By: Wendy Streater | 2010-03-29 | Alternative Medicine Dandelion is far more useful than you think. It is a healthy alternative to coffee and is better for you than spinach. read more
By: Evelyn Fielding | 2010-04-02 | Reference & Education Before you declare chemical warfare on the dandelions in your yard, consider that they may just want to be friends! Dandelions are an interesting addition to herbal remedy lore, not just an irritating weed. read more
By: Julie Johnson | 2011-07-16 | Medicine Because doing so isn't poisonous, Dandelion may be used liberally. The roots, leaves and blooms of this plant are edible. Dandelion supports a healthy urinary tract, kidneys and liver function. When harvesting, make sure to select plants which haven't been near toxins or chemicals. For more information, just click here. read more
By: Arsenalo | 2010-09-27 | Sales We are specializing in selling such brands as Rolex, Breitling, Tag, Omega, Cartier, Bvlgari, Patek Philippe, Chopard, IWC, Montblanc, Panerai, Corum, Gucci, Jacob & Co, etc. All kinds of luxury watches on sale, order the best watches in our Web-store and you'll be sure to get a high quality watch for an amazing price. read more
By: Carla Dummerauf | 2010-03-29 | Spirituality There it is laying on the table in all it's splendid yellow glory. The symbolism could not be over looked, yellow being a color that inspires will, self determination, a sense of feeling uplifted and a wash in warm optimism. read more
By: Christelle Smith | 2010-04-02 | Supplements When people think of dandelion, they usually think of a persistent weed that has yellow flowers and fluffy white seeds that children like to play with. The truth is that folk healers and herbalists alike have used dandelion for centuries to treat liver and digestive problems. This herb is grown commercially in Europe and both the roots and the leaves are used in herbal medicine. read more
By: Rosie Wallace | 2010-10-26 | Health & Fitness Our ancestors have used natural methods to treat various ailments for millennia. For example, dandelion juice was used as an herbal medicine for over 1000 years. Dyshidrotic and vesicular hand eczema are a rare form of skin inflammation and difficult to treat. The use of dandelion juice has been shown to be beneficial for this type of eczema as well as more common forms. You can treat this skin condition from the inside out with a natural dandelion juice. read more
By: karen campese | 2011-04-03 | Gardening The snow is melting and we are finally starting to see our lawns. It seems like the first thing we see in our lawns every Spring is the yellow flower of the dandelion. Many people add dandelions to their salads or cook them like spinach since they contain a lot of vitamins A and C and are high in beta carotenes. If you are not one of those people who enjoy eating dandelions, you probably do no read more
By: Brian C. Carlson | 2010-03-31 | Auctions Flowers never go out of style. They are sent as Thank You gifts, to woo a new love or an old flame, to say I Love You to Mom, as a condolence message for the loss of a loved one, or as a Get Well Soon present. With so many reasons for consumers to purchase flowers, how could you go wrong by getting into the floral business? read more
By: C. Mark Babcock | 2010-04-02 | Alternative Medicine There are all sorts of things growing in your backyard that you can utilize in your house. Simple things, things we take for granted, now and then things we try to get destroy. read more
By: Jason Fiorini | 2011-10-27 | Health & Fitness Hard Bodies Personal Training NYC Located in Manhattan, NY. Personal trainer NYC agrees while many people think of the dandelion Taraxacum officinale as a pesky weed, herbalists consider it a valuable herb that can be used as a food and medicine. read more
By: Robert F Lee | 2012-04-23 | Nature It’s spring in the moist woodlands of North America when fiddlehead ferns begin to unleash their soft green tongues like a frog set to strike at an insect. These greens are one of the most tender and juicy wild harvest foods, available worldwide. read more
By: Susanne Corbin | 2010-03-29 | Gardening It's August and time to plant the garden! Now? Yes, start growing greens now for a salad in January. Can't be done you say? It does take a little work, but you can easily raise salad greens to harvest during the coldest and snowiest days of the year - if you start NOW! This is a summary of what I have learned. read more
By: gaga | 2011-01-06 | Business Dietary sources The following foods are particularly rich in carotenes (also see Vitamin A article for amounts): sweet potatoes carrots wolfberries (goji) cantaloupe melon mangoes apricots Persimmon spinach kale chard turnip greens dandelion greens beet greens mustard greens collard greens watercress cilantro fresh thyme broccoli parsley romaine lettuce ivy gourd rose hips winter squash pumpkin cassava Absorption from these foods is enhanced if eaten with fats, as carotenes are fat soluble read more
By: Carol Galanty | 2010-04-03 | Nutrition If you want to improve your health, the first place to start is to increase your intake of green vegetables. They are without a doubt the primary food group lacking in most people's diets (okay I know that technically green vegetables are not classified as a food group of their own, but they really should be...they are that important). Read this article to find out how to get more greens into your diet. read more