Sea Minerals with Supa Boost

sea minerals with supa boost

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Finest quality ionic sea minerals with Carica Papaya (Pawpaw) , Hawthorn, Stinging Nettle and Sheep Sorrell

 

Internal body organ function

 

Contains 45 minerals and trace elements

Just one teaspoon per day!

250 ml bottle (335 mg). Enough for the whole family!

 

This is a balance of minerals and four special herbs which will help your internal organs to function better at the same time boosting your immune system. It will help your body get back on track.

carica papaya

Carica Papaya
image source: wikipedia.org

Carica Papaya - As recorded in the Dictionary on Traditional Chinese Medicine, the papaya contains papain, which can help cure cancers, and kill the lymphatic leukemia cells, probacteria, parasite and bacillus tuberculars, helping diminish inflammation, normalize the functioning of the gallbladder, alleviating pain and promote digestion. Meanwhile, it has stronger curative effect on gynaopathy, glaucoma, osteoproliferation, healing of wound, blood grouping and insect bites. The papaya powder, on the other hand, can help promote the blood circulation in one's breasts and make them healthier.

The papaya fruit and leaves also contains carpaine, an anthelmintic alkaloid which could be dangerous in high doses. Women in Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka and other parts of the world have long used papaya as a folk remedy for contraception and abortion.

Medical research in animals has confirmed the contraceptive and abortifacient capability of papaya, and also found that papaya seeds have contraceptive effects in adult male langur monkeys, possibly in adult male humans as well.

Unripe papaya is especially effective, in large amounts or high doses. Papaya is not teratogenic and will not cause miscarriage in small, ripe amounts.

Phytochemicals in papaya may suppress the effects of progesterone.

The black seeds are edible, and have a sharp, spicy taste. They are sometimes ground up and used as a substitute for black pepper. In some parts of Asia the young leaves of papaya are steamed and eaten like spinach. Excessive consumption of papaya, like of carrots, can cause carotenemia, the yellowing of soles and palms which is otherwise harmless.

The papaya fruit is susceptible to the Toxotrypana curvicauda, or Papaya Fruit Fly. This wasp-like fly lays its eggs in young fruit.(wikipedia.org )

 

hawthorn

Hawthorn
image source: wikipedia.org

Hawthorn - Considered a "cardiotonic" herb, the flowers and berries of the hawthorn plant have been used in traditional medicine to treat irregular heartbeat, high blood pressure, chest pain, hardening of the arteries, and congestive heart failure.

Animal and laboratory studies have found that hawthorn contains active compounds with antioxidant properties.

Today, many professional herbalists believe that the antioxidants in hawthorn may help protect against heart disease and help control high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

 

 

 

 

stinging nettle
stinging nettle
image source: wikipedia.org

Stinging nettle - has been used for hundreds of years to treat rheumatism (disorders of the muscles and joints), eczema, arthritis, gout, and anemia. Many people use it to treat urinary problems during the early stages of an enlarged prostate, for urinary tract infections, for kidney stones, for hay fever, or in compresses or creams for treating joint pain, sprains and strains, tendonitis, and insect bites and rheumatoid arthritis.

It is a herbaceous perennial, growing to 1-2 m tall in the summer and dying down to the ground in winter. It has very distinctively yellow, widely spreading roots.

The soft green leaves are 3-15 cm long, with a strongly serrated margin, a cordate base and an acuminate tip. Both the leaves and the stems are covered with brittle, hollow, silky hairs that were thought to contain formic acid as a defence against grazing animals; but recent research has revealed the cause of the sting to be from three chemicals - a histamine to irritate the skin, acetylcholine to bring on a burning sensation and serotonin to encourage the other two chemicals (Elliott 1997).

Bare skin brushing up against a stinging nettle plant will break the delicate defensive hairs and release the trio of chemicals, usually resulting in a temporary and painful skin rash similar to poison ivy, though the nettle's rash and duration are much weaker. It is possible, however, to evade the sting by just touching the middle of the leaf and or stroking with the hairs.

It is abundant in northern Europe and much of Asia, found widely in the countryside. It is less frequent in southern Europe and north Africa, where it is restricted by its need for moist soil. In North America it is widely distributed in Canada and the United States, where it is found in every province and state except for Hawaii and South Carolina, and also occurs locally south into northernmost Mexico.

However, in North America, the stinging nettle is markedly less common than in northern Europe. The European subspecies has also been introduced into North America. Away from its native area, the species has also been introduced to South America.

In the UK it has a strong association with human habitation and buildings. Sites of long abandoned buildings can often be deduced from the presence of nettles. This is believed to relate to elevated levels of phosphate in soils from human and animal waste. This is particularly evident in Scotland where the sites of crofts razed to the ground during the Highland Clearances can still be identified.(wikipedia.org )

 

 

rumex acetosella

Sheep Sorrell
image source: wikipedia.org

Sheep Sorrell (Rumex Acetosella) - High in chlorophyll, this herb helps to carry oxygen through the bloodstream. It improves liver, digestive, and bowel functions and is indicated for inflammatory diseases, tumors, cancers, and urinary/kidney diseases

Rumex Acetosella is a species of sorrel bearing the common names sheep's sorrel, red sorrel, sour weed, and field sorrel.

The plant and its subspecies are common perennial weeds. It has green arrowhead-shaped leaves and red-tinted deeply ridged stems, and it sprouts from an aggressive rhizome.

The flowers emerge from a tall, upright stem. Female flowers are maroon in color. The plant is native to Eurasia but has been introduced to most of the rest of the northern hemisphere. In North America it is a common weed in fields, grasslands, and woodlands. It favors moist soil, so it thrives in floodplains and near marshes. It is often one of the first species to take hold in disturbed areas, such as abandoned mining sites, especially if the soil is acid.

Livestock will graze on the plant, but it is not very nutritious and contains oxalates which make the plant toxic if grazed in large amounts.

Sheep's sorrel is widely considered to be a noxious weed, and one that is hard to control due to its spreading rhizome. Blueberry farmers are familiar with the weed, due to its ability to thrive in the same conditions under which blueberries are cultivated. It is commonly considered by farmers as an Indicator plant of the need for liming. (wikipedia.org )

 

 

 

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