Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-09 Thread Lena Guyot
Hi PT,
I only retain water if I've eaten stuff with regular table salt, and I READ 
LABELS CAREFULLY to avoid ordinary salt. (After an evening of junk food, my 
ankles will show edema) I try to avoid those kinds of foods, as the docs were 
right about that kind of salt.
The only other time I retain water is when I've not been hydrating enough, as 
the body will hold onto water if it thinks enough isn't coming in. As a Lymie, 
I drink half my weight (but in oz, not lbs) of water every day. That's part of 
the lymestrategies protocol.

Be well,
Léna
On Dec 9, 2016, at 9:40 AM, PT Ferrance wrote:

> Hi Lena, 
> How do you compensate for the water retention that often accompanies high 
> salt intake? 
> Thanks. 
> PT
> 
> 
> 
> From: Drumroll <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
> Sent: Wednesday, December 7, 2016 10:48 PM
> Subject: Re: CS>Salt
> 
> The salt and C protocol of lymestrategies: excellent, proven system for 
> slowly, carefully killing Lyme pathogens.the two are taken in equal amounts 
> and create a hostile environment for the Lyme, starting at 1g per day and 
> ramping up very slowly, also detoxing to clear the toxic dead pathogens.Lots 
> of Lymies are getting their lives back
> this way.
> Be well,
> Lena
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:54 PM, Patricia Cassidy <pcassi...@tx.rr.com> wrote:
> 
>> 
> 
> Sprouts sells the pink Himalayan salt in bulk.
> May i ask why you are taking 13g of salt ?  I thought we got enough in our 
> regular food especially if we add salt. :/  tricia
> 
> On 12/7/2016 8:46 PM, Lena Guyot wrote:
>> This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
>> daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
>> On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:
>> 
>>> Most health food stores carry
>>> good quality sea salt
>>> 
>>> On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com> wrote:
>>> Hi Tia,
>>> 
>>> If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
>>> favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big 
>>> reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated 
>>> enough of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: 
>>> San Francisco Salt Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend 
>>> the finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close 
>>> to 1 g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many 
>>> different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.
>>> 
>>> Be well,
>>> Léna
>>> On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:
>>> 
>>>> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things 
>>>> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this 
>>>> as I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I 
>>>> do recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide 
>>>> me to buy this again.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> TIA
>>>> 
>>>> Teri Kavakos
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
>>>> Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
>>>> 
>>>> Unsubscribe:
>>>> <mailto:silver-list-request@ eskimo.com?subject= unsubscribe>
>>>> Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/ silver-list@eskimo.com/ 
>>>> maillist.html
>>>> 
>>>> Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:silver-off-topic-list@ eskimo.com>
>>>> List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> 



Re: CS>Salt (Celtic salt as opposed to Himalayan salt

2016-12-09 Thread MaryAnn Helland
Jean -- where do you buy your Celtic salt? 

On Wednesday, December 7, 2016 11:56 PM, Jean Baugh 
<oldgloryte...@srcaccess.net> wrote:
 

 Hi,
I’ve tried Celtic sea salt and Himalayan salt, side by side.  There is no 
comparison; hands down the Celtic Sea Salt (coarse gray), was the taste test 
winner.  I use a coffee grinder to grind the coarse gray Celtic sea salt but 
you can buy it already ground and in shakers.
It can be bought in 10 lb bags from the people who collected this salt.   While 
giving many samples away and having many people asking for more free samples, 
still have 1/3 of the original purchase.  The only way to help some people who 
love freebies, is to tell them and in some cases, write them too, the address 
and website of the Celtic Sea Salt.  It took quite awhile to wean one person 
but he finally bought the Celtic Sea Salt in bulk.
My relative brought me a gift of Himalayan salt and ended up taking three times 
that amount of Celtic Sea Salt, back with her.  I still wonder if that was a 
con because she knew I had a stash of Celtic Sea Salt.  I even gave her the 
Himalayan salt back for CSS is the only one for me.
Jean

From:  Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
Reply-To:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Date:  Wednesday, December 7, 2016 at 8:46 PM
To:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Subject:  Re: CS>Salt
Resent-From:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Resent-Date:  Wed, 7 Dec 2016 18:46:23 -0800 (PST)

This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:

Most health food stores carrygood quality sea salt
On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com> wrote:

Hi Tia,
If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big reusable 
plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated enough of them, 
I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: San Francisco Salt 
Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the finest grind of 
the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close to 1 g. I fill up my old 
Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many different bulk sizes and the 
price is a great deal.
Be well,Léna
On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:

I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things that 
you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this as I 
believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I do recall 
there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me to buy this 
again.


