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r ranson wrote:I like to make a fever if I'm just on the edge of getting ill. I don't know if this is healthy, but it often kicks the illness before it gets hold. It's great right on that edge with the swollen lymph glands but before the sinuses begin to run.
I have a hot bath just before bed, then wrap myself up in extra blankets so I can sweat. During my sleep, I usually toss some of the blankets on the floor, but sometimes I don't. In the morning, I have a shower and it usually gets rid of the malaise.
So many plants, so little time
lesley verbrugge wrote:
r ranson wrote:I like to make a fever if I'm just on the edge of getting ill. I don't know if this is healthy, but it often kicks the illness before it gets hold. It's great right on that edge with the swollen lymph glands but before the sinuses begin to run.
I have a hot bath just before bed, then wrap myself up in extra blankets so I can sweat. During my sleep, I usually toss some of the blankets on the floor, but sometimes I don't. In the morning, I have a shower and it usually gets rid of the malaise.
Looks like you're spot on, according to NZ Herbalist Richard Whelan's informative article about sweating therapy here
Huxley Harter wrote:Apparently there are a few outbreaks of a new coronavirus, what herbs can help one prevent and treat it?
You are welcome to check out my blog at http://www.theartisthomestead.com or my artwork at http://www.davidhuang.org
Huxley Harter wrote:Apparently there are a few outbreaks of a new coronavirus, what herbs can help one prevent and treat it?
Mike Haasl wrote:I tried into my upper arm and it's borderline. If I bend both elbows and cross my arms and crane my neck down and forward it seems like it would be effective to cough into that cranny. I think we have a plan! Thanks team
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
r ranson wrote:Question: Can germs live in a towel? There's a shared towel we dry our hands on after washing. I notice it gets damp by the end of the day. Can I get germs from sharing a hand drying towel or are the germs gone from washing with soap and water?
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Carla Burke wrote:
r ranson wrote:Question: Can germs live in a towel? There's a shared towel we dry our hands on after washing. I notice it gets damp by the end of the day. Can I get germs from sharing a hand drying towel or are the germs gone from washing with soap and water?
Sadly, yes
r ranson wrote:
Carla Burke wrote:
r ranson wrote:Question: Can germs live in a towel? There's a shared towel we dry our hands on after washing. I notice it gets damp by the end of the day. Can I get germs from sharing a hand drying towel or are the germs gone from washing with soap and water?
Sadly, yes
Happy to know this.
The others either work or have kids in public school so I'm going to be bringing my own hand drying cloth from now on. I already bring my own tools and pens
Next thing - shared keyboard and mouse. How long between uses can the virus last? Sometimes they use the computer the day before I arrive, but once I'm there, I have sole use of it.
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Carla Burke wrote:
r ranson wrote:
Carla Burke wrote:
r ranson wrote:Question: Can germs live in a towel? There's a shared towel we dry our hands on after washing. I notice it gets damp by the end of the day. Can I get germs from sharing a hand drying towel or are the germs gone from washing with soap and water?
Sadly, yes
Happy to know this.
The others either work or have kids in public school so I'm going to be bringing my own hand drying cloth from now on. I already bring my own tools and pens
Next thing - shared keyboard and mouse. How long between uses can the virus last? Sometimes they use the computer the day before I arrive, but once I'm there, I have sole use of it.
I'd clean it each day, before you start working, frankly. Cold viruses can easily survive for weeks, even leaving and entering the atmosphere, to go from earth, to space.
It is necessary, therefore it is possible.
(Borghese)
Amy Francis wrote:
Carla Burke wrote:
r ranson wrote:
Carla Burke wrote:
r ranson wrote:Question: Can germs live in a towel? There's a shared towel we dry our hands on after washing. I notice it gets damp by the end of the day. Can I get germs from sharing a hand drying towel or are the germs gone from washing with soap and water?
Sadly, yes
Happy to know this.
The others either work or have kids in public school so I'm going to be bringing my own hand drying cloth from now on. I already bring my own tools and pens
Next thing - shared keyboard and mouse. How long between uses can the virus last? Sometimes they use the computer the day before I arrive, but once I'm there, I have sole use of it.
I'd clean it each day, before you start working, frankly. Cold viruses can easily survive for weeks, even leaving and entering the atmosphere, to go from earth, to space.
A health spokesman has stated that flu viruses can survive on surfaces for 1 day and 15 minutes on infected tissue. In air droplets e.g. from a cough, they can survive for several hours. We are 'at risk' if 2 metres from an infected person for 15 minutes or more.
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
It is necessary, therefore it is possible.
