Friday, August 24, 2012

Housecleaning with Essential Oils

Cleaning House with PURE ESSENTIAL OILS

By J.C. Shannon for Rocky Mountain Oils (reposted, edited for length)
In ages past, people put aromatic rushes and other sweet-smelling herbs under the rugs in their homes so the scent would permeate the room whenever they were walked upon. Certain scents also can clean, deodorize and disinfect:  lavendar, lemon, eucalyptus, pathcouli, pine, rosemary, orange, and geranium are top choices.
 
Today’s cleaners are full of chemicals with lasting effects on our environment and on our selves that have not yet been measured. What has been noted, however, is the antibacterial agents added to soaps today are not being filtered out by the sewage system and are now present in our rivers and other water sources. These antibacterial agents kill all bacteria. They are unable to distinguish between good and bad bacteria. In our own homes, the effect can be devastating as our bodies lose their natural bacteria balance that fights off infections with good bacteria.
Fortunately, AROMATHERAPY ESSENTIAL OILS clean the air and environment. They boost our immune systems by promoting the production of white blood cells, as well as cleaning out bad bacteria in our homes.
 
Here are some methods good for cleaning bacteria around the sinks in the kitchen and bathrooms.
  • Put 2 drops of one of the above PURE ESSENTIAL OILS on a wet cloth. Wipe down the surface of the counter and the sink then squeeze it out and let the water run down the drain, killing any bacteria lurking inside the drain.
  • Take the AROMATHERAPY ESSENTIAL OILS of your choice; add 8 drops to 2 1/2 cups of water. Put in a plant mister spray bottle—you want as fine a mist as you can possibly get—and spray into the air upwards and towards the curtains and carpets. If you have pets, pay particular attention to your carpets. Avoid velvet, silk and other sensitive fabrics, as well as some wood because the spray can leave stains.
The main thing to remember, all PURE ESSENTIAL OILS used in cleaning will help make your home a safer and much more enjoyable environment for all who enter.
(This information is provided for informational purposes only. It is not approved by the FDA nor is it provided in order to diagnose, prescribe or treat any disease, illness or injured condition of the body. Rocky Mountain Oils assumes no responsibility for such use. Anyone suffering from any disease, illness or injury should consult with a physician or health care provider.)

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Lavendar for Scratches, Bug Bites

Used lavendar, full strength, on some facial scratches my daughter sustained when our puppies showed her a lot of love this morning.  She had four pronounced, long, red marks on her nose and cheeks.  She used triple antibiotic foaming wash and lavendar essential oil.  Three hours later, the marks are gone.  Lavendar is mild enough to use full strength and powerful enough to help heal skin abrasions.  She's also used it to stop the sting in insect bites this week, with great results. 

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Acne & Rosacea

My friend Angie is searching for essential oils or blends to help treat her teenage daughter's acne.  While reviewing literature for the most commonly recommended essential oils, I came across this formula from Birch Hill Happenings, an aromatherapy company in Minnesota.  Lavendar, the No. 1 recommended essential oil for many, many conditions, appears in nearly every blend for acne.  Please remember to test a dab of any essential oil or blend on the hand before applying elsewhere, and of course, remember that "This statement has not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease."

From Birch Hill Happenings:

To 4 ml of Jojoba oil (4 ml. = 0.81 US teaspoons)

Add:
Lavender 8 drops,
Rosewood 8 drops,
Tea tree 8 drops,
Chamomile 4 drops,
Geranium 4 drops,
Helichrysum 4 drops and
Lemon 4 drops.

"Blend well and apply a finger tip of this oil to the blemishes you wish to treat. Can be applied several times a day. 

"SPECIAL NOTE: Many people afflicted with Rosacea often time find that the same home remedy, home treatment using essential oils for treatment of acne works great for the natural treatments of rosacea. You may want to give this natural home remedy a try to treat your rosacea, too."

