English Japanese
 
  Home    |   Products   |   How to Order   |   Shopping Cart   |   Specials   |   Newsletters   |   About Us   |   Wholesale Enquires   |   Contact Us
     
  0  ITEMS IN CART | $AUD 0.00   
Checkout
 
Your cart is empty
 MOST POPULAR PRODUCTS
Royal Jelly
Propolis
Omega 3
Shark Cartilage
Squalene
Natural Skin Care Range
Bee Pollen
Green Lipped Mussel
Placenta Serum
Vitamins & Minerals
Skin / Beauty Products
Emu Oil Products
Evening Primrose Oil
Goat's Milk Tablets
Jojoba Oil
Lanolin Products
Specialised Products
Anti-oxidants
Lecithin Capsules
Rose Hip Oil

Security & Privacy
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us
Site Map


  Propolis: Products of the hive - sticky, sweet and healthful
Better Nutrition, Feb, 1998 by James F. Scheer

Propolis: building a "city," rebuilding our health
 "Asians, Arabs, and other people around the world use propolis for everything from bad breath to colds, migraines, hearing loss, and other ailments. The Russians have even been using it to stimulate the body's [production of] white blood cells to prevent infections before and after surgery. Research in Poland has confirmed the antibiotic qualities of propolis."

Propolis is made by bees from a sticky sap gathered by them from balsam, poplar, and pine trees. Once back at the hive, they mix the sap with a wax secreted by special glands on their underside. They line the floor and the walls of the hive with it, and it hardens. The word "propolis" comes from the Greek, and means "before the city." The ancient Greeks called it that because they observed that bees used propolis to line the entrances to their hives -- their own cities.

Propolis inhibits microorganisms in the hive and is an antiseptic and healing agent, sealing the queen's chambers to guarantee a germ-free, sterile environment in which she will lay thousands of eggs.

Propolis also appears to have healing properties, including antibacterial. "In a recent study that pitted bee propolis against an array of conventional antibiotics, propolis prevented the growth of over 56 types of staphylococci bacteria," write Geelhoed and Barilla. "The conventional [bacteria] killers -- ampicillin, penicillin, streptomycin, and others -- failed the test. Further research has even shown that, while microorganisms typically `learn' to resist modern antibiotics, they never learn to resist the power of propolis."

Additionally, propolis does not destroy friendly bacteria working to defend us. In fact, propolis has been used for centuries in folk medicine to soothe and heal sore throats. In fact, many health food manufacturers include it in their throat lozenges, some of which contain vitamin C and/or zinc.
 

Continued: Royal jelly: fit for a "queen," healing for us

Product Resource Centre:
Bee Pollen | Emu Oil | Evening Primrose Oil | Green Lipped Mussel | Glucosamine
Goat's Milk Tablets | Lanolin | Manuka Honey | Omega 3 | Propolis | Royal Jelly | Shark Cartilage | Squalene