Greasewood is most valuable due to the rising widespread use of commercial antibiotics whose use encourages the growth of many types of fungi in the body.
GREASEWOOD [Chaparral]
Properties and use: antibiotic, antiseptic, antifungal, antibacterial, nourishing, cleaning corrective
This remedy comes from the American Indian Pharmacopoeia [listing of official Indian medicines]. Greasewood bush has dark, sticky, resinous-filled leaves and stems. It has the distinct taste of telephone poles or creosote, hence its common name Greasewood Bush. It performs a very valuable service as a douche for the female system [20 drops of extract to a cup of water]. Greasewood is most valuable due to the rising widespread use of commercial antibiotics whose use encourages the growth of many types of fungi [funguses], in the body. Jason's Winter Red Clover Tea Blend employs Greasewood as an agent to dissolve tumors and cancers on the advice of the American Indian. Indeed, of the Indian nations, the Eapoch, Pimas, and Maricopias of the desert southwest have long employed Greasewood to be effective in the following conditions: weight reduction, prostate trouble, skin and stomach cancer, leukemia, cancer, arthritis, warts, chronic backache, bronchitis troubles and to stimulate normal hair growth.
Dosage | 10 to 40 drops one to three tiems per day depending on severity of condition. Two to three bowels movements per day are recommended, when using Greasewood to complete the cleaning process.