Guest guest Posted May 10, 2008 Report Share Posted May 10, 2008 Hey Kathleen, I am going to make a reply that Butch can join in on when he has time. Fact 1. All flowers give off volatile chemicals. Fact 2. Hundreds of varieties have been analysed by special techniques that capture those chemicals and analyse them. Fact 3. Most of the above is done for the perfume trade so they can recreate fragrances that distillation cannot capture, ie. cherry blossom, apple blossom, etc. Fact 4. The definition of an 'essential oil' is a trade fixed term mainly based on way outdated French trade definitions that I do not accept as valid. In my view the only true essential oil is that substance found in the glands of plants or resins. That is NOT what you get in your little bottles because hot distillation IS an un-natural chemical process. That said, it in no way detracts from the usefullness of these " oils " . Taking into account the fact that we know thousands of chemicals are emitted by plants into the atmosphere, and some research indicating an effect on humans in forest airs and gardens, I will stake my reputation (for what it's worth) that some of these chemicals do have profound effects on both our physiology and our physchology. Will we get to find out which chemicals are involved? I kind of doubt it because most of the analysis is only for the fragrance trade. So is walking in a fragrant garden aromatherapy - you bet it is. Lastly bear in mind that the term 'aromatherapy' is an entirely modern one without any real analysis of what it means. Martin Watt http://www.aromamedical.com ATFE2 , " Kathleen Petrides " <Beadhussy wrote: > > There is another point that I hesitate to point out lest Butch takes out his > big gun and shoots me down. LOL! But here we go... > > How are eo's derived. Steam distillation for the most part. What is used? > Flowers (I'm being VERY simplistic here, I know other parts of the plant is > also used, so give moi a wee break). What kind of flowers? Fresh flowers. > Not dried up, withered old maid flowers without a spark of life, but big fat > juicy, prime of their fertile lives flowers, still retaining a bit of life > in them. > > Okay. Flowers, add steam (heated past boiling point water) and you get > essential oils. > > So. You trying to tell me that flowers growing in the garden, being pummeled > by mr. nasty sun (not a heat lover here) is NOT, in fact, releasing a minute > quantity of something theraputic? That when we suck into our lungs the air > around these flowers that we are ONLY getting smell? AAAAACHHHHOOOO! and > pollen. > > I don't believe it. > > One can be rather short sighted and say that only bottled product can be > used for the practice of Aromatherapy, but it is my belief that sitting in a > garden, a maze, a room filled with the real thing is going to do one a huge > amount of good and part of that is from whatever the plants are releasing to > the air around them. > > Chin stuck out with stubborn conviction that she's right! > > K > P.S. Keep in mind I am not saying that it could replace oils, I'm saying > there is a place for them as well. ;-) > On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 2:03 PM, Christina M <BodyAmbrosia wrote: > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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