Revolutionary laundry soap product grows on trees, replaces laundry detergent 
with eco-friendly solution    
   Commercial laundry detergents, fabric softeners and dryer sheets contain 
alarmingly high levels of toxic chemicals well known to cause cancer, liver 
disorders, neurological disturbances and hormone disruption. I still haven't 
figured out why so many people actually wash their clothes in these dangerous 
chemicals and then wear them around all day, allowing the chemicals in the 
clothes to penetrate their skin and enter their bloodstream where they cause 
serious harm.

Even worse, all those toxic chemicals get flushed downstream where they 
contribute to the mass killing of fish and ocean ecosystems, including all the 
various life forms that depend on the fish (such as birds). 

What if there were a natural laundry soap that actually grew on trees and could 
replace commercial detergents for good?

It sounds too good to be true, but in fact, it's real. For the past two months, 
I've been washing all my own clothes with this simple, natural laundry soap 
that's been used in India for centuries, and I've never felt happier (or more 
environmentally conscious) about my laundry.
  The soap that grows on treesAcross the jungles of India and Indonesia, a 
surprisingly practical tree called sapindus mukorrosi grows a small fruit 
surrounded by a firm outer shell, much like a lychee or rambutan. This tree, 
also called the Chinese Soapberry Tree, is unique in the fact that it 
synthesizes its own natural soap-like saponins that coat the shell of the 
fruit. When the fruits ripen and fall from the tree, local families harvest the 
windfall, then remove the inner fruit from the outer shell. The shell is then 
dried in the sun, using absolutely no chemical processing or manufacturing 
processes. In fact, the whole process uses no fossil fuels either, except in 
the transportation of the product to the western world (which is efficiently 
accomplished by ship).

It is this outer shell -- rich in natural saponins which act as water 
surfactants -- that the native families in India have used for centuries to 
wash their own clothes. They toss 2-3 shells into a small burlap bag and work 
it in with their laundry (which is usually washed by hand, by the way). The 
soap nuts, as they're now called (even though they have no relation to actual 
nuts), absorb water and release their saponins which circulate as a natural 
surfactant in the wash water, reducing the surface tension of the water and 
freeing dirt, grime and oils from the clothing.

When the clothes are rinsed, the soap nut saponins are washed downstream where 
they remain harmless to the environment. No synthetic chemicals, no fragrance 
chemicals, no foaming agents or other toxins. Just nut shells grown by nature. 
(See the resources section at the end of this article to learn where you can 
buy these nuts in the US, Canada, UK, Ireland and elsewhere...)

  Soap nuts can replace all brand-name detergentsEven though these soap nuts 
have been used for hundreds of years in India and Indonesia, they're barely 
known in the western world where brand-name chemical detergents are heavily 
marketed to consumers through advertising, coupons and in-store displays. 
Packed in eye-catching boxes and scented with artificial fragrance chemicals, 
these synthetic detergents are literally scooped up by tens of millions of 
consumers who have no idea they're bathing their clothes in cancer-causing 
chemicals while destroying the environment by flushing dangerous chemicals 
downstream.

Until now, there have been few options for eco-conscious consumers. While an 
increasing number of eco-friendly manufactured laundry products now exist in 
the marketplace (such as Seventh Generation and Biokleen brands), no natural 
laundry product has appeared in the western world that is 100% manufactured 
directly by nature. And many of the so-called "natural" laundry products are 
still made with fragrance chemicals, anyway.

When I first saw these soap nuts, I got really excited about the possibility of 
publicizing an eco-friendly solution that could replace all the manufactured 
laundry products currently being bought by consumers. So I decided to 
financially support the Maggie's Soap Nuts company by buying a large number of 
her soap nut products and stocking them in our Phoenix fulfillment center. 
They're now available for you to purchase (at a very reasonable price, by the 
way) at www.BetterLifeGoods.com

When you purchase these soap nuts and put them to use, you're not only 
protecting your health and the environment, you're also supporting the families 
in India and Indonesia that sustainably harvest these nuts as a way of life. 
Remember how I'm always urging us all to "vote with our dollars?" This is the 
perfect opportunity to do so. Vote against the chemical laundry companies and 
vote FOR natural, tree-grown laundry products by switching to soap nuts!

This is the "miracle" laundry product made by Mother Nature that I've been 
looking for. It's made by a tree, with absolutely nothing added or taken away 
(except the fruit, of course). It's natural through and through. No other 
laundry product even comes close.

