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Kim,

you are right... but it's best if it is from your local area for allergies...(just like honey)

Suzi

"sirona71 <vze4dm6p" <vze4dm6p wrote:

I think you can just take it by the spoonful...that's how my uncle used to take it. Not sure how it tastes though.I believe one of it's benefits is allergy relief...Kim

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  • 10 months later...

Hi Pam,

 

Here is some info. I have yet to find the exact studies. Clinical tests show that orally ingested bee pollen particles are rapidly and easily absorbed--they pass directly from the stomach into the blood stream. Within two hours after ingestion, bee pollen is found in the blood, in cerebral spinal fluids, and in the urine.

 

HTH,

 

Don Quai

 

-

pam

herbal remedies

Wednesday, November 05, 2003 4:52 AM

[herbal remedies] Bee Pollen

 

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  • 4 months later...
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I have been trying to get my husband to take bee pollen. He did a couple of years ago starting in November and it was supposed to lessen his allergic reactions to the usual spring pollens. It did seem to help. Heard more good things about it, but while in my local health food store today, I saw a warning on the label stating that it may cause high blood pressure.Anyone know if this is true. Also does red rice yeast contain statins?

Thanks

Judy

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Judy,

 

There is hope that your husband can completely eliminate his allergic reactions entirely!

 

http://www.drday.com/ is a link for health that I would like you to consider. Lorraine Day is an MD that had a mother who after 30 contiuous years of heart and high blood pressure problems and medication was healed and no longer in need of any medications after making some affordable health changes. I have accumulated various links that may also help such as recommendations on a more alkaline diet. http://www.dennisservaes.com/science.html

 

I am a beekeeper and the myth that pollen will stop allergic reactions may or may not be true. I would get allergies and eat pollen more than most people, however, the placebo effect is very real to the people that believe that stuff.

 

http://www.dennisservaes.com/bee_links.html has numerous links for beekeepers and also for products of the hive. I will soon be adding to the products sedtion of that page!

 

Guro Dennis Servaes

 

 

 

Judy <ramcd wrote:

 

 

I have been trying to get my husband to take bee pollen. He did a couple of years ago starting in November and it was supposed to lessen his allergic reactions to the usual spring pollens. It did seem to help. Heard more good things about it, but while in my local health food store today, I saw a warning on the label stating that it may cause high blood pressure.Anyone know if this is true. Also does red rice yeast contain statins?

Thanks

Judy

«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§ - PULSE ON WORLD HEALTH CONSPIRACIES! §Subscribe:......... - To :.... - Any information here in is for educational purpose only, it may be news related, purely speculation or someone's opinion. Always consult with a qualified health practitioner before deciding on any course of treatment, especially for serious or life-threatening illnesses.**COPYRIGHT NOTICE**In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107,any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for non-profit research and educational

purposes only. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

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Thanks Dennis. Very interesting site. You have lots of info. I have heard Lorraine Day on Art Bell a few years back. Amazing story. Wish all could understand we are what we eat. I have so many friends who don't and just plain won't give up aspartaime, for example. And when I mention the supplements I take, some of them say they take a multivitamin, or they say they eat their veggies and don't need anything else. They don't understand about our depleted soil, etc.

 

-

Guro Dennis Servaes

Monday, March 08, 2004 4:21 PM

Re: bee pollen

 

Judy,

 

There is hope that your husband can completely eliminate his allergic reactions entirely!

 

http://www.drday.com/ is a link for health that I would like you to consider. Lorraine Day is an MD that had a mother who after 30 contiuous years of heart and high blood pressure problems and medication was healed and no longer in need of any medications after making some affordable health changes. I have accumulated various links that may also help such as recommendations on a more alkaline diet. http://www.dennisservaes.com/science.html

 

I am a beekeeper and the myth that pollen will stop allergic reactions may or may not be true. I would get allergies and eat pollen more than most people, however, the placebo effect is very real to the people that believe that stuff.

 

http://www.dennisservaes.com/bee_links.html has numerous links for beekeepers and also for products of the hive. I will soon be adding to the products sedtion of that page!

 

Guro Dennis Servaes

 

 

 

Judy <ramcd wrote:

 

 

I have been trying to get my husband to take bee pollen. He did a couple of years ago starting in November and it was supposed to lessen his allergic reactions to the usual spring pollens. It did seem to help. Heard more good things about it, but while in my local health food store today, I saw a warning on the label stating that it may cause high blood pressure.Anyone know if this is true. Also does red rice yeast contain statins?

Thanks

Judy

«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§ - PULSE ON WORLD HEALTH CONSPIRACIES! §Subscribe:......... - To :.... - Any information here in is for educational purpose only, it may be news related, purely speculation or someone's opinion. Always consult with a qualified health practitioner before deciding on any course of treatment, especially for serious or life-threatening illnesses.**COPYRIGHT NOTICE**In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107,any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml «¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§ - PULSE ON WORLD HEALTH CONSPIRACIES! §Subscribe:......... - To :.... - Any information here in is for educational purpose only, it may be news related, purely speculation or someone's opinion. Always consult with a qualified health practitioner before deciding on any course of treatment, especially for serious or life-threatening illnesses.**COPYRIGHT NOTICE**In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107,any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

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Judy,

 

I don’t know about honey and high

blood pressure, but something you should be aware of with honey is that you should use only

local honey. I’m not

exactly sure about why, but I have heard that many times. Does anyone know the benefit of

this? Also I believe that the red

yeast rice that is used for cholesterol has statins. I don’t think the red yeast rice

used for building bone has it though.

 

Carol M

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Organic, wholefood,

supplements provide nutrients essential for the

health of people, pets and plants. http://www.bluegreensolutions.com

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

-----Original

Message-----

Judy

[ramcd]

 

 

I

have been trying to get my husband to take bee pollen. He did a

couple of years ago starting in November and it was supposed to lessen his

allergic reactions to the usual spring pollens. It did seem to

help. Heard more good things about it, but while in my local

health food store today, I saw a warning on the label stating that it may cause

high blood pressure.Anyone know if this is true. Also does red rice yeast

contain statins?

 

 

Thanks

 

 

 

Judy

 

 

 

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