chaga root how to make chaga cream chaga tinctures how to make chaga oil wild changa wild changa pictures of changa mushrooms how to make chaga tincture how to infuse oil with chaga how to make chaga cream chaga tincture how to make chaga tincture how to make chaga tincture making chaga tincture does chaga cure eczema how to make chaga infused oil 5d chaga mushroom healing make chaga infusion how to make chaga lotion chaga oil
Jewelweed (Impatiens capensis), also called "Touch Me Nots," or Imaptiens, is an effective remedy for Poison Ivy, Poison Oak, Stinging Nettles and other rash causing plants.
Making an oil infusion is simply pouring boiling water over herbs to extract the essential oils. This can work for leaves and flowers. The infusions can be used for massage, creams, ointments or aromatherapy purposes. Some medicinal herbs are volatile, and it is safer to make a cold oil infusion rather than a hot oil infusion with them.
In this movie Walking Bear and baby Niko show you how to make an infused herbal honey. The herb used is wild rose flowers, very high in vitamin C. Good for cold and flue and is very yummy. There is enough vitamin C in one rose hip or flower to equal 20+ oranges.
Use organic non-GMO honey. If you use honey this is an wonderful way to supplement your diet with herbal medicine. Any herb can be used to make an herbal honey.
The Plant Whisperer wild-crafted herbal how-to DVDs also include some extra clips of Walking Bear’s Native Flute music videos.
Treats cancer, balances the immune system, detoxification, diabetic modulation, anti-tumor, intestinal worms and more
The chaga mushroom is well known for its huge load of immune stimulating phytochemicals and betulin that can be consumed as a tea. Some of these compounds are derived from the birch tree and bark it consumes and concentrates in its flesh.
The chaga fungus has some of the highest amounts of anti-oxidants of any substance consumed by man. Siberian folk medicine and modern uses of a tea made from Chaga fungus include:
* boosting the immune system
* treating stomach diseases
* Intestinal worms
* Liver and heart ailments
* Cancers including those of the breast, liver, uterine, and gastric
* Hypertension
* Diabetes
* anti-tumor activity
* The active compound inotodiol which works against influenza A and B viruses and cancer cells.
* Activity against HIV-1
* As an anti-inflammatory
Some experts claim the Chaga is the best anti-cancer mushroom of all.
Properties and Ingredients of Chaga include:
* Polysaccharides that enhance the immune system; treat cancer, live, HIV virus and other bacterial and viral infections.
* Betulinic acid to counter viral infections and tumors
* Triterpenes to lower cholesterol, improve circulation, detoxify the liver, treat hepatitis, bronchitis, asthma, and coughs.
* Germanium (a free-radical scavenger) to cleanse the blood, normalize blood pressure, and prevent tumors.
* Other nucleosides, phytonutrients, minerals, and amino acids including saponin, magnesium, chromium, iron, kalium, beta-glucan, inotodiol, isoprenoid, and others.
Research indicates some of the uses as analgesic, antihistaminic, anti-inflammatory, anticancer, antioxidant, antiviral, bacteristat, cardio-depressant, estrogenic, fungicide, hypnotic, sedative and pesticide are valid.
Habitat
Alien, naturalized, biennial herb. Widely distributed plant, being found all over Europe and in temperate Asia as far as the Himalayas, and in North America it is exceedingly abundant. Great Mullein is found growing on hedge-banks, by roadsides and on waste ground, more especially on gravel, sand or chalk. Sunny positions in uncultivated fields and especially on dry soils. Cultivation: Great Mullein is an easily grown plant, it succeeds in most well-drained soils, including dry ones, and prefers a sunny position. Dislikes shade and wet soils. The leaves (first season) at the base of the stem form a rosette of numerous, large, 6 to 15 inches long and up to 5 inches broad, but become smaller as they ascend the stem, on which they are arranged on alternate sides. They are whitish with a soft, dense mass of hairs on both sides, which make them feel very furry and thick. The root is a long taproot with a fibrous outer cover and fleshy inside. The flower-spike (second season) has been known to attain a height of 7 or 8 feet, covered with densely crowded, sulphur-yellow, flowers about an inch across with five rounded petals. Blooming during July and August. Harvest the entire plant when in bloom and dry for later herb use.
Properties
Great Mullein has been used as an alternative medicine for centuries, and in many countries throughout the world, the value of Great Mullein as a proven medicinal herb is now backed by scientific evidence. Some valuable constituents contained in Mullein are Coumarin and Hesperidin, they exhibit many healing abilities. Research indicates some of the uses as analgesic, antihistaminic, anti-inflammatory, anticancer, antioxidant, antiviral, bacteristat, cardio-depressant, estrogenic, fungicide, hypnotic, sedative and pesticide are valid.