Thursday, October 14, 2010

The Public Restroom Solution


One of the things that bothers me most is using public restrooms. While it's something we all have to do occasionally, it doesn't mean that we to expose ourselves to the 'stuff' on the lids. Armed with essential oils that historically have proven to be anti-bacterial, anti-viral, anti-fungal, you won't have to cringe every time you have to make a visit to a toilet away from home. Just spray the lid and wipe off and your good to 'go'.

This multi-use spray can also be anywhere - door knobs, baby changing tables or any area that you touch that is subject to microorganisms (bottom of your purse). A side benefit of this spray is that as a bathroom odor spray and natural air freshener / deodorizer, the scent of the essential oils linger in the area eliminating any embarrassing scents you may have left behind.

The beautiful part of this natural multi-use spray is that doesn't contain any harmful chemicals. During flu seasons, this will be an important weapon to carry with you!


Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Raw Milk Response..reprint from Kimberly Hartke



Having dairy goats, we believe in the benefits of drinking raw milk. It's a shame that the government doesn't allow folks to purchase it from farms like in the 'good old days'. They restrict real food and force GMO foods on us. Go figure.

Inspired by an Unpleasant Encounter at the NIH Lactose Intolerance Consensus Conference

This is my written response to a lady who was most upset that I would publicly advocate raw milk in Maryland, a state where it was illegal. She grew up on a dairy farm and said “my father would never sell unpasteurized milk” and she cited the many deaths from undulant fever that occurred in his day and age. She considers raw milk a life and death issue. Fortunately, the NIH staffers supported my freedom of speech and declined to throw me out of the building. Saddened to have so enraged this woman, I am attempting to get this letter to her via the conference organizers.

Dear Angry Lady:
We met at the NIH Lactose Intolerance conference. You were quite angry about my exhibit booth there for the nutrition education group, Weston A. Price Foundation. Because of the high emotion, I was not able to really share with you why we were there, and what we advocate.

To try to bring some understanding between us, I feel compelled to write you.

We are a 12,000 member organization of farmers, health conscious consumers and health professionals. We promote whole foods, home cooking and support for local agriculture. We are educating the public and health professionals about the pioneering research done by Dr. Weston A. Price on primitive people groups around the world back in the 1930’s.

He found that indigenous people who ate their traditional foods had perfect teeth, an absence of degenerative disease and strong moral character. Once they were exposed to modern, processed foods, their health deteriorated. He wrote a nutrition classic, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, which is highly regarded by university nutrition and anthropology departments.

I know, based on your experience and knowledge it seems wrong for anyone to promote raw milk. But may I tell you why I do?

My ancestors were dairy farmers, too. My great-grandmother was a cheesemaker’s wife in the 1920’s. Her husband’s brother was a dairy farmer. She contracted tuberculosis of the bowel. A raw milk and raw egg diet prescribed by her doctor healed her of the disease. She lived in a tent in the front yard of her brother-in law’s dairy farm in Oregon, while she took “the milk cure.”

Five years ago, I was diagnosed with a painful knee condition, chondromalacia patella (runners knee). I have discovered that raw dairy products have helped to greatly improve the quality of my life. I own a cowshare at a certified grade A dairy, and my dairy farmer’s program was established with the approval of our state agricultural officials. This same dairy has saved the life of a baby failing to thrive, a story which was documented in a Washington Post article several years ago, called The Raw Deal.

So, for those of us on the other side of this issue, raw milk is about life and death, too.

It is important for you to know that there are two ways to insure that fresh milk is safe for consumption, one is pasteurization. The other, more conservative way, is with traditional animal husbandry. I mean by this, keeping cows on pasture, allowing them exercise and sunshine and feeding them only grass and hay. The farms that have strayed from traditional animal husbandry have led to the current state of affairs where we are forced to pasteurize much of our nation’s milk supply.

Today, with our ability to test for pathogens and bovine diseases (which modern raw dairy farmers do) it is entirely possible to ensure fresh milk’s safety. According to the Associated Press, raw milk is available in 35 states either through direct farm sales, cowshare programs, and in the case of California and 8 other states, even retail stores. So, Maryland is in the minority of 16 states that frustrate consumer access.

Nowhere in North America is it illegal to consume raw milk. What we are really talking about is that in some states, consumer freedom of choice is being denied. You might be surprised to hear the farm fresh milk is widely available in the United Kingdom, Italy, Slovenia and other European countries.

I wish you knew how many people with chronic health issues, like myself, are experiencing better health with carefully sourced farm fresh milk. The reason our non-profit exhibited at the NIH Lactose Intolerance Consensus Conference was to tell the attendees that 80% of those who are lactose intolerant, are able to consume unprocessed milk with absolutely no problem. Pasteurization is the root cause of much of the dairy intolerance people experience, today. When we sterilize milk, it destroys the enzyme lactase, naturally found in milk, which helps to digest lactose.

A young mother in Maryland who has led the effort to re-establish access to raw dairy in her state, is doing so because her children can’t tolerated processed milk. They are growing up healthy and strong on raw milk from Pennsylvania farms where it is legal for the farms to sell it (over 100 farms have raw milk permits issued from the state). Can you imagine the hardship of having to go to another state to provide food for your family—while watching as Maryland dairy farmers suffer great financial losses in this economy?

We also want the NIH attendees to know that many lactose intolerant people find relief by consuming fermented dairy products such as kefir, yogurt and cheeses. The fermentation process pre-digests the lactose, which means it is more easily tolerated.

I understand the thrust of the conference was to encourage dairy consumption in some form, and in that way, the Weston A. Price Foundation is at the forefront of promoting safe, healthy dairy foods.

But, we stand for much more than safe raw milk, we encourage a comprehensive dietary protocol which stresses whole and natural foods prepared using traditional methods. These foods include grassfed meats, bone broths, fermented vegetables and sourdough grains. We are helping thousands regain their health with our therapeutic diet. And we are encouraging America to learn, once again, how to cook at home and sit down for nutritious family meals—something our children and families will truly benefit from doing.

Please visit our westonaprice.org website and you’ll realize that there are many things that we promote that you probably can see value in, and just know that our experience of fresh, unprocessed milk is one of a life saving, health restoring foodstuff that under the right conditions can be safer and more nutritious, even, than pasteurized milk.

I do appreciate hearing of your concerns, and I hope this letter finds you well and will be received as the olive branch it is intended to be. I am very grateful for the opportunity to exhibit at this prestigious conference to share our story with you and others. I hope you will look at some of the new evidence and that someday you will agree that consumers need the right to choose healthy food, and the farmers need to have the freedom (and the support of state government officials) to meet the needs of the citizens they seek to serve.

Sincerely,

Kimberly Hartke
Publicist
Westonaprice.org and realmilk.com