View allAll Photos Tagged flatulence

One of the few thermal features that I was able to get a good picture of. The overcast skies really washed all the contrast away.

 

Punch Bowl Spring is found a little off the main path in the Upper Geyser Basin, the one with the famous Old Faithful Geyser. It's a really striking object, with the blue pool and brightly colored outflow.

 

I really enjoy the sulfurous smell around the various geyser basins. The best (ie strongest) smell is in the Mud Volcano area.

 

You could hold a convention for victims of chronic flatulence there and no one would notice a thing.

 

Cheers.

An Etch-A-Sketch of Nikolas Fartopolis, the farting teddy bear.

Owthorpe Fish Ponds, Nottinghamshire SK63R.

The ponds were in the grounds of Owthorpe Hall, which burned down and was demolished by 1832.

 

Acorus calamus (Sweet-flag, Sweet Sedge, Sweet Grass, Sweet Rush, Myrtle Flag) was grown by Gerard by 1596 and recorded from the wild in Christopher Merrett’s 1666 Pinax. Charles Deering wrote in his 1738 Flora of Nottingham, “Grows plentifully in the River Soar I many Spots, between Kegworth and Loughborough”. By the time the Howitts wrote their 1963 Flora of Nottinghamshire it was locally frequent in lakes, canals and rivers, including the Erewash and Trent as well as the Soar, although then as now it did not flower in the Trent.

 

Deering also wrote, “The spicy Bitterness of the Root of this Plant bespeaks it a strengthener of the Stomach and Head, and therefore may fitly be put into any Composition of that Intention. The Root preserved may with good Success be used by itself, and both the Germans and Turks are very fond of it, and reckon it a great Preservative against infectious Air, which makes them commonly eat a Piece of the preserved Root fasting. The Leaves having a very grateful Flavour are by some nice Cooks but into Sauce for Fish.” By the time Mrs Grieve’s Modern Herbal was published in 1931 the fluid extract was still an official preparation in the United States but not in the British Pharmacopoeia, although it was much used in herbal medicine as an aromatic bitter, with its properties accounted for by the volatile oil although little was known of its chemistry at that time. She noted it was formerly much esteemed as an aromatic stimulant and mild tonic, also acted as a carminative and she details pages of other uses. Richard Mabey’s New Herbal reported the Food and Drugs Administration in the USA banned its use as a remedy due to the presence of aserone in the essential oil, but rhizomes from Europe had low concentrations compared with those from India and no cases of malignancy were reported in mill or mine workers who chewed the rhizome. This was chewed for its mild sedative effect, whether for toothache or to break tobacco addiction. Mabey also wrote, “it is good for the stomach and bowel because it stimulates the salivary glands and production of stomach juices, helping to counter acidity and ease heartburn and dyspepsia. It also eases flatulence and relaxes the bowel, reducing catarrhal states of the mucous membranes.”

 

THE WINTER NOTEBOOKS, Pages 5 & 6

 

Diptych: 96" x 97"

Wood panels, gesso, modeling paste, acrylic, colored pencils

 

The hand written words on the panel behind the figure are transcribed below

 

Top right:

 

"The Dialogues of the True Cross, begun in 52 A.H., has been absorbed into Studio Section 97-02. This trilogy, with pages one through six of the Winter Notebooks, is the first actualization of the F.A.M. experiment. This five year segment will exist as a single work where-in the Process of Making replaces the making of product. Philosophically, an alternative to the decadent and currupt market metaphor for Art now exists. For me, whether this alternate metaphor is acculturated is of very little interest or concern. Our culture has been presented a choice: to continue the production of artifacts for the making of money or the making of Art."

 

Bottom right:

 

"In order to understand Procrustes, have I become him? A different head-dress, perhaps, but still procrustean in my approach to travelers en-route to destinations other than my Inn. Do I seek to seduce and destroy? Do I hate and respect my enemies while dismissing those who acknowledge me...those already my guests? Perhaps it has always been so. Perhaps I sought out the monster, Procrustes, to externalize and examine deficits within myself. The myth is so powerful, so usable, so revelatory, perhaps only self-recognition could paint him in the Now. Is this true of all myths and metaphors, I wonder? Are they created out of need for self-understanding and re-created over and over again depending on individuals and their circumstances as they are illuminated within the eternal Now? Do we assume the faces of heroes and demons as the light touches us and the drama proceeds in circuitry? Are we called upon to reveal our faces as the light touches us and recite the ancient lines to force the passage of time? Perhaps only the light moves creating a space between the birth and death of monsters. I will not mask my face nor shade it from the light. Be it monster or hero, I will play my part. If or when the light touches me, I will be there. Whether as traveler or as guest, Theseus or Procrustes, I cannot, I will not shun the light."

