2010 And The End Of The Anti-Biotic Era
As we embark into a new era, the way we perceive and understand our health is rapidly changing. We’ve created super-bugs that threaten humanity with potentially catastrophic epidemics, we’ve exploited the planet’s resources to the point of ecological chaos and we have arrived at a pivotal moment in human history.
There are no short cuts we can take. If we are to inhabit a sustainable world, it starts at the ground level. Replanting the global garden is the key to environmental health. Replanting the global garden is the key to poverty alleviation and wide-spread prosperity. Of equal importance, it is the key to preserving the world’s ethno-botanical, spiritual traditions. Medicinal plants are the key to human health.
Healthy people make healthy families. Healthy families make healthy communities. Healthy communities make healthy nations. Healthy nations make a healthy planet. Obviously, we have a long way to go and much work before us.
The work begins in our homes, with our families and with our friends. There are no magic bullets or secret pills that will solve our problems. True health comes from a wholesome lifestyle and efficient adaptability to stress. It comes from education, knowledge and a pro-active attitude towards that which brings goodness and vitality into our lives. True health is not just the absence of stress and dis-ease, it is the presence of vitality, inspiration and the willingness to persevere through difficulty.
So from Floracopeia to all of you who have supported us this year and beyond….we thank you deeply. You are the reason we are still here and the reason why we will continue to thrive into the coming year. Here’s to a healthy, happy and prosperous 2010.
To inspire your new year health resolutions, please read this all too important article from David Crow on the end of the anti-biotic era and the immune enhancing effects of essential oils.
Community Immunity: Using Diffusers for the Immune-Enhancing Effects of Essential Oils
By David Crow, L.Ac.
Essential oil-containing aromatic plants have been used for anti-infectious purposes for millennia. The unpleasant odors of sewage, rotting garbage, sick people, and environmental pollution reveal the presence of proliferating microbial toxins. Without knowing the details of what pathogenic agents were present, people have always known that where there were bad vapors, diseases lurked. Throughout history, aromatic plants and their essential oils have been the primary antidote for these evil spirits.
Since the 1800s, scientific research has compiled a substantial body of evidence demonstrating that essential oils have powerful antimicrobial effects against a broad range of bacterial, viral, and fungal pathogens. As the disturbances of the Kali Yuga increase around us, it is wise to consider how these healing plants can be used as our allies, not only to prevent contagion and enhance personal immunity by purifying the atmosphere around us, but to remove the causes of illness within communities as well.
One of the recent discoveries of aromatic research is that the antimicrobial effects of essential oils are most potent not when the oil is used in liquid form, as when applying tea tree to a fungal infection, but when pathogens are exposed to the vapors of the oils. This means that the most effective way of utilizing essential oils for reducing atmospheric contagion, neutralizing air-borne illnesses and enhancing immunity is through the use of aromatic diffusers, ionizers, and nebulizers. It has also been found that it is not necessary to have a high concentration of oil in the atmosphere for it to be effective; only a minimum amount of oil dispersed from a diffuser is necessary for optimum biological and immunological effects.
Although there are many aromatic diffusers on the market, from simple candle burners to complex ultrasonic devices, atmospheric dispersion of aromatic botanical oils is nothing new. A traditional fire puja in Rajasthan filling the temple with aromatic offerings; precious sandalwood and agarwood incense moving like coiling dragons through monastery meditation halls; Egyptian ceremonies burning copious amounts of desert resins and exotic spices; Tibetan monks throwing juniper branches onto coals while chanting; an Arab family welcoming an honored guest with a smoking censer of their purest frankincense: these are all ways that cultures have practiced spiritual hygiene and community immunity throughout the ages.
In their native habitats, plants grow in communities. They must survive exposed to the natural elements, must compete with other plants, and must live in the midst of complex microbial and insect communities. Essential oils are part of a plants immune system, created by its evolutionary intelligence primarily for repelling pathogens. By harvesting and distilling their oils, we bring the immunological power of the plant communities into our communities.
Just as an individual plant cannot thrive in a poor environment, no individual person can maintain their health if the community they live in is unhealthy. Whether it is the threat of serious epidemics such as flu, allergic reactions caused by genetically engineered food, antibiotic resistant bacterial infections, chemical sensitivities from an increasingly toxic environment, or just the common cold spread through schools and the workplace, one does not have to look far to see this basic truth.
A forest is a perfect example of community immunity. In conifers such as pine, spruce, and fir, the primary agents of the trees defense are monoterpenes, aromatic molecules such as pinene, which give pines their characteristic fragrance. These molecules have several important physiological functions, including repelling insects and microbial pathogens and healing wounds to branches and bark.
