This tasty tea lowers fevers and treats flus and colds.
The blossoms of both species can be used as a tea to help lower fever. The herb is diaphoretic, producing a sweat and thereby allowing the body to be cooled in a natural way. A tea of elderberry blossoms is useful for treating colds or flu with accompanying fever. The herb is especially nice to use for children, as it makes a tasty tea that works gently. The flowers can also be used for hay fever or sinusitis, because they help lower the reactivity of mucous membranes to allergens.
The purgative, vomitive and narcotic properties
of the Elder bark have long been known. The leaves are active; they are
(laxative, purgative and diuretic. Hippocrates prescribed them for
dropsical affections) and accord...
No prescription needed! This product is awesome! When any of us start to feel a cold coming on, we take a dose of this, and boom! The cold retreats. Same with flu symptoms - we take elder and the flu heads for the exits. I tell everyone abo...
Take 20-30 drops of extract in a small amount of warm water 3-4 times
daily as needed.
TerraVita is an exclusive line of premium-quality, natural source products
that use only the finest, purest and most potent ingredients found around ...
Take 20-30 drops of extract in a small amount of warm water 3-4 times
daily as needed.
TerraVita is an exclusive line of premium-quality, natural source products
that use only the finest, purest and most potent ingredients found around ...
Take 20-30 drops of extract in a small amount of warm water 3-4 times
daily as needed.
TerraVita is an exclusive line of premium-quality, natural source products
that use only the finest, purest and most potent ingredients found around ...
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Products are intended to support general well being and are not intended to treat, diagnose, mitigate, prevent, or cure any condition or disease. If conditions persist, please seek advice from your medical doctor. The essence of the current American rule on Traditional Uses is, as stated by FTC, "Claims based on historical or traditional use should be substantiated by confirming scientific evidence, or should be presented in such a way that consumers understand that the sole basis for the claim is a history of use of the product for a particular purpose."