 

Left:

 

"What does it serve to escape the beds of Procustes? To live out ones life in his Inn within the comforting walls of majority, is this not happiness? To grow old surrounded by flatulence and bad jokes, is this not contentment? To not see oneself reflected in the eyes of children yet presume it must be so, is this not valid self-deception? To be father or mother in league with multitudes of fathers and mothers to produce legions of sons and daughters to occupy the procrustean beds, is this not destiny? The way it is is the way we are. If you choose to be other, to avoid the beds of Procrustes, you choose exile, alienation, and defamation. You will be hounded into the desert of contradiction—and beyond.... Fare-well, Procrustes. Your Inn is full. Your beds are never empty. You have no need of me. I know who you are and what you are. Not a giant, but a Janus of human Isness. Without you, there would be no us and without you there is no me. Those of us who escape your beds simply reshape them to a new conformity. In order to escape you, we become you. And so it has always been. And so it will always be. Does this offend you?"

 

Bottom center:

 

"As this Studio Section comes to completion, I am faced with the possibility of freedom. Has this studio, now windowless in aged walls, been my Inn of Procrustes? Have I placed my life upon its beds and sliced and stretched myself into oblivion? I sense I do not exist. Would it be possible, I wonder, to leave this place and wander these pages without the constraints of memory? Have I not flayed myself enough? I want not only to look at flowers but to see them...to have the sun touch my skin and remember youth without guilt or regret. Finally, have I not exhausted all that I was so that I can be without excuse or defense? There are so few years remaining. Finally can I leave this place and simply say, “I am”? My mind is scorched; my body publicly branded. Who would condemn me for ending this obsession...for simply closing the door of my studio and saying, “Enough!”...And what would it matter? I do not exist. At least I have escaped history."

 

Collection:

Crocker Art Museum

Sacramento, California

SGG project - Working note:

BN: Elettariopsis elan C.K.Lim. Zingiberaceae.

VN: Malay - Serai aceh, Serai ache, Tepus wangi, Puar kampung, Pud hom (Thai).

Source: SLN, Jerant, Ph

ACQ Date: 130813-0052-August 13, 2013

 

Distribution - Pen. Thailand to Pen. Malaysia. Creeping herb to 70 cm tall. Lemon scented leaves and used for flavoring culinary as lemon grass substitutes and also folk medicines.

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-243106

Journal of Thai Traditional & Alternative Medicine, Vol. 5 No. 3 September-December 2007

 

Note:

Indigenous but occasionally grown in the backyards in Malay villages as folk medicine. Decoction of roots and plant parts for treatment of food poisoning (muntah-berak) as carminative for flatulence and others.

Kebun Raya Bogor, Indonesia

(Bogor Botanical Gardens, Indonesia).

 

Hydnocarpus anthelminticus Pierre ex Laness. Achariaceae, pre. Flacourtiaceae. CN: [Malay and regional vernacular names - Pokok kusta, Becampoih (Sumatera), Kandar luntung (Sunda), Luteng (Jawa), Wanute (Sulawesi)], Chaulmoogra oil tree, Krabao oil, Dafengzi, dà fēng zǐ 大风子, Siamese chaulmoogra. Distribution - Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, China. trees or shrubs, more rarely evergreen, reaching a height of 7-20 (-30) m tall, with strictly straight trunk, gray-brown bark; twigs thick, slightly enlarged in the node. Petiole 5-15 mm, glabrous; leaf green leaf when fresh, often reddish brown, lanceolate, ovate-lanceolate or oblong, (7 -) 10-20 (-30) × 3-8 cm. The axillary inflorescences. Flowers mostly unisexual, yellowish green or pink, fragrant. The fruit is a globose berry, 8-12 cm in diameter. Seeds numerous, 30-50 (-100), 1.5 to 2.2 × 1-1.7 cm. a recognized alternative treatment for this infectious disease. Used centuries ago for patients with leprosy in Indian and Chinese folk medicine, this remedy entered Western medicine only in the 19th century, before sulfones and antibiotics had started their era. Given its anti-mycobacterial activity, The oil has also been prescribed against conditions caused by mycobacteria, such as the tuberculous laryngitis. The oil was applied externally, directly on the skin regions affected by leprosy. Also used to cure flatulence, eczema, decrease itchiness, lessen skin redness. lowering blood sugar and remedying psoriasis. It is one of the 50 fundamental herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine, where it has the name dà fēng zǐ (大风子).

