Archive for October, 2011

October 26, 2011

Seasons

Seasons

Travel through the faces of the seasons winter, spring, summer and fall.

Can you guess what the hidden 5th season is?

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October 26, 2011

Basil Herb Pesto Recipe

Basil is a must grow in my herb garden! Even though it is an annual and must be planted every year, it is worth it to eat it fresh. Basil is easy to grow from seeds, which is good because I like to eat alot of it! I love making all kinds of pesto. If I grow too much, which is unlikely, I make pesto and put the leftovers in ice cube trays to freeze them, and then pop them out and store them in the freezer for later use.

Here is a basic PESTO recipe: Serves four

2-3 cloves of garlic
1-2 cups of basil

(You can add 1 cup spinach, dandelion leaves, garlic mustard greens or any kind of greens you can sneak in there) 1 cup spinach or greens

1/2 cup of parsley
1/3 cup of pine nuts or walnut pieces or nuts of your choice
1/4 cup – 1/2 cup of olive oil

squeeze of lemon juice (optional for lemon basil pesto and use lemon basil)
sea salt and pepper

Mix all ingredients in a blender or food processor

Add to pasta, toast, potatoes, roasted vegetables, sandwiches

Tastes like summer! YUMMY!@!

October 25, 2011

Natural Health Therapies

Descriptions of Natural Therapies and
Therapists

Herbalists

Herbalist strictly use herbs and usually make their own herbal tinctures/extracts and other plant medicinal preparations like salves and poultices. Tincture/extracts are herbs that have been macerated in a
mixture of alcohol and water and then strained. The tincture is not diluted
further and all of the active chemical constituents of the plant are left in the liquid.

Herbalists may prescribe further nutritional vitamin/mineral supplementation, but liquid forms of
consumption are preferred over pills because they absorb better.

Herbalists are trained to identify and collect plants and may use plants in a variety of ways including
poultices, salves, teas, tinctures, and so forth.

Herbalists do not give needle injections or use animal parts for medicine.

Aromatherapy

Aromatherapy is a natural therapy that uses essential oils. Essential oils are aromatic water-insoluble oily liquids that are derived from single botanical sources including herbs, seeds, fruit
peels, berries, roots, resins, wood and branches. They are extracted using a
variety of methods, the primary extraction method being steam distillation. In
this method steam is driven through the plant material and condensed until the
water, also known as a hydrosol, is separated from the oil soluble parts.

The origins of aromatherapy date back centuries. The use of plants and herbs is the
oldest method of healing disease, alleviating pain and beautifying the body.

The main difference between Aromatherapists and Aromatologists is that Aromatherapists are taught how to apply essential oils in massage applications.

TCM- Traditional Chinese Medicine

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has the oldest records of plant medicines, which is no surprise considering paper was invented in the Orient. Shen Nong’s Herbal Classic is a 2000-year old book that has the earliest Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) documentation about plant medicine. TCM has developed
over thousands of years and incorporates the use of plants, minerals and
animals for medicinal purposes.

All herbs are dried and some are made into powders, and are usually prescribed as
teas. Acupuncture, acupressure, tuina massage and wuxing (the five elements)
are also a part the energetic, philosophy of TCM. Acupuncture and acupressure
work with the meridian energy system. Acupuncture uses needles, and acupressure
is performed by touching with the hands along the meridian pathways in the body.
Tuina is a form of massage that encompasses pressure points and all are based
on the philosophy of the five elements, which is a model that serves as a diagnostic tool.

Homeopathy

Homeopathy is a relatively new natural therapy. It was invented in 1796 by a German physician named Samuel Hahnemann. It uses minerals and plants that are highly diluted and shaken, in a
process called succession and dilution. The water that the plant or mineral is
macerated in is diluted over and over again until there is only a trace amount
left in the liquid water. The liquid is then dropped onto small sugar and
lactose pills and consumed orally. Homeopathy follows the philosophy of the
principles that “like will cure like,” meaning that if a plant can cause a
fever then if you have a fever it will cure the fever.

Although there has been a lot of controversy over homeopathy and whether there are enough active
ingredients in the pills to make it work, it has been proven that water
contains memory and there is an imprint of the remedy even though it is in very
small amounts.

If you are lactose intolerant homeopathy pills are not for you.

Flower essences

Flower essences work on the same principle as homeopathy although liquid is used instead of sugar
lactose pills. The Bach Flower remedies are the most popular essences, named
for Edward Bach. He placed flowers in a bowl of water with a small amount of
brandy in it, and let it sit in the sun and then strained the liquid for use
with emotional disturbances such as shock. The essences are not diluted as much
as the homeopathy pills but are diluted more than herbal liquid tinctures/extracts.

Naturopathy

Naturopaths can encompass a wide range of services. They incorporate a TCM approach and may use
acupuncture or may do chiropractic work. Naturopaths prescribe a lot of nutritional vitamin and mineral pill supplementation and may give vitamin needle injections.

Naturopaths usually sell their own herbal pills and vitamin pill supplements, or will send you to buy
your own herbs to make tea. Some Naturopaths will send you to an herbalist to
get an herbal formula or will buy tinctures from an herbalist.

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