I took chaparral tincture several years ago for a chest infection.  Think I 
took it for several days.  
 
We were talking about a skin salve though, weren't we?  It should be safe for 
that.
 
Sally

Ed Kasper <edkas...@pacbell.net> wrote:
I think chaparral  has some cautionary about use. 
"caution with history of liver disease. discontinue if nausea, fever, fatigue 
or jaundice occur"
 
bloodroot cautionary
"not to use while pregnant, may cause vomiting and nausea"  "do not exceed 
recommended dosage"
bloodroot is pretty expensive stuff so most folks will use  sparingly. 
 

Ed Kasper LAc. Licensed Acupuncturist & Herbalist
Acupuncture is a jab well done
www.HappyHerbalist.com   Santa Cruz, CA. 

 
 
 -----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan B. Britten [mailto:jbrit...@cc.nakamura-u.ac.jp]
Sent: Sunday, January 23, 2005 7:15 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>tetrasil, etc PLUS RECIPE 


I'm with Ed: the more information we can get, the better. I particular, I have 
read nothing about bloodroot and CS in combination or as complementary 
protocols. 

BTW I first read about bloodroot in Andrew Weil's great book. Spontaneous 
Healing. This is a must-have. (The subsequent book were a bit disappointing. . 
. ) 

Here is a recipe I found for a bloodroot salve. This can save lives. Kindly 
pass on the recipe to anyone interested. 

JBB





This is a recipe for a black paste very similar to the cansema. But this is a 
preferred paste for melanoma and all suspect skin cancer like lesions. This 
paste also has worked well for all manner of cancers provided that they have 
become exposed to or close to the surface of the skin. 

1/2 cup powdered Blood Root (Sanguinaria Canadensis) 
1/2 cup Zinc Chloride, crystals or liquid 
1/2 cup common white flour 
1 1/2 cup warm water 
100ml Chaparral extract or 100gm of powdered Chaparral (Larrea mexicana) 

Pre-mix all but the water, thoroughly, before adding to the water. Using a 
stainless steel double boiler. Put in water, then stir in the other 
ingredients. Stir in well using a wooden spoon. Cook for thirty minutes over 
boiling water, stirring constantly. Application is much the same as cansema. 
Apply a thin layer (2-3mm) of the paste over the affected area and cover for 24 
hours. Then remove the covering but do not disturb the lesion at all, do not 
attempt to pull the cancer out at any time, it should fall out in 10 days or 
so. Some people with sensitive skin put vaseline around the cancer so that the 
paste does not irritate the skin. 




On Monday, Jan 24, 2005, at 11:00 Asia/Tokyo, Ed Kasper wrote:

Bob, will you elaborate on how you used bloodroot. did you make a tincture,
how strong how applied.
Thanks

Ed

-----Original Message-----
From: bbanever [mailto:bbane...@earthlink.net]
Sent: Friday, January 21, 2005 11:51 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>tetrasil, etc. NOW BLOODROOT


Jonathan - While it is true that bloodroot can be toxic in large quantities
it can also be a life saver and cure for cancer in small but sustained
dosages when ingested. It works pretty much the same internally as it does
topically.... it literally seeks out and destroys diseased cells while
leaving healthy ones intact. Some say it lyses the cell wall allowing the
immune system to identify and destroy that which was living inside of it...
virus, bacteria, fungus, parasites. Escharotic therapy is quite old and has
its roots in American Indian herbal medicine. I've used it successfully for
skin cancer and sarcoid tumors. In every case there is a tremendous
macrophage attack of the tumor followed by its dehydration and complete
healing. Amazing really. The size of the tumor on the skin is dwarfed
severalfold by the amount of diseased cells under and around it. I've used
CS in the healing phase of this therapy and haven't had any problems with
sepsis or scarring. I'm sure in very large quantities bloodroot can be
toxic and care must be taken when using this miracle substance.

Bob




                
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