Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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The Complete Home Guide tiomHmerubns,itNyatural Healing, and Nutrition  
122  
and the use of a number of immune herbs in any formula very useful in  
this twenty-first-century postantibiotic era.  
Essential Oils  
Essential oils are nature’s antibiotics. About 1910 it was discovered through  
a scientific experiment that the volatile oils from various plants were as  
strong as, if not stronger than, phenol, a much-used chemical antiseptic.  
These oils include garlic, angelica, citrus lime fruit, lemon, and fennel.  
Lavender, oregano, and rosemary are not far behind. Eucalyptus and  
thyme are not as strong but are, nevertheless, potent antiseptics. Some  
Australian surgeons use diluted eucalyptus oil wherever a European  
surgeon would use a manufactured antisepticfor instance, to swab out  
surgical cavities.  
Recent research has shown that tea tree essential oil is supremely  
effective against the scourge of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, including  
Staphylococcus aureus. These bacteria are becoming more common in  
hospitals, where already vulnerable patients can easily pick up such  
opportunistic infections, and the usual treatments are ineffective. The  
resulting symptoms can range from debilitating to life-threatening. In  
tests, solutions between 0.2 and 2.0 percent of tea tree oil were added to  
cultures of these bacteria. The results indicated that as little as 0.25 to 0.5  
percent killed the bacteria effectively. Vials containing no more than a  
teaspoon of tea tree oil, sold quite inexpensively in health-food stores,  
look like a cheap and effective godsend.  
Pine tea, made from pine needles that are rich in essential oils, is a  
great antiviral aid. This is a traditional Native American remedy that has  
recently been discovered to be a prime antioxidant as well.  
The use of essential oils can be part of keeping well and dealing with  
sickness. Oils can be added to the bath, used in the shower, put into  
shampoo and other hair treatments, added to toothpaste and mouth  
gargles, made into massage oils, added to foot and hand baths, and used as  
fragrances.  
Use an essential oil supplier who tests the oils or has them tested using  
chromatography and other methods of analysis to ensure good-quality  
oils, devoid of toxins. Making your own oils at home is perhaps the most  
desirable of all. Collect the plants, flowers, leaves, or needles, blend them  
with olive oil, and leave in the sun, shaking daily, for two weeks. An easy  
antimicrobial oil would be made with equal parts of pine needles,  
ecualyptus leaves, and rosemary leaves.  


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