TIA

Teri Kavakos


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Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-09 Thread PT Ferrance
Hi Lena, 
How do you compensate for the water retention that often accompanies high salt 
intake? 
Thanks. 
PT



  From: Drumroll <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Wednesday, December 7, 2016 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: CS>Salt
   
The salt and C protocol of lymestrategies: excellent, proven system for slowly, 
carefully killing Lyme pathogens.the two are taken in equal amounts and create 
a hostile environment for the Lyme, starting at 1g per day and ramping up very 
slowly, also detoxing to clear the toxic dead pathogens.Lots of Lymies are 
getting their lives back
this way.Be well,Lena
Sent from my iPad
On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:54 PM, Patricia Cassidy <pcassi...@tx.rr.com> wrote:


 
Sprouts sells the pink Himalayan salt in bulk. May i ask why you are taking 13g 
of salt ?  I thought we got enough in our regular food especially if we add 
salt. :/  tricia
  
 On 12/7/2016 8:46 PM, Lena Guyot wrote:
  
This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
  On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote: 
 
 Most health food stores carry good quality sea salt  
 On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com> wrote:
 
 Hi Tia, 
  If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins  sells nice big 
reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated enough 
of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: San Francisco 
Salt Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the  finest grind 
of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close to 1 g. I fill up my 
old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many different bulk sizes and 
the price is a great deal. 
  Be well, Léna
  On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote: 
 
 I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things that 
you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this as I 
believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I do recall 
there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me to buy this 
again.
 
 
 TIA
 
 Teri Kavakos
 
 
 --
 The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
 Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
 
 Unsubscribe:
 <mailto:silver-list-request@ eskimo.com?subject= unsubscribe>
 Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/ silver-list@eskimo.com/ maillist.html
 
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 List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>
 
 
  
  

  
  
  
 
 
 

   

Re: CS>Salt (Celtic salt as opposed to Himalayan salt

2016-12-08 Thread PT Ferrance
And I like Himmy for eating/cooking and CSS for salting my water!PT
 


  From: Drumroll <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
 Sent: Thursday, December 8, 2016 8:17 AM
 Subject: Re: CS>Salt (Celtic salt as opposed to Himalayan salt
   
Happy your salt works for you. Early in my choosing, My favoring Himalayan salt 
camr from a concern about modern-day pollutants in present ocean's sources. 
Himmy salt is ancient, taken from beneath mountains, pre-dating those concerns. 
Still, one needs to vet all salt for possible metals, etc.I've had Lyme for 
over 50 years, was truly circling the drain, and now have my life back. As they 
say, " the proof of the pudding is in the eating"...Be well,Lena

Sent from my iPad
On Dec 8, 2016, at 12:54 AM, Jean Baugh <oldgloryte...@srcaccess.net> wrote:


Hi,
I’ve tried Celtic sea salt and Himalayan salt, side by side.  There is no 
comparison; hands down the Celtic Sea Salt (coarse gray), was the taste test 
winner.  I use a coffee grinder to grind the coarse gray Celtic sea salt but 
you can buy it already ground and in shakers.
It can be bought in 10 lb bags from the people who collected this salt.   While 
giving many samples away and having many people asking for more free samples, 
still have 1/3 of the original purchase.  The only way to help some people who 
love freebies, is to tell them and in some cases, write them too, the address 
and website of the Celtic Sea Salt.  It took quite awhile to wean one person 
but he finally bought the Celtic Sea Salt in bulk.
My relative brought me a gift of Himalayan salt and ended up taking three times 
that amount of Celtic Sea Salt, back with her.  I still wonder if that was a 
con because she knew I had a stash of Celtic Sea Salt.  I even gave her the 
Himalayan salt back for CSS is the only one for me.
Jean

From:  Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
Reply-To:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Date:  Wednesday, December 7, 2016 at 8:46 PM
To:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Subject:  Re: CS>Salt
Resent-From:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Resent-Date:  Wed, 7 Dec 2016 18:46:23 -0800 (PST)

This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:

Most health food stores carrygood quality sea salt
On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com> wrote:

Hi Tia,
If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big reusable 
plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated enough of them, 
I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: San Francisco Salt 
Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the finest grind of 
the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close to 1 g. I fill up my old 
Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many different bulk sizes and the 
price is a great deal.
Be well,Léna
On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:

I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things that 
you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this as I 
believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I do recall 
there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me to buy this 
again.