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Bergamot, Lemon & Lime Essential Oils

My friend Buffy asked a good question about the kitchen sink scrub recipe posted earlier this week,  wondering if the lemon and lime did anything other than counteract the smell of baking soda and vinegar.
Yes!
The recipe calls for lime and bergamot essential oils; bergamot, or citrus bergamot, is a lovely green citrus fruit.  As an essential oil, bergamot is a strong antibacterial, antiseptic, anti parasitic, and anti infectious powerhouse that kills strep and staph bacteria.
Lemon and lime essential oils also have very strong antibacterial, antiviral, anti fungal and antiseptic properties.  
All three smell fresh and uplifting, and taste great.  
Here are some useful ways to harness the powers of lemon essential oil, shared by DoTERRA:

  • Add a drop to a water bottle or glass of water
  • Diffuse aromatic ally or apply topically, diluted, for mood elevation
  • Add to a drop of honey to soothe sore throats or coughs
  • Dilute with coconut oil to massage and condition fingernails
  • Apply directly to cold sores for relief
  • Add a drop to toothbrushes after brushing
  • Diffuse in a room to neutralize odors
  • Remove gum, label adhesives, grease from fabric
  • Clean kitchen counters and stainless steel appliances
  • Add to olive oil for nontoxic furniture polish

Friday, August 17, 2012

Nature's Healing Pharmacy

Amazon.com rating: 5 stars
Two ratings
New book, Kindle $9.99
The journey toward wellness can be relative, with a chronic condition like fibromyalgia or arthritis, because "well" isn't part of the mix.  No cures, but fortunately there are many ways to seek relief without the side effects of prescription medications.  One such avenue leads to Illinois, where Pam Taylor, ND, practices.  She's written a new book, "Simple Ways of Healing," that includes many, many simple blends of essential oils for dozens of common ailments and conditions.

http://pamelataylornd.com/


Amazon.com rating:  4.5 stars
Eight ratings
New paperback $13.29
Three of Taylor's more complicated blends are published in Kurt Schnaubelt's book, "The Healing Intelligence of Essential Oils."  I highly recommend the pain relief blend formula shared by Taylor with Schnaubelt's readers.  My first batch is working very well, particularly to relieve muscular and connective tissue pain that develops overnight. 

Please use the amazon.com link on this blog to shop for these excellent books; the pennies I'll earn on your purchases will be going toward my daughter's college fund!

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Sample Essential Oils at Home

Amazon.com rating:
Five stars, 125 customer
reviews
$19.90 + shipping
From Amazon.com:

Eucalyptus, Lavender, Lemongrass, Peppermint, Sweet Orange & Tea Tree (10 ml each)
"All Edens Garden oils are 100% Certified Pure Therapeutic Grade Essential Oil - no fillers, additives, bases or carriers added."
    From Barb:
I'm using Edens Garden essential oils and love them.  Excellent customer service, outstanding prices, check out the very high number of top ratings from Amazon customers.  You can get free shipping by ordering $75 in products directly from the company at www.edensgarden.com, too.  Add jojoba oil and other carrier oils -- you'll add just a few drops of essential oils into an ounce of jojoba or even olive oil from your pantry (EVOO, cold pressed).  Essential oils are very strong and with a few exceptions, are rarely used "neat"  (full strength).  Edens Garden also offers a "create your own" set for $19.95 -- choose six oils from a very large array.  Hint for gifts:  These sets are beautifully boxed.

Tea Tree Soap from Dr. Bonner

From Amazon.com --
  • All Natural Organic Certified Ingredients; Bio-Degradable; Packaged In 100% Post-Consumer Recycled Bottles; No Animal Testing And Cruelty-Free
  • Cleans Body; Floors; Bathrooms; Counters; Walls; Dishes; Pets; Fruits & Vegetables; Great For Shaving
  • Tea Tree Oil Is Great For Facial Cleaning; Cleaning Minor Cuts And Scrapes
  • Great For Camping; Backpacking; Traveling



  • From Barb --  Smells great, foams well in foaming dispenser, which is the most economical way to add tea tree's disinfecting qualities to everyday hand washing. This 32-oz. bottle sells for about $14 on amazon.com and if you buy two bottles, you get free shipping.  Choose from Dr. Bonner's blends of lavendar, citrus, peppermint, or mild baby castile soaps.  Most foaming dispeners call for a mix of 10% soap and 90% water, which means this bottle of biodegradable soap will last a very long time.

    Wednesday, August 15, 2012

    Rocky Mountain Oils

    Here's another company to check out ... I'm interested in their backstory. Looks like they left the multi-level marketing world and now offer several blends that compete with Young Living's top sellers.  Nice online beginner's guide, informative and easy to use charts on blended products.
    http://www.rockymountainoils.com/

    Tuesday, August 14, 2012

    Complete Book of Essential Oils and Aromatherapy

    Library Journal review posted by Amazon.com:
    
    Published 1991
    Amazon.com ratings: 155
    Average rating: 4.5
    Price: $5.85 to $12.63
    "There are plenty of good books on herbs, and some of them devote a chapter to essential oils, but there's nothing comparable to Worwood's work. Her premise is different from other herbalists--she believes that the most effective way to use herbs medicinally is by external application or inhalation. Both methods allow the essential oil to enter the bloodstream without passing through the digestive tract. Her grasp of basic physiology is somewhat confused, but there's nothing dangerous in her suggestions. (Worwood runs an aromatherapy clinic in England and conducts research on aromatherapy.) Her book prescribes oils for everything from basic first aid and treating common ailments to natural cosmetics and body care, fragrance for the home and office, and cooking with essential oils. A good addition to alternative medicine collections."
    NOTE: Some reviewers note a lack of safety cautions for essential oils.

