Sunday, September 11, 2011

[Everything doTERRA] Re: More about newsletter

Thanks Brooke.

~ Jan

On Sep 10, 6:53 pm, "Brooke Magleby" <brooke...@cableone.net> wrote:
> Great explanation Jan!  -Brooke
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: everythingdoterra@googlegroups.com
>
> [mailto:everythingdoterra@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jan Meredith
> Sent: Saturday, September 10, 2011 3:05 PM
> To: Everything doTERRA
> Subject: [Everything doTERRA] More about newsletter
>
> I'd be happy to post my newsletter here if I knew how. Learning that
> will have to wait until I get back from a long-overdue vacation. If I
> have missed sending the newsletter to anybody who has ALREADY
> requested it, please request again.
>
> I"d like to honor other request as well, but as Suzy says, adding
> names to my mailing list right now is too tedious to fit my time
> frame. And so, here is the portion in the Sept edition about doTERRA
> quality.
>
> doTERRA's Certified Pure Therapeutic GradeT essential oils are 100%
> pure natural aromatic compounds carefully extracted from plants. They
> contain no fillers or artificial ingredients that would dilute their
> active qualities. Proper extraction and thorough, precise testing also
> ensure that doTERRA's CPTG essential oils are free of contaminants
> such as pesticides or other chemical residues.
>
> doTERRA oils are sourced from all over the world, including right here
> at home. Our peppermint comes from Washington State, but why go all
> the way to Italy for lemon oil when there is more than anybody would
> ever want in Florida? Why France when lavender grows perfectly well in
> most of the U.S.?
>
> Here's the answer to those questions and two more necessary
> requirements for CPTG quality oils.
>
> Geographical source - Plants grown in their indigenous area are
> measurably higher quality. Ex: lavender grown in high altitude France
> contains at least one constituent that never even develops in the same
> type of lavender grown at lower altitudes.
>
> Specific plant variety - For example, Oreganum vulgare rather than
> other types of oregano. Identification of specific plant variety,
> added ingredients, or even whether or not the oils are completely or
> partially
> synthetic is not required in labeling. Interestingly, a high
> percentage of
> "lavender" essential oil sold on the regular retail market is not
> lavender at all. Rather, it is quite often lavendin. High quality
> lavendin does offer therapeutic benefits but is distinctly different
> from true lavenders
> including intensifying the damage from burns.
>
> Expertise and methods of distillation - maturational stage of plants;
> time of day harvested; amount of time elapsed between harvesting and
> distillation; low pressure, steam distillation (rather than chemical
> extraction) done at low temperature for the optimum time
> relative to each type of plant. Fast, hot distillation can burn off
> delicate constituents. Distilling too long can also degrade the oil.
> On the other hand, some elements cannot release from the plant if
> distillation is stopped too soon.
>
> So you see, getting CPTG essential oil in those little bottles takes a
> bit of doing! And it's worth it!
>
> Whew! And I thought making a souffle was difficult!
>
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