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UsneaSulphurOintment1
USNEA-SULPHUR SHELF LUBRICATING OINTMENT 1 OZ
Our Price: $6.00

This soft-set ointment is lubricating, antibiotic and antiseptic for use around the vaginal area. It helps relieve vaginal dryness, a condition that affects more than 80% of women just entering menopause and continues to affect up to 50% of those completing menopause.

This soft-set ointment is lubricating, antibiotic and antiseptic for use around the vaginal area. It relieves itching and irritation due to yeast or vaginal infections. Usnea sp., Laetiporus sp.

Usnea, also known as old man’s beard, is not a plant but lichen — a symbiotic relationship between an algae and a fungus. The entire lichen is used. Usnea looks like long, fuzzy strings hanging from trees in North American and European forests, where it grows. This particular species of Usnea, common to our area, is medium-sized tufted shrub lichen, pale yellowish green in color. It is highly branched, bearing numerous short side branches, reinforced by a tough, white, central cord. Usnea grows over trees and shrubs, preferring old growth forest conifers in shady areas.

Usnic acid, which gives usnea its bitter taste, acts as an antibiotic.

Constituents: Usnic acid, mucilage.

Sulphur Shelf (also known as Chicken of the Woods), grows on a variety of hardwoods and softwoods throughout much of North America. The mushroom is a popular edible, and easily recognized by its color, soft texture, and absence of gills. The young rosettes and the tender edges from mature clusters are more palatable than the older, tougher specimens.

The brilliantly colored fungi produces antibiotics and has been noted to consume E. coli upon contact. The fungus is also know to speed healing of burns, both first and second degree.

Extracts of cultures of this mushroom are currently the subject of in vitro scan investigations for antibacterial properties based, in part, upon a long history of folkloric use in the Russian Far East.

Ingredients: Dried Laetiporus sulphureus mushrooms infused in olive oil and thickened with beeswax.

Constituents: N-Phenethylhexadecanamide, eburicoic acid.


PHOTOS: Usnea-Sulphur Shelf Lubrication Ointment; Usnea; Sulphur-Shelf Mushroom; Oh, The Joy of Usnea!

Usnea (Usnea sp.) infused in virgin olive oil and thickened with beeswax.
USNEA ANTIBIOTIC SALVE 1 OZ.
Our Price: $6.00

1 oz. white plastic jar. Made of Usnea (Usnea sp.) infused in virgin olive oil and thickened with beeswax. Use as an antiseptic and antibiotic salve for sore, wounds, infected cuts, and abrasions.

Usnea, also known as old man’s beard, is not a plant but lichen—a symbiotic relationship between an algae and a fungus. The entire lichen is used. Usnea looks like long, fuzzy strings hanging from trees in North American and European forests, where it grows. This particular species of Usnea, common to our area, is medium-sized tufted shrub lichen, pale yellowish green in color. It is highly branched, bearing numerous short side branches, reinforced by a tough, white, central cord. Usnea grows over trees and shrubs, preferring old growth forest conifers in shady areas.

Constituents: Usnic acid, mucilage.

Photos: Usnea Antibiotic Salve 1 oz.; Usnea lichen; Renee dressed as lichen for McCall's Winter Carnival Parade.

Made with fresh Willow Bark (Salix sp.) infused in olive oil and thickened with beeswax.
WILLOW BARK SALVE 1 OZ.
Our Price: $6.00

1 oz. white plastic jar. Willow works as an antiseptic as well as a pain numbing agent. This salve is especially good for open, runny, hard to heal infections and abscesses.

Ingredients: Fresh Willow Bark infused in olive oil and thickened with beeswax.

There are approximately twenty-four native willows in this region, ranging from prostrate, and dwarf shrubs to small trees. Individual species can be highly variable and hybridization is common. Their leaves are typically long and narrow with smooth edges, but the can be nearly round, sometimes with finely toothed edges, and they vary from hairless to densely silky hairs, and sometimes with a whitish cast or bloom. Willows have tiny flowers borne in catkins, with the male and female catkins on separate plants. The flowers develop pointed capsules that split open to release the many tiny seeds, each with a tuft of cottony hairs.

Constituents: Phenolic glycosides; salicin, picein and triandrin, with esters of salicylic acid and salicyl alcohol, acetylated salicin, salicortin and salireposide: tannins, catechin, p-coumaric acid and flavonoids.


PHOTOS: Willow Barks Salve 1 oz.; biting the Willow to test salicylic acid strength; peeling Willow bark; salve setting before sealing and labeling.

Salve made from wild harvested Yarrow flowers, extra virgin olive oil and beeswax.
YARROW SALVE 1 OZ.
Our Price: $6.00


1 oz. white plastic jar. Since Yarrow contains several antiseptic, anti-inflammatory and pain-relieving constituents, such as azulene and salicylic acid, Yarrow is very effective in the treatment of wounds. Additionally, the salve not only deadens pain, but speeds healing and lessens scarring, as well.

The pungently scented Yarrow has finely divided fern-like leaves and a flat-topped cluster of many small white flowers. The species grows in a diversity of habitats, flowering from June through September. The densely hairy plants average between ten and twenty inches tall, with leaves one to four inches long.

Contains: Yarrow (Achillea sp.) leaves and flowers infused in olive oil, then thickened with beeswax.

Constituents: Essential oil (proazulene, borneol, camphor, cineole, eugenol, linalool, pinene, sabinene, thujone), isoValerianic acid, achillein, formic acid, salicylic acid, polyacetylenes, asparagin, sterols, glycoalkaloid (achhilleine), flavonoids (apigenin, luteolin, rutin, quercitin), coumarins, tannins.

PHOTOS: Yarrow Salve, fresh Yarrow flowers, Andrew proudly stands beside his first Yarrow Salve.