|
Manuka Honey is pure, raw, natural, organic honey collected from the flower to the Tea Tree of New Zealand and is used for sore throats, colds, canker sores, fever blisters or on toast with peanut butter! |
|
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE for your Health? |
a
|
|
Manuka honey is very useful in your first aid closet too. Manuka honey can be applied to minor cuts, wounds, scratches, abrasions, insect stings and bites. UMF10+ Active Manuka Honey is used on burns, sores and ulcers and is known to hardly leave burn victims with a scar when applied twice daily, therefore rarely needing skin grafting after honey treatment! To your left, is a photo of the manuka flower |
|
Research has shown that when comparing two groups of burn victims where one group was treated with UMF10+ Active Manuka Honey, and the other group with regular wound treatment for burns, that the patience treated with UMF10+ Active Manuka Honey could be released 1 week earlier from the hospital and not one patient of the honey treated group needed skin grafting. | |
UMF10+ ActiaveManuka Honey also seems to destroy the helicobacter pylori (h. pylori), the bacteria typically associated to stomach ulcers (peptic ulcers) and seems to help sooth heartburn as well. It appears likely that UMF10+ Active Manuka Honey may offer healing properties for millions of stomach ulcer (peptic ulcer) sufferers worldwide!
To learn how to apply UMF10+ Active Manuka Honey internally for an up-set stomach, stomach ulcer, duodenal ulcer or as an external wound dressing for first, second and third degree burns, open bed sores, diabetic leg and foot ulcerations and other infectious wounds that won't heal with traditional methods. Click on the following link: HONEY RESOURCE LINKS
For customer testimonies, click here...
Manuka Honey used for burns! (CBS Health Report)
"When I had a sore throat my friend told me to try some of her Manuka Honey. After trying it only once, I was amazed at how fast it relieved the soreness. What could have turned into a day or two of missed work, instead turned into productiveness on the job. Thank you for a natural remedy over drugs." Janie R. Florence OR
|
HOW TO USE MANUKA HONEY... |
| FOR SORE THROATS: | Take 1 teaspoon of manuka honey and let is dissolve in your mouth first, then slowly slip on down the throat to coat it. If you still have a sore throat in an hour or two, take your second teaspoon. Repeat this 1-4 times a day (if you are not diabetic). Don't drink any liquids for 5-10 min. after manuka honey intake, in order for the manuka honey to stay as concentrated as possible for best results. |
| FOR COLDS: | Even if you already have a cold, manuka honey still seems to shorten the time period that you have a cold. Use manuka honey the same way as described for sore throats. |
| For Canker Sores and fever blisters: | Apply manuka honey directly to a canker sore or fever blister 5-6 times a day. It seems to take away the pain of a canker sore fairly soon after it has been applied and seems to soothe the soar. |
| For Pimples/ Acne: | Apply manuka honey 5-6 times daily on pimple. Manuka Honey facial: Tie back your hair and apply manuka honey all over your face and let it rest for 15-20 min and then wash it off with warm water. Manuka draws moisture out of a wound (pimple), destroys bacteria at the wound site and enhances the growth of new cells closing the wound. a |
| Insect stings and bites: | Apply manuka honey directly onto an insect bite or sting. It seems to help relieve pain and sooth the bite. A |
MANUKA HONEY should be present in every
FIRST AID KIT!
|
| |
|
IS MANUKA HONEY USED FOR MEDICINAL PURPOSES ONLY? | |
We recommend using Meadowfoam Honey in your favorite herbal tea when you experience a sore throat or cold. Meadowfoam honey has an ALL NATURAL VANILLA TASTE! Meadowfoam honey tastes great in tea, on toast, is used for cooking, baking, BBQ sauces, as a pancakes or waffles topping or smothered over your favorite ice cream. Meadowfoam honey blended with peanut butter tastes heavenly!
The reason why we don't recommend using Manuka honey in tea is, that if the tea is too hot, it will destroy the enzymes and the enzymes destroy the bacteria (staph and strep). Also, manuka honey would be diluted in a cup of tea and would be about 30x less concentrated than if used raw and concentrated, as described above.
If you know someone in your family, a friend or co-worker suffering from frequent sore throats, colds, canker sores, fever blisters or stomach ulcers (peptic ulcers) duodenal ulcers or heartburn - inform them about the natural benefits of manuka honey and active manuka honey from the tea tree of New Zealand, so they too may start benefiting from manuka honey's natural properties.
=========================
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/Honeybeatssuperbugs.php?printing=yes (SEE THE WHOLE STORY OF MANUKA AND ALL HONEY on this website, about how it kills superbugs! I am wondering if a drop of tea tree oil in liquid would have a beneficial effect, too. However, the bismuth in 'the pink stuff' is better with the 'coater' IN the pink stuff than it probably would be from taking it directly as a mineral, just as the coating effect of honey is also likely more beneficial than a drop of extract or oil in water would be.--"Cheyenne Cin"- P.S.
Also- the tea tree oil isn't actually Lepospermum scoparium, but instead is Melaleuca alternafolia, not Manuka honey.)
One type of honey, Manuka, made from the flower essences of the Manuka Tree (Lepospermum scoparium) or Tea Tree, was noticeably more effective in inhibiting S. aureus even when diluted with 54 times its volume of fluid [3]. Manuka Tree is a small tree or shrub that grows abundantly throughout New Zealand, and was named by Captain Cook. The properties of this tree are known to some inhabitants and indigenous Maoris, who use the leaves as bitter tea, similar to green tea. Cooled tea is used for treating burns, and vapour from hot tea clears head colds. Only compounds of a few of the 85 Lepospermum genus contribute to "active" manuka honey used in clinical trials and produce the "unique manuka factor" (UMF) that stops the superbug. This was advertised on two company websites, one in New Zealand, and the other in the UK [6].
