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Thanks, Allan! I'll look up Summa. Why do you like it better than

azomite and where do you get it?

Marla

>

> >

> >Hello All:

> >

> >Is anyone using azomite as a supplement? If so, would you share how

> >you're using it?

> >

> >Thanks,

> >

> >Marla

>

> I prefer SUMMA to AZOMITE, Marla, but, either way, you can stir it

> into a glass of water and let it settle and drink it (it's the stuff

> that doesn't settle out that is so available to your body, or I use a

> smaller amount, like 1/4 tsp in a greendrink and make a point to not

> grind my teeth until I've rinsed my mouth. People also bake either

> one in their

bread. (Summa or Azomite) -Allan

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I use it, and add it to an activated EM supplement I make. See site:

http://www.vinnypinto.us/

Rebekah

Azomite

Hello All:

Is anyone using azomite as a supplement? If so, would you share how

you're using it?

Thanks,

Marla

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>Allan, what should be done with that grit which settles out - try to

>drink or toss it? I had not seen the distinction you mentioned

>before. Thanks ---Carol

You can toss it. I don't have a deep understanding of 'why' to toss

it, except that's what my practitioner told me to do. In the Reams ag

work, though, we do a similar thing with rock phosphate for foliar

applications. The stuff that 'floats' is the stuff that's

'available.' For a human, with kidneys and a liver and ??, I assume

there are good reasons to NOT increase one's intake of small,

non-available 'grit,' no matter the mineral content. BTW - there's

also a lot to be said for getting these minerals from the vegetables

and fruit you eat instead of getting them from rock itself. Minerals

that have been incorporated into plant flesh are even more available

(I would assume) than that 'dust of the dust' that floats from the

rock dust. -Allan

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  • 11 months later...

Sharon-

>Does anyone have any experience or opinions on Azomite mineral powder?

I find that it makes a great wound plaster.

As a dietary supplement... I'm rather dubious. I think it would be

much more effective applied to soil and eaten via plants and animals.

-

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On 1/23/06, Sharon Conti <sharflin@...> wrote:

> Does anyone have any experience or opinions on Azomite mineral powder? I've

> started using it based on the recommendations in NT. While much of it

> disolves/is suspended in water, a noticable amount settles quickly to the

> bottom of the glass and is very gritty. I wonder if those particles are too

> big for digesting the minerals? Thanks much, Sharon

Below are some posts I retrieved from another thread/list.

--

" The stone age ended, but not because of any lack or stones.

Undoubtedly the oil age will end the same way. "

Sheik Yamani, one time oil minister to Saudi Arabia

######

Noticed that you are using azomite. Thought that you might be interested in

our review of that product. We considered it as a possible component of our

fertilizers and rejected it. Basically, it is a hydrated sodium calcium

aluminosilicate. In plain English that is a sand with high sodium, calcium,

and alumina components. It will pass right through your body with little

left behind. If you are trying to add trace minerals to your diet you would

be better served by finding a high grade of bee pollen from some remote

area. These pollens are rich in trace minerals and have an advantage of

being already chelated by the bees. Most ground powders transfer poorly in

the body. In the soil they have to be chelated by a weak acid before they

can be used by a plant.

######

Do you really think human bodies are set up to digest and utiltize rock

dust nutritionally? As I understand it, plants eat sun and soil, and

animals eat plants.

Some people on this list seem to be saying that even plants can't eat

soil. They are fed by the microorganisms in the soil that eat the soil.

I guess that raises the possibililty that human gut flora can digest some

of that stuff and feed it to us, I suppose, but wouldn't something like

seaweed be a more reliable and efficient source of ingesting trace

minerals?

######

I don't think this will hurt a thing in the human body but it is not very

efficient in its assimilation in the body. The reason for this is minerals

need to be combined with sugars to be absorbed. When people consume

low-brix foods they are consuming low sugar foods and they don't have enough

carbohydrates to utilize rock minerals. That is why the mineral box for

cattle can never replace high-sugar forages. I have heard reports of

powdered rock assisting in good bowel function. A preferred method is to

use Azomite on the garden soil and get the minerals back in a chelated form.

######

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  • 2 weeks later...

Sharon-

>That is my intuition as well. Though I prefer Redmond Clay for wound

>plastering...

I think I might just have some Redmond Clay lying around, amazingly

enough. What sort of benefits do you notice from using it instead of

azomite? Should I cut myself badly in two places and try a proper

experiment? <g>

-

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,

> I think I might just have some Redmond Clay lying around, amazingly

> enough. What sort of benefits do you notice from using it instead of

> azomite? Should I cut myself badly in two places and try a proper

> experiment? <g>

No grit!! Smooth as silk. I've used it on cuts - it is messy but stops all

throbbing and prevents any inflammation/infection.

Sharon

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