Home remedies for minor ills are worth their weight in gold, if you know the right ones. Here are a few useful remedies to help you breathe easy, and a handy list to help guide any future remedies.
June 30, 2015
Home remedies for minor ills are worth their weight in gold, if you know the right ones. Here are a few useful remedies to help you breathe easy, and a handy list to help guide any future remedies.
If you have access to fresh stinging nettle (it's a common garden weed), wear gloves when harvesting and washing the leaves. Add 110 grams (four ounces) of the leaf to 1.5 litres (six cups) of boiling water. Lower heat and simmer until the water turns green, then strain through a fine sieve into a large teapot. During hay fever season, drink a cup of nettle tea in the morning and one in the evening, sweetening it with honey if you like. Studies have yet to definitively confirm the efficacy of stinging nettle (Urtica dioica) for treating hay fever, but legions of people swear by the nettle's powers to ease runny noses and watery eyes.
Here's a homemade spray that will flush allergens from your nasal passages. The isosmotic solution parallels the concentration of salt found in the body, making the spray mild but effective.
This spray works best at room temperature. Discard any unused solution after two days or it may become contaminated.
You probably already know the meaning of many of the words in this list, not all of which apply only to herbal remedies. But when it comes to self-treatment, having a fuller grasp of the terminology becomes all the more important. Here's a great place to start:
This ABC of natural remedies will help you understand what you need the next time you're looking for a natural remedy.
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