    Monday, August 13, 2012

    Vanilla Facial Toner

    From Mountain Rose Herbs:

    Ingredients
    2 organic vanilla beans
    8 oz. witch hazel extract

    Slice vanilla beans into small pieces.  Place in glass jar.  Cover with witch hazel extract, cap, and shake well. Store in cool, dark place for two weeks, shaking daily. 
    Strain the beans from the liquid, using cheesecloth, and pour liquid into a glass bottle.

    Splash face in the mornings!

    Sunday, August 12, 2012

    Natural Face Scrub

    From Edens Garden:

    Ingredients
    1/4 c. plain yogurt
    1/4 c. conrmeal
    5 drops each Patchouli, Grapefruit, and Lavendar essential oils

    Mix and refrigerate one hour before using.  Store unused mixture in refrigerator.

    Location, Location, Location

    Soil, water, weather, farming techniques, and harvesting are all variables in the plant kingdom.  It makes sense that different strains or species can exhibit different qualities.

    Without getting into the sometimes heated debate over where the "best" plants are found or how they are harvested and processed into essential oils, here are some thoughts from Kurt Schnaubelt, a chemist, author, co-director of the Pacific Institute of Aromatherapy, and essential oils retailer with global sourcing:

    "Often we are asked by customers, which Lavender should I buy. A legitimate question considering the significant price differences between sauvage, population, clonal and hybrid Lavenders. Generally the subtext to these questions is, whether or not the more expensive oil packs a bigger therapeutic punch. The honest answer, in a first approximation, is probably ‘no.’ A Lavender Maillette should calm down a mosquito bite just as well as a population Lavender.

    Resistance is Futile

    We hear a lot about bacterial resistance to prescription medications.

    Learn more about how essential oils can be helpful in the battle against bacteria and viruses, by reading "Resistance," in Chapter Two: The Bioactivity of Essential Oils ("The Healing Intelligence of Essential Oils," Kurt Schnaubelt, Ph. D., Healing Arts Press 2011).

    This is a challenging read, as a scientific review of literature and detailed analysis of how the chemical properties of essential oils work on the human body.  It's also fascinating.  Several chapters also dig into specifics about essential oils and their place in healing.


    Schnaubelt's Ph.D. is in chemistry and he is the co-director and founder of the Pacific Institute of Aromatherapy in California.

    Define "Pure"

    Lots of confusion is expected for the beginning buyer, student, or dabbler in essential oils when it comes to price and quality.  What is therapeutic grade?  How pure is pure?  When is an essential oil "authentic" or adulterated?  What does "organic" mean?  Testing terms such as gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (GS, MS) sound imposing, but what do they mean?

    Purity is a red herring in the world of essential oils.  Basically, you don't want additives or synthetic stretchers or fillers.  Just the good stuff, and each producer or retailer has a different way of describing their particular goodness.  This is an unregulated industry, for better and worse.  Sure, you can buy just about anything that smells good or seems affordable, but will it ease arthritic pain?  Soften a flare of fibromyalgia?  Clean your kitchen without adding toxins to the environment?  Treat acne?  End a week of insomnia?  Scent your skin with lasting delicacy?  You get the idea.

    There are thousands of years of wisdom awaiting the careful beginner and prudent practitioner of essential oils.  Avail thyself.  This blog includes time-saving direct links to many sources that in turn offer a wealth of selection and information about essential oils and blends.  

    If you want to jump right in, visit any of the companies profiled so far in this blog and do these things:
    1. Read and adhere to the disclaimers that always appear on more trustworthy websites about diagnosis or treatment of ailments. 
    2. Read each description of an essential oil or blend, including what it's meant to do or when it shouldn't be used. Respect safety and caution statements. 
    3. Look for country of origin or batch numbers.  That's a clue about production quality.
    4. Check for availability of material data sheets or product support information. 
    5. Test every product on a small patch of your hand before slathering.  Be sensible and safe.
    6. Keep a log of what you use and how you feel.  Experiment.  Test.  Record.  Compare. Evaluate.  Enjoy!
    If the purity conundrum intrigues you, read on.  There's plenty of debate over authenticity and testing that really doesn't settle who has the "best" product for the price.  It helps to have a general idea of how the industry processes plant materials for their essential oils, and how different companies try to distinguish themselves from one another. 