Because trees and humans are so closely related biologically, it is not surprising to discover that the essential oils produced by a trees immune system are directly beneficial for our immunity. When we diffuse conifer oils into our homes we are not just bringing the beautiful fragrance of the forest indoors: we are also surrounding ourselves with a cloud of disease-fighting molecules created by the trees immunological intelligence.
A garden is another kind of plant community. When the soil is healthy and rich in nutrients produced by healthy microbial ecologies the plants have vibrant flavors, colors and fragrances, indicating the presence of vitality and life force. Some of the most powerful antibacterial and antiviral essential oils come from this community: rosemary, sage, thyme, oregano, lemon balm, and lavender. A well-known example of this type of community immunity is the Hindu practice of growing of tulsi, holy basil, in courtyards of homes for its health-enhancing and insect-repelling powers; in other parts of the world aromatic plants such as basils and marigolds planted in gardens have been found to be highly effective for repelling mosquitoes from neighborhoods.
Deserts have their own communities of long-lived species, growing slowly under the harsh sun. In this community we find some of the most famous of the sacred scents used for prayer and meditation from time immemorial: frankincense, junipers, sages. From our own backyard in the dry California coastal mountains we find the white sage, now globally renowned as part of Native American ceremonies, containing its own potent camphorous antimicrobial oils.
Jungles are intensely dynamic communities, filled with a multitude of diverse aromatic medicines. Here we find common spices like cinnamon, and more unusual species like ravensare and niaouli, which have unique antimicobial properties.
In the fields we find yet more fragrant plants with oils that destroy pathogens, such as lemongrass, palmarosa, citronella, and angelicas.
Nature has provided us with a rich and diverse palette of aromatic healing treasures to choose from. By filling our gardens and cities with aromatic plants, by using their flavors in our diet, and by diffusing the oils they produce into our workplace and homes we are strengthened and protected by the essence of their immunological intelligence. We can create not just good health at the individual level, but community immunity as well.
Community Immunity Series: On Sale for New Year’s Weekend
The Ultrasonic Aromatherapy Diffuser: $70.00 $63.00
Forest Essential Oil Diffuser Blend: $54.00 $43.20
Orchard Essential Oil Diffuser Blend: $40.00 $32.00
Fields Essential Oil Diffuser Blend $54.00 $40.00


Happy New Year David,
Thank you for all the essential knowledge that you have been sharing over the years and blessings for a healthy and safe 2010.
Am wondering what essential oils or other treatment you might recommend trying for fungal conditions on feet and nails.
Prescription drugs seem more damaging with little result. Laser has been suggested but we do not know of anyone who has had success with this process. I turn to essential oils now with your advise.
Peace,
Joan Baron
environmental artist
student of the connection between healing and the arts
David, your brother Leo (from Tucson) says hello and sends his love, Daniela Holmes Silver City, NM
Hello David, or who ever may respond,
I just returned from Puerto Vallarta, on the west coast of Mexico, where the hotel I stayed in broadcast spray against mosquitos (the city does, too). They’re particularly concerned about Dengue Fever. (A friend of mine there knows several people who have contracted it, with fairly severe results.) I’m researching alternatives. Any suggestions?
The hotel sends a man around every morning wearing a face mask and carrying a portable fogger. The buildings are relatively open air, so inside is not very separate, and of course most people are outside in the warm climate, eating, etc. Families around the pool, iguanas, birds and jungle critters, vegetation, waterways – all are getting doused. I believe they’re using pyrethroid, a synthetic related to pyrethrin (oily esters, C21H28O3 and C22H28O5, from crysanthemum flowers). Certainly this seems better than a pesticide like malathion, yet perhaps there are still better options?
Growing citronella/basil/marigold/other repellant plants? Using essential oil in the fogging machinery? (which) Some type of incense burners? I’m grateful for any input.
~ May the new year bring abundant Blessings! ~ Beth
These comments are echoed in a dynamic book I’ve been reading by Stephen Harrod Buhner “The Lost Language of Plants: The Ecological Importance of Plant Medicines to Life on Earth”. It reveals the devastating effects of pharmaceuticals on all of the earth’s beings while reminding us of the wholistic beauty of the “Way of the Plant”. Essential Oils have been my preferred method of treating my body ills the past decade & I have used them to work with plants in the gardens I tend. Thanks for this call to consciousness in the choices we make!
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