TIA

Teri Kavakos


--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
 Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org

Unsubscribe:
 <mailto:silver-list-request@ eskimo.com?subject= unsubscribe>
Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/ silver-list@eskimo.com/ maillist.html

Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:silver-off-topic-list@ eskimo.com>
List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>











   

Re: CS>Salt (Celtic salt as opposed to Himalayan salt

2016-12-08 Thread Drumroll
Happy your salt works for you. Early in my choosing, My favoring Himalayan salt 
camr from a concern about modern-day pollutants in present ocean's sources. 
Himmy salt is ancient, taken from beneath mountains, pre-dating those concerns. 
Still, one needs to vet all salt for possible metals, etc.
I've had Lyme for over 50 years, was truly circling the drain, and now have my 
life back. As they say, " the proof of the pudding is in the eating"...
Be well,
Lena

Sent from my iPad

> On Dec 8, 2016, at 12:54 AM, Jean Baugh <oldgloryte...@srcaccess.net> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> I’ve tried Celtic sea salt and Himalayan salt, side by side.  There is no 
> comparison; hands down the Celtic Sea Salt (coarse gray), was the taste test 
> winner.  I use a coffee grinder to grind the coarse gray Celtic sea salt but 
> you can buy it already ground and in shakers.
> 
> It can be bought in 10 lb bags from the people who collected this salt.   
> While giving many samples away and having many people asking for more free 
> samples, still have 1/3 of the original purchase.  The only way to help some 
> people who love freebies, is to tell them and in some cases, write them too, 
> the address and website of the Celtic Sea Salt.  It took quite awhile to wean 
> one person but he finally bought the Celtic Sea Salt in bulk.
> 
> My relative brought me a gift of Himalayan salt and ended up taking three 
> times that amount of Celtic Sea Salt, back with her.  I still wonder if that 
> was a con because she knew I had a stash of Celtic Sea Salt.  I even gave her 
> the Himalayan salt back for CSS is the only one for me.
> 
> Jean
> 
> 
> 
> From: Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
> Reply-To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
> Date: Wednesday, December 7, 2016 at 8:46 PM
> To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
> Subject: Re: CS>Salt
> Resent-From: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
> Resent-Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2016 18:46:23 -0800 (PST)
> 
> This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
> daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
>> On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:
>> 
>> Most health food stores carry
>> good quality sea salt
>> 
>>> On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com> wrote:
>>> Hi Tia,
>>> 
>>> If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
>>> favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big 
>>> reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated 
>>> enough of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: 
>>> San Francisco Salt Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend 
>>> the finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close 
>>> to 1 g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many 
>>> different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.
>>> 
>>> Be well,
>>> Léna
>>>> On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things 
>>>> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this 
>>>> as I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I 
>>>> do recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide 
>>>> me to buy this again.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> TIA
>>>> 
>>>> Teri Kavakos
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
>>>> Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
>>>> 
>>>> Unsubscribe:
>>>> <mailto:silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com?subject=unsubscribe>
>>>> Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html
>>>> 
>>>> Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com>
>>>> List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>> 
>> 
> 


CS>Salt (Celtic salt as opposed to Himalayan salt

2016-12-07 Thread Jean Baugh
Hi,

I¹ve tried Celtic sea salt and Himalayan salt, side by side.  There is no
comparison; hands down the Celtic Sea Salt (coarse gray), was the taste test
winner.  I use a coffee grinder to grind the coarse gray Celtic sea salt but
you can buy it already ground and in shakers.

It can be bought in 10 lb bags from the people who collected this salt.
While giving many samples away and having many people asking for more free
samples, still have 1/3 of the original purchase.  The only way to help some
people who love freebies, is to tell them and in some cases, write them too,
the address and website of the Celtic Sea Salt.  It took quite awhile to
wean one person but he finally bought the Celtic Sea Salt in bulk.

My relative brought me a gift of Himalayan salt and ended up taking three
times that amount of Celtic Sea Salt, back with her.  I still wonder if that
was a con because she knew I had a stash of Celtic Sea Salt.  I even gave
her the Himalayan salt back for CSS is the only one for me.

