Tea Tree Oil and Packaging

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By dst


Tea Tree in Bloom


There is a wealth of information and articles regarding the proven benefits of tea tree oil. It really is a product that approaches the category of “miracle cure”. There is also quite a growing business built around the sale and distribution of vials of tea tree oil and therein lies a caution. Like just about anything else, this “miracle cure” can be over-dosed and misapplied to produce negative results. Let’s take a quick look at the origins of tea tree use to get a little reality check.

The Tea Tree (genus Melaleuca) is endemic to Eastern Australia where it has been used by the Bunjalung people for centuries. These people have inhaled it and applied it to wounds and sores with great success. If you were to visit them a hundred years ago, you would have seen them use it with cautious care and with a knowledge past on through many generations. What you saw was the result of many trials and many errors and nobody was trying to “reinvent the wheel”. They did not need the AMA (Aboriginal Medicineman Advisers?) to tell them how to use the drug; they had learned it from their parents. There is a contemporary message there for us.

In the 1920s and 1930s the tea tree arrived in the halls of modern medical science and was awarded the status of “wonder cure”. Today the oil of the Melalueca tree has found its way into our lives. Its value has been found in the treatment of skin tags, acnes, athlete’s foot, dandruff, thrush, periodontal disease, small wounds, boils, lice, fleas, eczema, psoriasis, and yeast infections as well as a host of other conditions. There is no question about its effectiveness. However (oh, there is always a “however”) I would suggest that both the dosage and the means of application fall under scrutiny. Take a lesson from the Bunjalung people.

It is unlikely that you will find an MD who will consult with you on the exact uses of tea tree oil. The next best thing is to use it as it appears in well established products. For example, you would expose yourself to serious toxic harm if you took vitamin D in a pure and unrestrained manner, but it is a great benefit to you in orange juice. In the same sense, it is reasonable to receive the benefits of tea tree oil through the use of home and health care products which provide it in measured and controlled applications. In this respect, the antifungal characteristics of tea tree oil can realized when it is included as an ingredient in a household cleaner. By the same token, the oil can be toxic if ingested in all but very low doses (whatever that means) but it works very well to prevent mouth diseases when it is included in your toothpaste.

You can shop for individual items which contain this oil from the Melalueca tree and you could find a source company who uses it in many of its products which would give you a one stop shopping place. That’s like going a mall instead of driving all over town with a shopping list. We offer our site as a well qualified source of these products. Visit http://healthy-home.ws

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Whikat profile image

Whikat  says:
9 months ago

I Love tree tea oil, I have been using it for years. It really is a miracle oil. Thank you for the hub.

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