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

apps.cs.ipb.ac.id/ipbiotics/user/organism/detail/detail_o...

www.liveandfeel.com/articles/hydnocarpus-anthelminticus-i...

es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnocarpus_anthelmintica

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achariaceae

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnocarpus_anthelminticus

Chapter 1

 

In the basement of the State Museum Dr. Frobe stared at the puzzle box. It was now past midnight and he was tired of looking at the thing. It was a large puzzle box, just under three feet long, just over two feet wide and exactly two and a half feet tall, but far from the largest. It was the museum's latest acquisition, and the administration wanted to see how it was opened. Hence Dr. Frobe, a specialist in foreign puzzle boxes, was working overtime. He had been facing off against the box since the morning. This did not mean that this was a particularly demanding puzzle box. The Sakata Puzzle Box was in the museum's possession for 17 years before it was opened. An unassuming viewer wouldn't have even guessed the Sakata work to be a puzzle box. It was less than a inch thick, perfectly smooth, inlaid with five different kinds of wood to create the image of a unicorn (seen as quite the work when created, now undermined somewhat with the creature's association with young girls). When it finally yielded, another smaller puzzle box was found inside, this thin one inlaid with the image of a dolphin (again, tastes change). The smaller Sakata Puzzle box had yet to be opened, and attempts had been made to do so for 79 years now.

Dr. Frobe was working long hours because it was widely felt that this puzzle box would not take anywhere near 79 years to open. This one, adorned with carvings of roses, was not terribly impressive. Even an untrained eye could spot the groves in the wood that hinted at parts that were likely to move. The thing was perhaps fit for a small town museum out in the provinces, but didn't belong in the State Museum, and didn't deserve his attention. When the opportunity arose, Dr. Frobe would have the thing removed. However until he was in a position to do so, he need to continue to work to show that he deserved such a position. The reason Frobe was unlikely to get a more distinguished position was that (fairly or unfairly) he didn't see things the same way the administration saw them. And what they saw was not the box itself, but the weight, almost 200 pounds more than an empty box ought to weigh. Its unknown contents was what they wanted. Plus he had a flatulence problem, and everyone agreed he was best kept in the basement.

It was near one in morning when Dr. Frobe finally touched the box. A well made puzzle box would be made more difficult to open if an incorrect attempt was made. This was unlikely to be the case with this box, but it was still better to be careful. Dr. Frobe grabbed two of the roses, twisted one clockwise, the other counterclockwise, then pushed both of the roses down. Nothing happened. He gave the box a kick. The box gave a click as the top released. Dr. Frobe pushed the top off to reveal a tall, lean, toned man with dark blond hair.

“You weren't supposed to open it yet.” With that the man kicked Dr. Frobe in the face.

Hutch peaked over the edge of the puzzle box to see that the room was clear. Seeing that it was, he leapt from the box and headed up the stairs. At the top he paused, on the other side was the main hall of the museum, at the end of which was his objective. The main hall would be completely open, no columns, no statues to hide behind, just paintings on the walls. That and security guards, ones he was expected to leave alive, but who were not expected to extend any such courtesy to him. Quite the contrary in fact. Hutch paused to consider his next move. The conditions where not great. He was still stiff from being inside the box. A bit of stretching might help, but he would feel absurd doing calisthenics during the middle of a break in. Besides, now that he was out of the box he needed to get what he came for and get out as quickly as possible. Hutch stiffened up, then made himself relax and walked out into the museum.

