2.7 oz. or 4 oz. tin bottle with spray top.
Invigorate and energize the skin. Add to bath, freshen sheets, air or body!
Soothe minor cuts, scrapes, and burns, and joint inflammations. Relieve dry, itchy skin conditions.
Add to diffuser alone or with essential oils.
Ingredients: Fresh Ponderosa Pine needles (Pinus ponderosa)* steam distilled. *Wild harvested in Idaho.
It is recommended that you consult with a qualified healthcare practitioner before using herbal products, particularly if you are pregnant, nursing, or on any medications.
For educational purposes only. This information has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
- Ponderosa
- Pine, also known as the Western Yellow Pine or simply P-pine, is the
- dominant pine of the Rocky Mountains from Canada to Mexico. (It also
- grows in Canada and Mexico). Lewis and Clark first learned of the tree’s
- existence when they found cones that had been washed down the Missouri
- River into the Dakotas. Ponderosa Pine is a large tree (sometimes more
- than two hundred feet) with an irregular crown, eventually developing a
- flat top or short conical crown. Ponderosa pine self-prunes well and
- develops a clear bole. The bark is very dark (nearly black) on young
- trees, developing cinnamon-colored plates and deep furrows with age.
- This tree has evergreen leaves (needles), 5 to 10 inches long, with
- three tough yellow-green needles per fascicle. When crushed needles have
- a turpentine odor sometimes reminiscent of citrus. The male flowering
- part is yellow-red, cylindrical, and grows in clusters near ends of
- branches; female flower parts are reddish and grow at the branch tips.
- The cones, maturing from August through September, are ovoid, 3 to 6
- inches long, sessile, red-brown in color, and armed with slender
- prickles.
Fresh Plant Hydrosol Extract initiated within 36 hours of harvest.
Hydrosols are a product of steam distillation. Pure deep well water and wild plant materials are heated in a chamber for many hours. The steam rises and condenses in copper pipes. The resulting waters contain a small amount of water soluble plant constituents and fragrant volatile essential oils.
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