cure a bellyache.
Chickweed: When there is no Catmint available, this is a good second choice.
Cob Nuts: Used to attract prey out of its burrows in leaf-bare.
Cobwebs: Commonly used to stop bleeding.
Coltsfoot: Used to treat kitcough.
Comfrey Root: Used in a poultice for healing broken bones or a wrenched claw.
Daisy Leaves: Used to take away pain in aching joints.
Dandelion: Leaves are chewed and used as a pain killer.
Death Berries: A poisonous berry, can kill a cat with a single berry.
Dock Leaves: Used to make a cat's coat slippery, also to soothe sore pads.
Fennel: Stalks are broken; the juice inside them are used to ease hip pain.
Feverfew: Used to cool feverish cats and to treat head pains.
Foxglove Seeds: Tiny, poisonous black seeds that can get mixed up with poppy seeds.
Goldrod: Used in a poultice to treat aching joints and stiffness.
Heather Flower: Makes swallowing easier and sweetens herbal mixtures.
Honey: Used to soothe cats that had too much smoke in their lungs.
Horsetail: The sap in it can be used in combination with cobwebs to stop bleeding
Ivy Leaf: Used to wrap herbs in.
Juniper Berries: Used to relax a cat.
Mallow Leaves: Used to soothe a belly ache.
Marigold: Used for dressing wounds and healing an infection.
Mouse Bile: Used to get rid of ticks. Especially used on elders.
Needle Leaves: Used to treat swelling.
Nightshade: As poisonous as Death Berries.
Oak Leaf: Used to stop infection from settling in.
Parsley: Used to stop a queen from producing milk after her kit(s) dies. Also used to cure belly aches.
Poppy Seeds: The best herb possible to numb pain and ensure a good night's sleep.
Ragweed: Used to give cats extra strength.
Ragwort and Lamb's Ear: Given to cats before a long journey somewhere.
Raspberry Leaves: Used as a pain killer, or to help stop bleeding during kitting.
Rosemary: Put on a dead cat's body to prepare for burial; hides the scent of death.
Rush: Used to bind broken bones; helps hold a broken limb in place.
Snakeroot: Used to cure poison in a cat.
Sorrel: Used as a traveling herb. Often mistaken as dock.
Stinging Needle: Seeds are eaten by a cat whose swallowed poison; used to repel poison.
Tansy: Used best to treat coughs.
Thyme: Used to sooth anxious cats.
Water Hemlock: Causes writhing and foaming at the mouth; the most poisonous plant after deathberries.
Watermint: Used to treat a bellyache, usually made into a pulp.
Wild Garlic: Used for cuts and scrapes, stop infections; especially if you have rat bite, usually not gathered, but rolled in.
Willow Bark: Used to ease pain
Wintergreen: Used to treat wounds and some poisons
Yarrow: Used as an ointment to soften pads or make cats sick so they can expel poison.