“Hey you! Stop!” The guard yelled. Hutch had to admit, this guy was decent, not one of those sleeping guards he was hoping for.

“Oh good, I finally found someone, I have been lost for the last hour.” Hutch replied in the man's language. His grammar was respectable, but his pronunciation was lacking, vowel harmony was just something he never managed to master.

“What are you doing here?” growled the guard as he hurriedly approached Hutch.

“Well I was just looking for the bathroom...”

“No! What are you doing in the museum?”

“Oh, well I'm a visiting pro...” As Hutch was midway through his bogus explanation when the guard gripped his left shoulder with a meaty hand, Hutch could tell the guard was about to spin him around to bind his hands. In a blink Hutch pressed his right thumb against the guard's eye, causing him to let go. Then with he put the guard into a choke hold until he passed out and laid him on the floor. Hutch stepped over the guard. Sometimes he wondered what happened to these guys who got in the way during his missions.

Security guard Mallet would become despondent after losing his job at the museum. Sunlight became a harsh glare and he stopped leaving the house in the day. Wine and bread tasted terrible to him. His wife tried to support him at first but she quickly grew tired of him sulking around the house. Only after she left him did he learn that the main reason she disliked his brooding was that her various lovers never had the chance to come over. Then he stopped leaving the house altogether. He lost weight and became a skeleton of his former self. One day while trying to choke down a bit of bread he realized that it wasn't just his mood that made the bread taste terrible, it actually was terrible bread. He had been eating it all his life but somehow he had never noticed before how bland and tough the stuff was. It seemed to him that making a better bread would be an undaunting task. So he made his own bread. And from there, of course, lead to him owning his own successful bakery with bread so good that even his ex-wife would meekly enter to acquire a loaf. He wasn't bothered by her since he now had a younger prettier wife (that is, prettier if you like heavier set girls, which Mallet did).

Things didn't go nearly as well for security guard Eaton though. Having severed at the museum three months longer than Mallet he was considered the senior guard and therefor the primary individual responsible for the museum. Due to his failure, he was executed shortly after Hutch's intrusion (Eaton being the guard who tried to stop Hutch. Mallet had gone to the bathroom to relieve himself and then decided to pleasure himself while he was at it and consequently missed Hutch's entire appearance. To be fair Mallet had to work in a building full of paintings of naked plump girls.).

At the end of the main hall was a smaller yet grander room. In it laid the State Museum's pièce de résistance, a bright green emerald so crystal clear that it was possible to read through it, and bigger than Hutch's head. That in itself was nothing remarkable. In the north of Trellick was a mountain of emerald. The locals there used sheets of emerald as windows and smaller bits as doll eyes. What made this emerald unique was what the jeweler Benson had done with it. Within the emerald lay the coat of arms of the kingdom of Findland (gold was still considered valuable, and there was but one known doll that used it as eyes). The emerald remained flawlessly smooth, and the method of placing the seal within it had been lost with Benson's death. This crown jewel had been mockingly displayed in Trellick for the last 120 years.

As Hutch approached the indigo dyed hemp rope surrounding the jewel, he decided there was no point being gentle at this point, seeing how he had already been seen twice. Hutch picked a pole holding up the rope and brought it smashing down on the glass case enclosing Findland's crown jewel. He picked up the jewel, as he did so he heard a bell ring out. Hutch stiffened, then realized it was the clock tower, marking the hour of one am.

Hutch put the emerald in his bag and headed for the exit. Finding the backdoor locked and himself without the means to open it he grudgingly went to the front door, which was also locked. He checked the passed out guard Eaton for keys, which the he didn't have. Hutch well knew that he wouldn't be able to discreetly break into the museum, the security was too good (Hence he had to hide in a puzzle box). What he hadn't anticipated was that at night the guards were essentially locked in, and that he would not be able to get out.

Hutch had a gold ring with a red gem (Well, it wasn't actually a gem, but it looked like a gem and it was more valuable than a gem, so we'll call it a gem) on his right index finger. He twisted the ring around his finger three times. Then he started taking paintings off the wall.