Maggie's Soap Nuts replace both laundry detergent and fabric softener, by the 
way. They leave your clothes clean, unscented and feeling cozy soft. It's the 
first laundry product I've ever found that I was truly happy with. This is what 
I'm now washing all my clothes with.

  But do the soap nuts really work?Of course, any skeptical consumer would be 
asking one question right now: "Do these soap nuts really work?"

I was skeptical, too, that a soap nut grown by a tree in India could really 
replace my high-tech eco-friendly laundry soap made in America. So I bought a 
box of Maggie's Soap Nuts and tried them myself. I took 3 soap nuts and dropped 
them into the small cotton bag that comes in each box of Maggie's Soap Nuts, 
then I tossed them into my laundry and avoided using any other detergents or 
laundry products. I set the temperature on warm and gave it a normal wash 
cycle, then I hit the start button and walked away.

An hour later, I returned and examined the finished load. They sure smelled 
clean. But the real test would come from wearing them during a workout, so I 
took them outside to dry them in the sun (since we have such great sunlight 
here in Arizona, I often use it for drying clothes). After a few hours of 
blazing desert sunlight, the clothes were completely dry. I suited up with a 
pair of workout pants and an A shirt, then headed to the gym for an intense 
workout designed to produce lots of sweat.

The short version of this story is that the clothes were really, truly clean 
and they smelled just fine, even after an hour of sweat-inducing cardiovascular 
activity. (It also helps that I don't drink dairy products, which makes people 
stink, but that's another story...) My workout clothes seemed just as clean to 
me as any other load of laundry I washed in various eco-friendly laundry 
products!

Over the next few days, I continued washing more loads with the soap nuts. 
Every load came out clean, yet unscented (just the way I like it). I washed 
grimy socks, workout pants, hiking shorts and sweaty underwear, and everything 
was cleaned to my satisfaction. In other words, Maggie's Soap Nuts really clean 
your clothes just as good as commercial soap products! I remain convinced that 
these tree-grown soap nuts are just as good as any other soap products on the 
market.

One thing I did learn in all this, however, was that you probably shouldn't 
wash bedsheets with these soap nuts. What happened? In my wash, the small 
cotton bag holding the soap nuts got wrapped up in the sheet, and the soap nuts 
soaked the sheet with a slight soap nut color (sort of rust colored). This 
color came out in the next wash, because it's not a permanent stain or 
anything, but it taught me that for the soap nuts to be really effective, they 
needed to be able to circulate freely in the laundry and not get caught in a 
large bedsheet.

Aside from the bedsheet incident, everything else came out of the wash sqeaky 
clean!

  How soap nuts clean your laundryThe process by which soap nuts clean your 
clothes is naturally quite simple. The soap nut shell contains a natural 
saponin that works as a surfactant, making your water "wetter" and allowing it 
to penetrate the fibers of your clothing, working away the dirt and grime that 
makes clothes dirty. The surfactant then holds on to the dirt, keeping it in 
suspension in the water until it's drained away, taking the dirt with it.

What's left is a load of clean clothes and nothing else! That's the way laundry 
should be. Much like clean water, clean laundry should NOT contain toxic 
chemical residues. In fact, it's more important to consider what laundry 
products do NOT contain than to look at what they do contain.

What Maggie's Soap Nuts do NOT contain include:

• Foaming chemicals that fool consumers into thinking their clothes are cleaner 
because there are "suds" in the wash. TRUTH: Suds have nothing to do with 
cleaning. They are chemical additives used to create the illusion of cleaning 
action. (Silly consumers actually expect suds, so the manufacturers add them 
in.)

• Fragrance chemicals that make laundry "smell" clean. Most commercial laundry 
products use toxic, synthetic fragrance chemicals that are, in fact, well known 
to promote cancer and liver disorders. Laundry products are not really 
regulated by any single government agency, and there is currently no law 
banning the use of known cancer-causing chemicals in laundry products (much 
like with cosmetics).

• Filler ingredients. Nearly all commercial laundry products are made with at 
least 50% filler ingredients to "bulk them up" and make them appear to deliver 
more value for the price. Consumers are mostly just buying the illusion of 
detergent, made mostly with filler.

You won't find filler or toxic chemicals in Maggie's Soap Nuts. Just pure, 
natural saponins grown by a tree and engineered by nature. In my opinion, 
that's where more of our products should ultimately come from. Wouldn't it be 
great if shampoo also grew on trees?

