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Purslane and Mercury

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, Good report. Have been pickling purslane (relish) for a while.

That being said, in Indiana, pigweed looks like this (google link) It

has prickly thorns and is not a ground-hugging succulent. From my quick

search, it seems that Purslane (/Portulaca olearacea/) is called Pigweed

in Australia and NZ, possibly elsewhere. Most of the University plant

id web pages listed various members of the /Amaranthus/ family as

Pigweed (pics below). Another reason folks lecturing in public should

reference latin names...

You prolly can consume pigweed /Amaranthus/ etc by processing it like

Nettles. Don't know what nuitrients are in /Amaranthus/ and they're too

prickly to bother with at this stage of hunger. (how blessed we are!)

Saralou

google.com/images?hl=en & q=pigweed%20picture & um=1 & ie=UTF-8 & source=og & sa=N & tab=wi & \

biw=1360 & bih=518

//www.colostate.edu/Dept/CoopExt/4dmg/Weed/purppig.htm

//safiles.tamu.edu/agronomy/newsltr/weed003.htm

/Portulaca olearacea /appears to be called pigweed down Under...

://www.livingturf.com/weed-identification-n-z.php

//www.greenharvest.com.au/seeds/vegetables_d_l.html

//www.msuturfweeds.net/details/_/redroot_pigweed_32/ Redroot Pigweed

--- /Amaranthus retroflexus/

Here are pictures of Purslane (/Portulaca olearacea/)

//landscaping.about.com/od/weedsdiseases/ig/weed-plants/Purslane-Photo.htm

//www.umassvegetable.org/ethnic-crops/crops/verdolaga.html

//tgcgarden.wordpress.com/

//safiles.tamu.edu/agronomy/newsltr/common_purslane_portulaca_oleracea_001.jpg

>

> This is the truth! I attended a wellness conference and heard this

> incredible lady talk about the weed purslane--you know, pig weed. It's

> everywhere, all across the US, invasive in every garden and yard.

>

> This lady is a scientist, if I remember right, and a medical

> intuitive. She

> had so many clients that were ill with mercury poisoning. She wanted to

> find a way to help them and started praying to be shown something that

> could

> help.

>

> She also gardens, and knows pigweed as a weed that is just always there.

> She's hoed it out for years, but it keeps coming back. So, she's praying

> for something to help, and working in her garden and there's this large

> pigweed that she pulled up. This time she thought " I'm going to put it on

> top of this rock here, so it will die " because she knows that if she just

> leaves it laying on the ground it's going to re-root.

>

> The next day she goes back out to her garden and the first thing she

> sees is

> the pigweed. Sitting on the rock and not only not dead, but still fat and

> juicy! It suddenly struck her-- " I've been asking for something to get rid

> of mercury--what if this is the answer? "

>

> So she takes some of the plants into her lab and tests them. Sure enough,

> it removes mercury! She's astounded and sends it to 3 other, independent

> labs, to have it tested and they all come back with the same info--it

> removes mercury.

>

> She then develops an underarm deodorant because with the main lymph glands

> being right there, that this deodorant pulls the mercury out from there.

> She also has made it into capsules to take. It tends to give some kidney

> pain (dumping the mercury there before it is urinated out) so she

> discovered

> that cloves stops the kidney pain. The routine is to stop the purslane for

> a few days and load up on clove capsules, then go back to the purslane.

>

> She discovered that putting purslane in a cream and rubbing it on the back

> of the neck and the sides of the neck will stop a migraine. I'm sure

> by now

> as this was about 3 or 4 years ago, she's come up with some other products

> with it.

>

> She's Canadian and it's hard to find her products here. But you can call

> them and they will tell you who is an American distributor. It's a family

> run business, her, husband and daughter. You can even call and pay for a

> medical reading from her.

>

> Her site is http://www.naturalplantation.com/index.html

>

> Now, purslane is also a superfood. It use to eaten by our pioneers, but

> unless you are interested in wild foods, hardly anyone knows this

> anymore.

> There is information about this being a super food on her site, too.

>

> Samala,

>

>

>

>

>

> -------Original Message-------

>

> > I have almost decided that the tougher a

> > weed is to eradicate, the more we have to learn and benefit by it

> > somehow. Joyce Simmerman

> >

>

>

>

>

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