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  RED BELTED POLYPORE HYDROSOL 2 OZ. DROPPER BOTTLE
Steamed distilled Red Belted Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola).


 
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Our Price: $6.00

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Product Code: REDBELTEDPOLYHYDRO
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Description
 
2 oz. brown glass dropper bottle of Red Belted Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola) Hydrosol. Red Belted Polypore Hydrosol also acts as a tonic to reduce inflammation of the digestive tract and has proven effective in some cases of Irritable Bowel Syndrome. This fungus has also been used to treat jaundice and liver dysfunctions.

Ingredients: Steamed distilled Red Belted Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola).

Constituents: Triterpenes ergosterol, polyporenic acid C, egrosterol, ergosta-7, fungisterol, eburicoic acid, lamosterol, inotodiol, 21-hydroxy-lanosta-7, pinicolic acid.

Hydrosols, used for medicinal, pharmacological, and cosmetic purposes, have been dated to use in Egypt over 6,000 years ago. Ancient Vedic Hindus vaporized floral and herbal oils to soften the skin, sooth the mind, and normalize various glandular activities. The Aztecs enjoyed saunas whose steam carried fragrant floral and herbal vapors from small pools of stone and hot water. Hippocrates described the curative effect of more than 300 plants.

'Flower water' isn't an accurate definition because hydrosols do not come just from flowers any more than essential oils come only from flowers. Roots, bark, branches, wood, needles and leaves, even fruit and seeds can produce both oils and hydrosols. Hydrosols are the condensate water co-produced during the steam- or hydro-distillation of plant material for aroma therapeutic purposes. Usually the distillation is undertaken is to obtain the essential oils contained in the plant material, but occasionally the distillation is undertaken specifically to produce the plant water that results.

Hydrosols contain all of the plant in every drop, just like a hologram. Here we have the water-soluble components, the essential-oil molecules, and the very fluid that was flowing through the plant cells when the plant was collected. It's all there in a matrix of water that is so much more than water, one of the most recognized holographic substances in healing.

Storing Hydrosols ~ The Hydrosols must be put directly into sterilized containers as soon as they are extracted by the still. The sterilized containers should be brown or dark blue glass bottles. Once bottled, the Hydrosols should be labeled with the distillation date. Most Hydrosols will keep for approximately one year if stored in a cool, dark place with very little temperature fluctuation. The refrigerator works fine, if you don't have a cool storage area otherwise.


PHOTOS: Red Belted Polypore Hydrosol 2 oz. dropper bottle; Bob with a freshly harvested Red Belted Polypore; Mikey slices the rubbery fresh conk.


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