Jean



From:  Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com>
Reply-To:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Date:  Wednesday, December 7, 2016 at 8:46 PM
To:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Subject:  Re: CS>Salt
Resent-From:  <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Resent-Date:  Wed,  7 Dec 2016 18:46:23 -0800 (PST)

This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g
daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L
On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:

> Most health food stores carry
> good quality sea salt
> 
> On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot <drumr...@stny.rr.com> wrote:
>> Hi Tia,
>> 
>> If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and
>> favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big
>> reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated
>> enough of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: San
>> Francisco Salt Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the
>> finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close to 1
>> g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many
>> different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.
>> 
>> Be well,
>> Léna
>> On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:
>> 
>>> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things
>>> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this as
>>> I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I do
>>> recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me
>>> to buy this again.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> TIA
>>> 
>>> Teri Kavakos
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --
>>> The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
>>>  Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
>>> <http://www.silverlist.org/>
>>> 
>>> Unsubscribe:
>>>  <mailto:silver-list-requ...@eskimo.com?subject=unsubscribe>
>>> Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html
>>> 
>>> Off-Topic discussions: <mailto:silver-off-topic-l...@eskimo.com>
>>> List Owner: Mike Devour <mailto:mdev...@eskimo.com>
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
> 





Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-07 Thread Drumroll
The salt and C protocol of lymestrategies: excellent, proven system for slowly, 
carefully killing Lyme pathogens.the two are taken in equal amounts and create 
a hostile environment for the Lyme, starting at 1g per day and ramping up very 
slowly, also detoxing to clear the toxic dead pathogens.Lots of Lymies are 
getting their lives back
this way.
Be well,
Lena
Sent from my iPad

> On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:54 PM, Patricia Cassidy  wrote:
> 
> Sprouts sells the pink Himalayan salt in bulk.
> 
> May i ask why you are taking 13g of salt ?  I thought we got enough in our 
> regular food especially if we add salt. :/  tricia
> 
> 
>> On 12/7/2016 8:46 PM, Lena Guyot wrote:
>> This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
>> daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
>>> On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:
>>> 
>>> Most health food stores carry
>>> good quality sea salt
>>> 
 On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot  wrote:
 Hi Tia,
 
 If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
 favored   in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's 
 Vitamins sells nice big reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. 
 When I'd accumulated enough of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally 
 high quality source: San Francisco Salt Company. If you're making your own 
 capsules, I recommend the finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) 
 capsule of it is close to 1 g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! 
 SFSalt Co ships in many different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.
 
 Be well,
 Léna
> On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:
> 
> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things 
> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this 
> as I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  
> I do recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can 
> guide me to buy this again.
> 
> 
> TIA
> 
> Teri Kavakos
> 
> 
> --
> The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
> Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
> 
> Unsubscribe:
> 
> Archives:  
> http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html
> 
> Off-Topic discussions: 
> List Owner: Mike Devour 
> 
> 
 
>>> 
>> 
> 


Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-07 Thread Patricia Cassidy

Sprouts sells the pink Himalayan salt in bulk.

May i ask why you are taking 13g of salt ?  I thought we got enough in 
our regular food especially if we add salt. :/  tricia



On 12/7/2016 8:46 PM, Lena Guyot wrote:
This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 
13g daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements 
we take. L

On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:


Most health food stores carry
good quality sea salt

On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot > wrote:


Hi Tia,

If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly
recommended and favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's
Vitamins sells nice big reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent
quality. When I'd accumulated enough of them, I switched to a
cheaper and equally high quality source: San Francisco Salt
Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the
finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is
close to 1 g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt
Co ships in many different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.

Be well,
Léna
On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:


I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all
the things that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if
anyone also ordered this as I believe it was someone on this
list that recommended  this highly.  I do recall there was a 5
lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me to buy
this again.


TIA

Teri Kavakos


--
The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal
Silver.
Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org


Unsubscribe:
?subject=unsubscribe>
Archives:
http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html


Off-Topic discussions: >
List Owner: Mike Devour 











Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-07 Thread Lena Guyot
This is very true, but for those of us taking a high dose,(in my case 13g 
daily) it can get expensive, along with all the other supplements we take. L 
On Dec 7, 2016, at 9:19 PM, Smitty wrote:

> Most health food stores carry
> good quality sea salt
> 
> On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot  wrote:
> Hi Tia,
> 
> If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
> favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big 
> reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated 
> enough of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: San 
> Francisco Salt Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the 
> finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close to 1 
> g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many 
> different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.
> 
> Be well,
> Léna
> On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:
> 
>> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things 
>> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this as 
>> I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I do 
>> recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me 
>> to buy this again.
>> 
>> 
>> TIA
>> 
>> Teri Kavakos
>> 
>> 
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> 



Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-07 Thread Smitty
Most health food stores carry
good quality sea salt

On Wed, Dec 7, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Lena Guyot  wrote:

> Hi Tia,
>
> If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and
> favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big
> reusable plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated
> enough of them, I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source:
> San Francisco Salt Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend
> the finest grind of the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close
> to 1 g. I fill up my old Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many
> different bulk sizes and the price is a great deal.
>
> Be well,
> Léna
> On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:
>
> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things
> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this
> as I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I
> do recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide
> me to buy this again.
>
>
> TIA
>
> Teri Kavakos
>
>
> --
> The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
> Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
>
> Unsubscribe:
> 
> Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/
> maillist.html
>
> Off-Topic discussions:  >
> List Owner: Mike Devour >
>
>
>
>


Re: CS>Salt

2016-12-07 Thread Lena Guyot
Hi Tia,

If you're speaking of Himalayan salt, (the most commonly recommended and 
favored in the salt and C protocol), Swanson's Vitamins sells nice big reusable 
plastic jars of it, of excellent quality. When I'd accumulated enough of them, 
I switched to a cheaper and equally high quality source: San Francisco Salt 
Company. If you're making your own capsules, I recommend the finest grind of 
the pink sherpa salt, as a (00) capsule of it is close to 1 g. I fill up my old 
Swanson's jars with them! SFSalt Co ships in many different bulk sizes and the 
price is a great deal.

Be well,
Léna
On Dec 7, 2016, at 5:44 PM, Teri Kavakos wrote:

> I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the things 
> that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also ordered this as 
> I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  this highly.  I do 
> recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope someone here can guide me to 
> buy this again.
> 
> 
> TIA
> 
> Teri Kavakos
> 
> 
> --
> The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver.
> Rules and Instructions: http://www.silverlist.org
> 
> Unsubscribe:
> 
> Archives:  http://www.mail-archive.com/silver-list@eskimo.com/maillist.html
> 
> Off-Topic discussions: 
> List Owner: Mike Devour 
> 
> 



CS>Salt

2016-12-07 Thread Teri Kavakos
I bought a salt from someone years ago that they made with all the 
things that you need and I'm about out.   I wondered if anyone also 
ordered this as I believe it was someone on this list that recommended  
this highly.  I do recall there was a 5 lb minimum to buy it.  Hope 
someone here can guide me to buy this again.



TIA

Teri Kavakos


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CS Salt excretion test

2008-06-04 Thread Harold MacDonald
I have a simple way to determine if I'm losing salt,I just lick my 
skin.Today,I taste no salt,but some days it is quite strong.This follows 
when I eat overly salted food,particularly prepared grub,ugh
Also to find if I need salt,I sprinkle some on my palm and lick it.If it 
tastes good,I do,if not,I don't.


Harold 




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Re: CS salt

2007-06-27 Thread Clayton Family
I was wondering if the Himalayan salt has alot of magnesium in it. I am 
not tolerating it very well. I do ok with sea salt, though, so I guess 
I may stick to that.


On Jun 27, 2007, at 1:00 AM, Rowena wrote:


There are various formulae about quantities of water based on person's
weight.  They may be accurate.

Plain water can be hard to force down, in my experience, but adding a 
little

natural salt changes that.  It also adds what you need in the way of
minerals.  I use Himalayan, sometimes Celtic salt, but NEVER refined, 
heated
table salt which has been robbed of valuable mineral$ and whose 
crystalline

structure is destroyed.  Much has been said on salt in the past - a web
search on natural salt would be a good investment of time.  Strong 
salt may
force parasitic worms out of the skin, Lyme researchers report; 
Daddybob has
written that he suspects that using a weaker brine over a longer 
period may

be kinder to the person but still effective.



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Re: CSHelp please Re Kelp-CS-Salt solution

2001-12-11 Thread Jim Meissner
Dear Group:

Would someone please translate Brooks Bradley's fascinating post about Kelp.
I am over 60, so I think this may be applicable.

I am guessing that 11 oz of kelp powder is 11 oz. dry weight mixed into 1
gallon of water?
(It does not like to mix!)

