Exploring Lost Herbal Remedies

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2024

Комментарии • 7

  • @rebeccabrown1739
    @rebeccabrown1739 3 месяца назад +1

    I have really used the first book. It was my start into herbalism. It is a great book. It has more than most herbal books. Thank you Nicole Apelian.

  • @Noone-rt6pw
    @Noone-rt6pw 3 месяца назад +2

    I used to get the magazine at the store all the time! I had plans on a homestead, where countryside too! But, I was taken down many roads otherwise!

  • @lolaisawake
    @lolaisawake 27 дней назад

    I’m in the process of doing her online course and I’m enjoying it. A lot of the course material books are digital..I prefer physical books but I suppose they need to keep the course cost down.

  • @Noone-rt6pw
    @Noone-rt6pw 3 месяца назад +1

    I’ve seen her books, where I’ve been curious of them.
    Do they tell what soil, climate, weather, time of day to harvest? How to store?
    Big question, pit vipers the cottonmouth, rattlesnake and copperhead have been here since Indians, where the life of the Indian and settlers that came here got snake bit as they were out and about more. So what was successfully used against snake bite?
    Everything has electrical charges, where I heard the shock from a lawnmower would work! Some swear it will not, but so many talk about things they’ve never experienced, but recite books. Then there’s things that’s been used no one knew why but knew it worked! Shock, it might affect the charges of the venom!
    There’s the femur of a cow turned into charcoal, where it’s said to make a suction on insect bites, maybe snakebite!
    The latestest I’ve heard was to make a poultice from plaintain putting on the bite!

  • @Noone-rt6pw
    @Noone-rt6pw 3 месяца назад

    Can we buy both books at once? Cost? Where from?
    Where books like these can be handy, but if they are what claimed, it’d be good to have for younger folks that want to live!

  • @Noone-rt6pw
    @Noone-rt6pw 3 месяца назад

    I’d like sophisticated and simple biogas’s production, methane!
    My dad talked when he was a kid, a hole would be dug, all kinds of organic matter, manure if I understood him would be dumped in it, then a piece of pipe that’s capped would be pushed into it, then back filled. I do not recall him mentioning a time factor, but after everything had time to convert to gas, it’d be uncapped, then lit!