Actually, it does.

  More than just laundry soapThe natural saponins found in Maggie's Soap Nuts 
are universal cleaning agents. Sure, they work great in the laundry, but did 
you know they are also traditionally used to clean skin and hair? In fact, the 
soap nut saponins work on everything from pets and children to washing fruits 
and vegetables. In ancient India, jewelers even used the soap to shine their 
precious metals and stones, giving them a beautiful natural luster.

By the way, all children's clothes should be washed in these soap nuts to avoid 
exposing infants and children to the toxic chemicals found in commercial 
laundry products. And while you're at it, why not save yourself from that 
exposure, too, by washing your own clothes with nature's laundry soap?

Using Maggie's Soap Nuts, you can make your own ultra-pure multipurpose cleaner.

Here's the recipe:

Simmer 1 cup of soap nuts in 4 cups of water on your stove, then allow the 
liquid to cool. Mash the soap nuts by hand (squish them around to get out all 
the saponins), then drain the resulting liquid through a cheese cloth or nut 
milk bag. Voila! You've got a concentrated cleaner made by nature! Use it 
around the kitchen, in the shower, washing the dog... it's all good. You can 
even use it to wash your dishes.

Remember: This natural soap isn't going to foam up like phoney cleaning 
products made by chemical companies, and it sure doesn't smell like fragrance 
chemicals. So don't expect it to look or smell like the products you might have 
been using. However, soap nuts get things really clean. The soap works so well 
that it's actually being studied right now as a way to decontaminate soils from 
exposure to toxic chemicals. How's that for a natural solution? Nature's soap 
can save the planet from man's soap.

  The bottom line: Nature's replacement for manufactured soap productsOverall, 
I'm incredibly delighted to have discovered Maggie's Soap Nuts. They're 
nature's gift to the world, and we would all be smart to stop buying 
manufactured laundry detergents and switch to natural laundry soaps that grow 
on trees. It's good for your health, your family and your environment. Plus, it 
ends the cycle of monetary support for manipulative consumer product companies 
that poison the world with their harmful chemicals products. All those 
brightly-colored laundry detergent boxes lining the shelves of your local 
grocery store are, indeed, quite poisonous to both you and the planet.

How much do soap nuts cost? The price of using these soap nuts in your laundry 
is well under fifty cents a load (U.S.), making it quite comparable to other 
eco-friendly laundry products. It's not as cheap as dumping foaming chemicals 
into your laundry, but then again, if you're the kind of person reading this 
website, you're probably far more concerned about saving your health than 
saving a quarter on a load of toxic laundry. Isn't it good to know that you can 
protect your health and protect the planet as the same time?

Washing your clothes doesn't have to be bad for the environment. There's a new 
option now in the western world: Soap nuts!

  Where to get your soap nuts: U.S., Canada, U.K. and moreOur e-commerce site 
www.BetterLifeGoods.com is now shipping these soap nuts throughout the U.S. and 
Canada, including Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Orders are also accepted from other 
countries, but we urge consumers to carefully consider the fuel resources 
needed to ship such items internationally. If you live in Australia, New 
Zealand or anywhere near Asia, we encourage you to find a regional source for 
these soap nuts to avoid redundant international shipping. Here are a few 
sources we know of right now:

U.S. and Canada: www.BetterLifeGoods.com (that's our e-commerce site)

UK & Ireland sources for Soapods, another brand of a similar product: 
http://www.soapods.com/stockists.html

  Frequently Asked Questions about Maggie's Soap NutsThe following information 
is borrowed from Maggie's Soap Nuts website. It answers most of the common 
questions about soap nuts:

Can I use too many nuts?
We recommend two whole Maggie's Soap Nuts per load of hot water wash. For 
really dirty clothes, giant loads, or when washing in cold water, you can use 
more nuts. You'll know you've used too many nuts if your clothes feel stiff 
after washing. The stiffness results from excess saponin in the rinse water and 
is not harmful to you or the clothes. The stiffness will go away after the next 
washing.

Can I use the Soap Nuts more than once?
It depends on the temperature of the water you're using. The saponin in 
Maggie's Soap Nuts releases quickly into hot water, and more slowly in cold 
water. When washing in hot water you only need two soap nuts per load and 
they'll release all of their saponin in about one wash. When washing with cold 
water, up to 4 nuts and reuse them up to 4 times. You'll know the saponin in 
Maggie's Soap Nuts is used up when the nuts no longer feel squeaky clean or 
sudsy when you rub them.