Then I would like to make 32 oz batches.  If 2 table spoons for 1 gallon,
then it would be 1/2 table spoon for 32 oz of water?

Now if I wanted to add 20% CS that would be 6 oz CS and 26 oz of water and
1/2 table spoon of concentrate?

Is that right so far?

Now when he talks about Celtic sea salt I get lost.

Can this be translated into how many teaspoons per 32 oz?

All you chemists are probably laughing, but ...

Juergen P. (Jim) Meissner
Check out my Website at www.MeissnerResearch.com
Read about the benefits of the Brain State Synchronizer sounds for improving
your life and health.
- Original Message -
From: BROOKS BRADLEY liat...@flash.net
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2001 2:30 PM
Subject: CSPOSSIBLY USEFUL PROTOCOL INVOLVING KELP EXTRACTS


 The recent animal-related posts jogged my failing memory
 into recalling some interestingand I believe, useful investigations
 we conducted some time in the past.  These endeavors revolved about the
 possible efficacy of kelp-based solutions for nutritional support and
 disease prevention/abatement in animal pets and livestock.  Our results
 were VERY encouraging.
 The most efficacious protocol was as follows:
 Starting with a concentrated solution of  kelp (seaweed)
 extract [ approx. 11 ounces of soluble powder in 1 gallon of water],  we
 used 2  tablespoons CONCENTRATE diluted in 1 gallon of water..as the
 basic  mixture.   Our goal was to evaluate the benefits---if any---of
 using this material as a nutritional support and/or a disease prevention
 modality for domestic pets and livestock.  The beneficial results
 exceeded our expectations.  In chickens furnished this solution free
 choice, NO significant nutritional-based deficiencies were
 detectable(less than .1%)..with them receiving 3 different
 commercial feed mixtures.  Among controls, a background pathogenic level
 of 5% was a constantand in some cases outbreaks of varying pathogens
 expressed as high as 20%...on occasion.  Among purposely infected
 groups, naturally -occurring recovery/resistance spontaneously
 established (lowering mortality from 60% to 10%) when the kelp solutions
 were administered as the sole source of liquid intake AFTER THE
 INFECTION. The speed and completeness of recovery was noticeably
 enhanced when the parent solution was diluted 20%, by volume, with 10
 ppm CS.  This in spite of contentions/suspicions of antagonisms between
 the silver colloid and the parent solution substances.  Among subjects
 furnished access to the Kelp X CS combination solution, we were able to
 infect...via direct injectionless than 2% of the subjectsand the
 resulting insults were, in almost all cases, quite mild.  Mortality was
 less than .05%.
 Our results among dogs, cats, and birds.were equally
 impressive;  although the physical number of subjects was much smaller.
 We did encounter some difficulty in getting cats to drink water
 containing this level of kelp.at least in the beginning.  The only
 successful method involved maintaining them in cages.during the
 evaluations.
 At the time of these experiments we did not utilize MSM,
 vitamin supports, fluid electrolyte enhancement, etc.
  A rather fascinating byline relating to this type
 investigation is that a similar modality involving human volunteers
 (older subjectsbeyond 60) yielded superior resultswhen employing
 a somewhat modified versionfor individuals suffering from a variety
 of chronic expressions.  The principal modification involved a second
 dilution of the kelp X CS with 25%, by volume, of  complete sea-solid
 solution (reduced from 35,000 ppm to 8750 ppm).   The sea solid solution
 may be constructed using any acceptable FULL SPECTRUM source (e.g.
 Celtic Sea Salt, etc.but never ANY white or leached marine salt).
 This latter modification enabled a rather pronounced synergistic
 effect.  Interestingly, we utilized the same unmodified, agricultural
 grade, kelp powder. which we used in the animal experiments.  Our
 bacteriological tests (of these CS containing solutions) revealed no
 viable pathogens extant.prior to use for the human volunteers.
 While there was little difference in the kelp
 products we evaluted, we settled.for the bulk of our tests.upon
 on one called Maxicrop.  The reasons being that it gave the best
 solubility results and seemed to evoke more pronounced biological
 benefitsprobably as a result of superior extraction/concentration
 techniques.   We do not endorse thisOR ANY OTHER---product.  These
 were, simply, our particular results 

Re: CSHelp please Re Kelp-CS-Salt solution

2001-12-11 Thread Craig Chamberlin
Greetings,

I would also be interested in the conversion to something more easily
used for us regular folk:)

Regards,

Craig

Jim Meissner wrote:
 
 Dear Group:
 
 Would someone please translate Brooks Bradley's fascinating post about Kelp.
 I am over 60, so I think this may be applicable.
 
