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Are Sweet Peas Aromatherapy?

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Hi all,

 

I was standing in a sweet pea maze this weekend, soaking in the extrordinary

aroma of vines literally all around me. It was delightfully delicate, and so

unlike anything I have smelled lately. I inhaled deeply, and totally forgot

about my woes at work. (Check out the pic on our main page.)

 

For me, those flowers fit my definition of Aromatherapy. And I would love

to hear your thoughts on whether or not they fit your definition. For those

who like to weigh in on polls, this one is a straight yes or no. Thanks for

your participation!

 

Cheers,

Christina

 

 

 

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I voted no because most of the Sweet Pea scents I've run into in the

name of Aromatherapy have been synthetic scents, not any extraction of

real blooms.

Serra

 

 

 

On Tue, May 6, 2008 at 10:46 PM, Christina M <BodyAmbrosia wrote:

>

> Hi all,

>

> I was standing in a sweet pea maze this weekend, soaking in the

> extrordinary

> aroma of vines literally all around me. It was delightfully delicate, and

> so

> unlike anything I have smelled lately. I inhaled deeply, and totally forgot

> about my woes at work. (Check out the pic on our main page.)

>

> For me, those flowers fit my definition of Aromatherapy. And I would love

> to hear your thoughts on whether or not they fit your definition. For those

> who like to weigh in on polls, this one is a straight yes or no. Thanks for

> your participation!

>

> Cheers,

> Christina

>

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ATFE2 , Serra <serrathescented wrote:

>

> I voted no because most of the Sweet Pea scents I've run into in the

> name of Aromatherapy have been synthetic scents, not any extraction of

> real blooms.

> Serra

 

I agree. While Sweet Peas are readily redolent they are not extracted

into oils that are readily available. (Someone, *please* correct me if

I'm wrong here.)

 

Take care,

Stacey

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Dissenting vote here...

 

Hell YES standing amongst fragrant sweet peas is Aromatherapy. Aroma meaning

smells, scents. Therapy, well y'all should know the definition of that by

now. If they made you feel good and you were happy inhaling the fragrance,

then it's aromatherapy.

 

Remember folks, she wasn't talking bottled crap, she was talking about the

scent of the real thing out side amongst them. Lilacs are aromatherapy for

me (as are sweetpeas. Love em), and just because you can't bottle them, test

them or drink them, doesn't make them less viable than something one CAN

bottle and sell.

 

Oh great gazzoo, This is three notes in one evening. Quick, DIVE DIVE DIVE

back into my hole!

K

http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQsassZwoobeyqueen

 

 

On 5/6/08, Stacey <millerslm1 wrote:

>

> ATFE2 <ATFE2%40>, Serra

> <serrathescented wrote:

> >

> > I voted no because most of the Sweet Pea scents I've run into in the

> > name of Aromatherapy have been synthetic scents, not any extraction of

> > real blooms.

> > Serra

>

> I agree. While Sweet Peas are readily redolent they are not extracted

> into oils that are readily available. (Someone, *please* correct me if

> I'm wrong here.)

>

> Take care,

> Stacey

>

>

>

 

 

 

--

Kathleen Petrides

Bead Hussy

http://www.BeadHussy.com

 

 

 

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Well the Narsissus " Actaea " are blooming in our field again (Spring

HAS arrived at last! or maybe we just skipped right into summer its

been so hot these last two days!) and they are beautifully scented.

Walking across the fields with the smell of fresh chomped grass

wafting through the warm breeze, mingled with Narsissus, has got to be

truly aromatherapeutic heaven...

Wish I could bottle that. :-)

LLx

 

 

2008/5/7 Christina M <BodyAmbrosia:

> Hi all,

>

> I was standing in a sweet pea maze this weekend, soaking in the extrordinary

> aroma of vines literally all around me. It was delightfully delicate, and so

> unlike anything I have smelled lately. I inhaled deeply, and totally forgot

> about my woes at work. (Check out the pic on our main page.)

>

> For me, those flowers fit my definition of Aromatherapy. And I would love

> to hear your thoughts on whether or not they fit your definition. For those

> who like to weigh in on polls, this one is a straight yes or no. Thanks for

> your participation!

>

> Cheers,

> Christina

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Liz said:

 

>To me aromatherapy is natural scents only. But then - what about

>absolutes?

Absolutes are far more " natural " than any essential oils as long as

they have been properly produced. More floral notes, less chemical

changes caused by distillation,chemistry much closer to the living

plant, etc. etc. The downside is they are frequently adulterated(but

so are essential oils), also there are some on the market the skin

safety of which is not known.

 

The other big problem is many so called 'natural perfumers' use some

extracts that are restricted, and uneducated therapists then start

using them on peoples skin in volumes that they were never intended to

be used in.

 

Give me a fine Egyptian rose absolute anyday to badly cooked village

essential oils such as some therapists have seen in Turkey. High

quality Absolutes are extracted using the best modern equipment,

whereas some essential oils are ruined when heated over crude fires

such as some of the forementioned, and some of the attars from India.

 

Martin Watt

ATFE2 , Liz <liztams wrote:

>

> Hi

> According to Sense of Smell Institute that sour apple scent would be

> Aroma-Chology® (note the TM!) ...not Aromatherapy

> Check out their definition here

> http://www.senseofsmell.org/resources/aroma_chology_print.php

>

> To me aromatherapy is natural scents only. But then - what about

absolutes?

> (It gets tricky.....!)

> LLx

>

>

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Hi Martin

 

2008/5/8 Martin Watt <aromamedical:

> Liz said:

>

>>To me aromatherapy is natural scents only. But then - what about

>>absolutes?

 

> Absolutes are far more " natural " than any essential oils as long as

> they have been properly produced.

 

I personally love absolutes (well, a lot of them, not all) and I'm

intrigued by *properly produced*.

Do you mean they have all the extraction chemicals removed completely?

Or is there a (commercially viable) method of production not involving

chemicals?

Also, how do you see the flower-as-aromatherapy? Can a natural scented

flowers be considered as AT in your opinion? or has AT to come out of

a bottle to be *true AT*?

(lot of questions there - sorry!)

LLx

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