    First, read "Essential Oil 101" by Edens Garden, a small California producer of essential oils and blends.  You'll get a pretty clear picture of how plant parts can be processed into potent essential oils.

    Second, digest these observations about "therapeutic grade" oils from Essential Oil Exchange, a very new membership cooperative launched in 2012 in New York.  Here's the introduction:

    "For the most effective aromatherapy purposes, essential oils should be therapeutic grade… but what does that really mean? Since there is no organization that oversees therapeutic quality like there are for organic standards, the Essential Oil Exchange (EOX) has its own position and standards for the oils we offer. It is our premise that essential oils should be therapeutic-grade in order to have true aromatherapy benefits."

    Next, consider this viewpoint from Original Swiss Aromatics, an essential oils firm doing business in California since 1983. 

    Original Swiss Aromatics
    "We maintain that knowing the producer is the best safeguard against adulteration. While we also analyze our essential oils by GC/MS, we do know that analysis alone has not kept adulterated oils out of aromatherapy. To the contrary, analysis hype is often used to sell cleverly adulterated oils. However, a specific essential oil from a specific producer and a given batch, can be matched against the fingerprint of the original. It's authenticity can be established without a doubt." http://originalswissaromatics.com/eofaq.asp

    It all boils down to shopping with your eyes open and trying different products that seem to meet reasonable standards.  I'm currently using products from Edens Garden, DoTerra, and Mountain Rose Herbs.  I like them all.  DoTerra makes some products I can't get elsewhere, and likewise for Mountain Rose.  Edens Garden makes their own essential oils and sells direct, for prices considerably lower than DoTerra.  Is there a discernible difference?  I'll keep you posted!










    Kitchen Sink Scrub

    From Edens Garden:

    Ingredients
    1/2 c. baking soda
    1/8 c. vinegar
    5 drops each Bergamot and Lime essential oils

    Mix and scrub kitchen sink.  Wash down with warm water.

    Edens Garden

    My first blends with essential oils from Edens Garden are getting the job done.

    Using a recipe from Pam Taylor N.D. (naturopathic doctor), published in Kurt Schnaubelt's book, "The Healing Intelligence of Essential Oils," I blended several carrier oils and essential oils. I filled two 30-ml bottles and three roller-ball applicators (approximately another 30 ml, total), and applied a bit of leftover blend directly to my overstressed neck, back and shoulders.  The relief was palpable and fast.

    Edens Garden is based in southern California.  I like the detailed information provided on each oil and blend, as well as the company values statements and incredibly fast shipping.

    http://www.edensgarden.com/index.php?route=common/home

    Essential Oil Exchange

    Check out this membership approach to accessing essential oils, from a very new cooperative venture.  There is an interesting article that addresses therapeutic grade oils in clear layperson terms.

    http://www.essentialoilexchange.com

    White Lotus Aromatics

    Literate.  Enlightening.  Irresistible.

    Dig deeply into this treasure trove,  shared by Christopher and Suzanna McMahon of Washington state. Follow your nose and see if you end up in India, where the art of Aromatherapy goes back thousands of years.  McMahon's passion is easy to appreciate through his prose and the company's distinctively described essential oils and other aromatics.

    Original Swiss Aromatics

    Informative, top-notch science, highly respected experts and products.
    http://originalswissaromatics.com/

    This company was created by Kurt Schnaubelt, Ph.D. (a director of the Pacific Institute of Aromatherapy) and other experts in the field to answer a need for reliably pure, superior essential oils.  Browsing the website is fun, fascinating, and remarkably educational.

    Schnaubelt posts infrequently, but with worthwhile depth, in this blog.  If you can find a subscribe link in his blog, please post here!  
    http://www.kurtschnaubelt.com/

    Schnaubelt's book, "The Healing Intelligence of Essential Oils," is great reading and an invaluable resource.  If you please, purchase it using the product link found in this blog.  Thanks!

    Mountain Rose Herbs

    An admirable company, with excellent bits and pieces to inform the beginning student as well as many products and recipes for folks who are ready to discover essential oils.

    http://mountainroseherbs.com

    In the Beginning

    Welcome.
    Health and happiness to you!
    Join me in a worldwide search for the best in essential oils and their many applications.