Sun method
Encyclopedia : S : SU : SUN : Sun method
- redirect
- The medicinal properties of a plant are, rather than in the roots or leaves, contented more concentrated in the flower-heads.
- He decided that a dewdrop should contain some of the properties of the plant upon which it rests and so tested this theory by collecting the dew from plants and trying it out on himself.
- But what he found was that dew collected from plants exposed to sunlight was far more potent compared to that collected from plants growing in shade. Further, he concluded that the sun's heat somehow must be essential to the process of extraction.
- Collecting dew was too arduous, so he reasoned to pick a few blooms from a chosen plant and place them in a glass bowl filled with water from a clear stream, and leave it standing in the field in full sunlight for several hours.
- He found that this water was 'impregnated' with the power of the plant, and thus - very potent. He had discovered the new method of extraction or potentisation, as he called it the sun method.
- Bach was very satisfied with the method, because it was of simplicity he had longed for, and involved a process of combination of the four elements. He described it like:
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