Can I use Soap Nuts with any temperature water?
Yes! The saponin in Maggie's Soap Nuts releases quickly into hot water, and 
more slowly in cold water. When washing in hot water you only need the 
equivalent of two whole Soap Nuts per load. They'll release all of their 
saponin in about one wash. When washing with cold water, up to 4 nuts and reuse 
them up to 4 times. Alternatively, pre-soak your cotton sack containing two 
soap nuts in a little hot water to release the saponin. After a couple minutes 
of soaking, add the mixture to the cold-water wash.

Do I have to remove the Maggie's Soap Nuts from the washing machine during the 
rinse cycle?
No need to remove the soap nuts from the rinse cycle. There's no soapy residue 
to rinse away! The little bit of saponin left in the rinse adds softness and 
body to your clothes.

Are Maggie's Soap Nuts hypoallergenic?
Yes! Maggie's Soap Nuts are 100% natural, safe and hypoallergenic. We recommend 
them for babies and people with sensitive skin. In Indian Ayurvedic medicine, 
Soap Nuts are used traditionally to treat skin disorders like eczema and 
psoriasis. With Maggie's Soap Nuts, there's nothing between you and your 
clothes but Mother Nature!

Do I need to clean the chemical detergent residue out of my washing machine 
before I wash my clothes with Soap Nuts?
You can use Maggie's Soap Nuts to purify your washing machine. To remove 
chemical residues from your machine, run a full load of rags through a warm or 
hot wash cycle with 4-5 soap nuts in the sack.

I'm allergic to nuts. Can I use Soap Nuts?
Yes! Maggie's Soap Nuts are actually a dried fruit related to the lychee. 
People with nut allergies can safely use Soap Nuts! They are not actually nuts.

Do Maggie's Soap Nuts have a fragrance?
Yes and No. On their own Maggie's Soap Nuts have a mild, fresh, vinegary smell. 
They will not fragrance your clothes. For added fragrance, add a few drops of 
you favorite essential oil on the cotton sack. For a refreshing wash, Maggie 
likes to use geranium, coriander, or neroli.

Do I need to use fabric softener?
Nope. Maggie's Soap Nuts naturally soften and add body to your clothes! In 
fact, Soap Nuts are used commercially to give body and sheen to expensive 
silks! You'll love how your clothes feel after washing with Maggie's Soap Nuts.

Are Maggie's Soap Nuts safe for my delicate washables?
Yes! Soap Nuts are ideal for gently cleaning delicate fibers like wool and silk!

Will Soap Nuts keep my colors bright?
Yes! Maggie's Soap Nuts are 100% natural and gentle. Your colors will look 
brighter!

Will Maggie's Soap Nuts get my white clothes REALLY white?
To maintain sparkling whites we recommend that you always separate your colors. 
For extra stain removal, when necessary add a scoop of environmentally friendly 
oxygen bleach to the wash.

Can Maggie's Soap Nuts help me Save Water and Energy?
Yes! Since there's no soapy residue to rinse away you can use shorter rinse 
cycles on your washing machine.

What do I do with the leftover shells?
You'll know the saponin in Maggie's Soap Nuts is used up when the nuts no 
longer feel squeaky clean and sudsy when you rub them. If they're re-useable, 
let the shells dry out and use them again later. When the shells are ready to 
retire, add them to your 
garden compost.

Why is the plastic bag and silica gel desiccant necessary?
We import Maggie's Soap Nuts from humid climates. Without a plastic bag the 
nuts absorb moisture from the very wet air and get black and sticky as they 
release their saponin. We pack a desiccant inside each bag to help absorb any 
moisture that gets trapped inside.

My Nuts are sticky! What's up?
Yikes! Soap Nuts turn black and sticky as they absorb moisture from the air. If 
your soap nuts are exposed to long-term moisture, like humid air, they may 
change color. This doesn't affect Soap Nuts' cleaning power. In fact, some 
people think the sticky nuts 
clean better because they are pre-releasing their saponin. We like our nuts to 
release when WE are ready, so we pack them with a desiccant.

What's this little black marble I found in my box of Soap Nuts?
Lucky you! That little black marble is a seed. You can plant your own Soapberry 
tree!

 
    
  check out my website......http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/arubyrogers/
   

       
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