 I am guessing that 11 oz of kelp powder is 11 oz. dry weight mixed into 1
 gallon of water?
 (It does not like to mix!)
 
 Then I would like to make 32 oz batches.  If 2 table spoons for 1 gallon,
 then it would be 1/2 table spoon for 32 oz of water?
 
 Now if I wanted to add 20% CS that would be 6 oz CS and 26 oz of water and
 1/2 table spoon of concentrate?
 
 Is that right so far?
 
 Now when he talks about Celtic sea salt I get lost.
 
 Can this be translated into how many teaspoons per 32 oz?
 
 All you chemists are probably laughing, but ...
 
 Juergen P. (Jim) Meissner
 Check out my Website at www.MeissnerResearch.com
 Read about the benefits of the Brain State Synchronizer sounds for improving
 your life and health.
 - Original Message -
 From: BROOKS BRADLEY liat...@flash.net
 To: silver-list@eskimo.com
 Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2001 2:30 PM
 Subject: CSPOSSIBLY USEFUL PROTOCOL INVOLVING KELP EXTRACTS
 
  The recent animal-related posts jogged my failing memory
  into recalling some interestingand I believe, useful investigations
  we conducted some time in the past.  These endeavors revolved about the
  possible efficacy of kelp-based solutions for nutritional support and
  disease prevention/abatement in animal pets and livestock.  Our results
  were VERY encouraging.
  The most efficacious protocol was as follows:
  Starting with a concentrated solution of  kelp (seaweed)
  extract [ approx. 11 ounces of soluble powder in 1 gallon of water],  we
  used 2  tablespoons CONCENTRATE diluted in 1 gallon of water..as the
  basic  mixture.   Our goal was to evaluate the benefits---if any---of
  using this material as a nutritional support and/or a disease prevention
  modality for domestic pets and livestock.  The beneficial results
  exceeded our expectations.  In chickens furnished this solution free
  choice, NO significant nutritional-based deficiencies were
  detectable(less than .1%)..with them receiving 3 different
  commercial feed mixtures.  Among controls, a background pathogenic level
  of 5% was a constantand in some cases outbreaks of varying pathogens
  expressed as high as 20%...on occasion.  Among purposely infected
  groups, naturally -occurring recovery/resistance spontaneously
  established (lowering mortality from 60% to 10%) when the kelp solutions
  were administered as the sole source of liquid intake AFTER THE
  INFECTION. The speed and completeness of recovery was noticeably
  enhanced when the parent solution was diluted 20%, by volume, with 10
  ppm CS.  This in spite of contentions/suspicions of antagonisms between
  the silver colloid and the parent solution substances.  Among subjects
  furnished access to the Kelp X CS combination solution, we were able to
  infect...via direct injectionless than 2% of the subjectsand the
  resulting insults were, in almost all cases, quite mild.  Mortality was
  less than .05%.
  Our results among dogs, cats, and birds.were equally
  impressive;  although the physical number of subjects was much smaller.
  We did encounter some difficulty in getting cats to drink water
  containing this level of kelp.at least in the beginning.  The only
  successful method involved maintaining them in cages.during the
  evaluations.
  At the time of these experiments we did not utilize MSM,
  vitamin supports, fluid electrolyte enhancement, etc.
   A rather fascinating byline relating to this type
  investigation is that a similar modality involving human volunteers
  (older subjectsbeyond 60) yielded superior resultswhen employing
  a somewhat modified versionfor individuals suffering from a variety
  of chronic expressions.  The principal modification involved a second
  dilution of the kelp X CS with 25%, by volume, of  complete sea-solid
  solution (reduced from 35,000 ppm to 8750 ppm).   The sea solid solution
  may be constructed using any acceptable FULL SPECTRUM source (e.g.
  Celtic Sea Salt, etc.but never ANY white or leached marine salt).
  This latter modification enabled a rather pronounced synergistic
  effect.  Interestingly, we utilized the same unmodified, agricultural
  grade, kelp powder. which we used in the animal experiments.  Our
  bacteriological tests (of these CS containing solutions) revealed no
  viable pathogens extant.prior to use for the human volunteers.
  While there was little difference in the kelp
  products we evaluted, we settled.for the bulk of our tests.upon
  on one called Maxicrop.  The reasons being that it gave the best