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Learn the silver bullets to mix and match for all your cleaning needs!
FOR NATURAL LIQUID SOAP AROUND THE WORLD:
Please note: This course was originally filmed in context for India. The two liquid soaps mentioned below - soapnut & shikakai are native to India and widely available. Soapnuts are available for purchase throughout the Western world, but it should be noted that other local plants rich in saponin will be more economical.
For example, in Canada, USA, Europe & Australia, horse chestnuts (Aesculus hippocastanum) can be collected totally for free all around public parks and boulevards during the autumn season and stored to be made into a liquid soap all year round.
Procedures in these videos for making, storing and using shikakai and soapnut can be applied to all saponin-rich plants.
Examples are:
- soap bark tree (Quillaja saponaria), native to Chile, Peru & Bolivia. Bark is soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-Mojave yucca (Yucca schidigera), native to the Americas. Bark is soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), chestnuts are soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-soapwort (Saponaria officinaux), soak or boil leaves in water
-gypsophila genus (Gypsophila paniculata), common name Baby's Breath. Native to Europe. Roots are soaked or boiled in water for soap.
FOR NATURAL LIQUID SOAP AROUND THE WORLD:
Please note: This course was originally filmed in context for India. The two liquid soaps mentioned below - soapnut & shikakai are native to India and widely available. Soapnuts are available for purchase throughout the Western world, but it should be noted that other local plants rich in saponin will be more economical.
For example, in Canada, USA, Europe & Australia, horse chestnuts (Aesculus hippocastanum) can be collected totally for free all around public parks and boulevards during the autumn season and stored to be made into a liquid soap all year round.
Procedures in these videos for making, storing and using shikakai and soapnut can be applied to all saponin-rich plants.
Examples are:
- soap bark tree (Quillaja saponaria), native to Chile, Peru & Bolivia. Bark is soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-Mojave yucca (Yucca schidigera), native to the Americas. Bark is soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), chestnuts are soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-soapwort (Saponaria officinaux), soak or boil leaves in water
-gypsophila genus (Gypsophila paniculata), common name Baby's Breath. Native to Europe. Roots are soaked or boiled in water for soap.
FOR NATURAL LIQUID SOAP AROUND THE WORLD:
Please note: This course was originally filmed in context for India. The two liquid soaps mentioned below - soapnut & shikakai are native to India and widely available. Soapnuts are available for purchase throughout the Western world, but it should be noted that other local plants rich in saponin will be more economical.
For example, in Canada, USA, Europe & Australia, horse chestnuts (Aesculus hippocastanum) can be collected totally for free all around public parks and boulevards during the autumn season and stored to be made into a liquid soap all year round.
Procedures in these videos for making, storing and using shikakai and soapnut can be applied to all saponin-rich plants.
Examples are:
- soap bark tree (Quillaja saponaria), native to Chile, Peru & Bolivia. Bark is soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-Mojave yucca (Yucca schidigera), native to the Americas. Bark is soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), chestnuts are soaked or boiled in water for soap.
-soapwort (Saponaria officinaux), soak or boil leaves in water
-gypsophila genus (Gypsophila paniculata), common name Baby's Breath. Native to Europe. Roots are soaked or boiled in water for soap.
1 liter laundry detergent:
Combine 700 ml liquid soap (from any saponin rich plant) with 150 ml natural vinegar & 150 ml bioenzyme.
Store in a bottle.
For each load of laundry, combine 1 spoon baking soda with 200 ml of the liquid mix.
The attached PDF has lots of bonus recipes for natural hair care solutions!
The PDF resource attached also includes bonus recipes for body butter, body & lip scrubs, facewash & natural cosmetics. Have fun!
Making your own natural products is inexpensive, easy and transformative! Take a stand against chemicals in ecosystems, bodies and homes and find freedom from what marketing tells you you need for beauty & cleanliness. This course will revolutionize you & your family for decades to come by learning all the solutions for your household essentials.
In this course, we will learn the truth of what chemical products are doing inside our bodies and then empower you with easy and effective alternatives for shampoo, conditioner, dish soap, laundry detergent, toothpaste, deodorant, surface spray, and other general home cleaners. Knowledge is power! So inform yourself and equip yourself with the alternatives. You will never go back!
Besides the health & ecosystem benefits, learning these solutions saves you TONS of money. We did the math on surface spray and listen to this. The ingredients to make 5 liters of bioenzyme concentrate, which after dilution becomes 50 liters of surface spray, cost $1 USD. An average store bought surface spray is $4 USD and about 500 ml. That means that 50 liters of store bought surface spray would cost $400 and we are making it for $1!
We could do the same math for all of these products to soon realize that one year of DIY products can save $1,000 USD or more! Now if that isn't an incentive to make the switch, I don't know what is.
Note: two sections in this course 'Soapnut' & 'Shikakai' are products that are readily found in India, where we live. In those sections I give great alternatives for other saponin-rich plants available for use as liquid soap in Western countries and around the world.