(Borghese)
Some places need to be wild
I've been close enough to medical/drug experimental models to understand that the models are designed for just that - to model. Humans are far too varied for one dose or one specific treatment regime to work for every human. As a bit of an outlier it's easier for me to get that. Where many friends would "take two aspirin and go to bed", a half an aspirin for me was usually more than enough.Only one of my doctors could see that this was not helping.
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Some places need to be wild
Oystein Tandberg wrote:
All living things have consciousness. Your interactions with nature follows a certain structure. Nature has it's way, and the system set up by humans has its way. The system uses words to produce emotions. One of these words is the word virus. It used to refer to a toxic substance, but in 17something that changed. Was that a big mistake? This documentary is about the most famous of all viruses. HIV. A word that instills so much fear that people have died just from the diagnosis alone. If you are a bold truth seeking adventurer that loves nature, this documentary is for you.
So many plants, so little time
Trace Oswald wrote:
Mike Haasl wrote:I tried into my upper arm and it's borderline. If I bend both elbows and cross my arms and crane my neck down and forward it seems like it would be effective to cough into that cranny. I think we have a plan! Thanks team
Walmart has those small 4'x6' fleece blankets on sale pretty often for a couple bucks. Maybe you could fashion one into an entire head-hood by wrapping it around your head, in it's entirety, several times, cut tiny eye slits in it, and just throw it away each time you cough...
Sorry Mike, I'm just picturing you contorting yourself into all kinds of interesting positions every time you cough... Didn't you mention somewhere that you are quite tall? I'm picturing Ichabod Crane going into an elaborate arms-around-the-head fetal position at every cough, and trying to make your way around springing in and out of that position...
My disclaimer is that I'm laughing my ass off thinking about this. No offense is intended to anyone. My sense of humor often appeals to me much more than others.
Donald MacLeod wrote:
The spread of this coronavirus thing - best plan is to regularly disinfect your mobile phone -
I have seen people who work for example: in a coffee shop taking a break outside, smoke in one hand holding their mobile and tapping away busy on their mobile phone with the other hand -
then put their phone in their pocket and the pocket is where it was placed earlier and they retrieved it from.
I saw them come back inside grab a cup for a customer and fill it with coffee. ( I refuse to go back to that coffee shop ) Think of the bacteria just passed on that cup?
I also imagine that as they cannot be without their mobiles looking to see who likes them? I can guess that they scroll their phones while on the loo as well..
How many times do they disinfect their mobile phones?
Olga Booker wrote:... I too, like to wipe down door knobs, shopping cart handles etc...
It is necessary, therefore it is possible.
(Borghese)
...what a lot of people do for colds and the flu, shingles and herpes, is likely to work for coronavirus also. Baking soda puts your body temporarily into an alkaline state, which probably kills off the viruses currently active in you...
About 1 tsp is the dose for a 150 pound adult. (Overdose is over 4 teaspoons a day, sustained for several days, so exact dose is not required.) Scale it down for kids, or up for heavier people. One teaspoon of baking soda, in water, taken before bed.
“The most important decision we make is whether we believe we live in a friendly or hostile universe.”― Albert Einstein
Pioneer Plants Permaculture
Pioneer Plants Permaculture
John Weiland wrote:Just wanted to add two potentially useful links, the first for symptoms and the infection cycle of the current coronavirus in question and the second a cautionary writing about potentially amping up your immune system too high with regard to this type of infection:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/health-news/heres-what-coronavirus-does-to-the-body/ar-BB100EJ8?li=BBnbfcL&ocid=mailsignout
https://naturallysimple.org/living/2020/02/14/why-elderberry-might-not-be-the-best-adjunct/?fbclid=IwAR0r8IvsoZEwcInIl651HTkymuC7r1tDHcMOfp9D44XsTxPSnZWKrjMHelM
It is necessary, therefore it is possible.
(Borghese)
John Weiland wrote:Just wanted to add two potentially useful links, the first for symptoms and the infection cycle of the current coronavirus in question and the second a cautionary writing about potentially amping up your immune system too high with regard to this type of infection:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/health-news/heres-what-coronavirus-does-to-the-body/ar-BB100EJ8?li=BBnbfcL&ocid=mailsignout
https://naturallysimple.org/living/2020/02/14/why-elderberry-might-not-be-the-best-adjunct/?fbclid=IwAR0r8IvsoZEwcInIl651HTkymuC7r1tDHcMOfp9D44XsTxPSnZWKrjMHelM
Amy Francis wrote: It's important to get it right when it comes to this situation!
May You Walk in Beauty,
Sharol Tilgner ND
Sharol's books available at website
http://www.youarethehealer.org
https://www.facebook.com/youarethehealer.org/
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