 

*

 

“Why did you have to be late today? Things are bad, real bad.” Tin Willis sipped his coffee and stared at the babbling guard with contempt. He had already been harangued by his fellow key holder for being late, he didn't need to hear it from a junior guard also. Maybe once these clowns had kids they would realize that sometimes you get delayed because you need to clean vomit out of your shoes.

“What's wrong Mr. Mallet?” Tin replied.

“They're gone! All the paintings from the main hall...”

“What do you mean...”

“And the emerald! The Findland crown jewel is gone! And Eaton, he's all messed up, doesn't know what happened. I was just...” Tin didn't hear what Mallet said next because he had pushed him aside at “gone” and took off running to the main room. There he found the sad sight of a museum with nothing to display, merely a slumped guard leaning against the wall. Tin immediately noticed bruising around the guard's neck and eye.

“Eaton! What happened here?” growled Tin.

“I don't know sir” Eaton meekly replied “I was standing guard and the next thing I know I'm on the floor, head's spinning.”

What the hell was this? “Have you been drinking?”

“No sir!” Eaton responded in a hurt tone. Tin spun around to face the junior guard who trailed behind him.

“And you, where are you in all this?”

“I was doing my rounds, going through the ancient pottery and the war room. When I came back everything was gone and Eaton was all confused, he didn't know what was going on.” I'll bet, thought Tin.

“You” Tin turned to face his equally worthless fellow key holder “go and summon the police.” The cellophane man did so without responding. Tin walked up to the shattered display case and stared at it in disbelief. Without turning he addressed the sniveling guard following behind him. “Mallet, what about Dr. Frobe?”

“Who?”

“Professor Frobe. Specialist in puzzle boxes. He was working through the night.”

“He was?”

Great, this incompetent didn't even know about people who were supposed to be in the museum. “Yes he was. Shall I take it that you haven't seen him around either?”

“Er... No sir.”

“Then perhaps we should go check on him.” Tin Willis and Mallet found Dr. Frobe unconscious, sprawled out across the basement floor. Tin Willis decided to gasp an opportunity that wasn't likely to present itself again and slapped Dr. Frobe hard across the face. Dr. Frobe awoke with a startled jump and a fart. “Good morning. You want to tell me why you are on the floor?”

Dr. Frobe looked at the two men standing over him and blinked rapidly at them. “Was a he in puzzle box kicked me in face!”

“What?”

“A man! There was a man inside that puzzle box, and when I opened it he kicked me in the face! He said I wasn't supposed to have opened it yet.” Tin looked at the ugly puzzle box with wooden roses. It was shut. Tin grabbed Dr. Frobe and pulled him to his feet.

“Open it.” Tin ordered. The doctor hesitantly approached the puzzle box. Standing as far away as possible he gave two of the roses a twist then kicked it. The box gave a click as the top released and Dr. Frobe promptly ran behind guard Mallet. Tin pushed the top back to reveal the missing paintings.

“Oh thank the sun!” exclaimed Mallet. “Everything is here, I thought I was doomed there for a while.”

“Mmmmhhh. Is there a large emerald containing the Findland coat of arms inside?”

“Sundammit! It's not here!”

“No it's not. Go and secure the exits. No one in or out.” Mallet blinked at Tin's order. Tin grabbed the guard by the front of his shirt. “Go and secure the exits. No one in or out.” The guard ran off in compliance. Tin ignored Dr. Frobe, who was desperately tying to demonstrate that he had no idea why the paintings were in the puzzle box and certainly no reason to place them there himself. Tin had ascertained what had happened in the night (well not quite, but he had a general idea of what had occurred, more or less). But by that time it was too late. A tall lean toned man with dark blond hair had slipped out of a different puzzle box (The Trellick State Museum had the world's premier collection of puzzle boxes) and out the door in the mist of the confusion.

 

Or perhaps she's just testing the smoke machine for tonight's performance in the Scoop. I moved away just in case.

Zerbert - n. The sound that occurs where someone places the mouth against skin and blows, imitative of the sound of flatulence

Edible Parts: Leaves.

Edible Uses: Condiment; Tea.

  

Leaves - raw or cooked. A strong peppermint flavor, they are used as a flavoring in salads or cooked foods. This plant should not be used by pregnant women, see the notes below on toxicity. An essential oil from the leaves and flowers is used as a flavoring in sweets, chewing gum, ice cream etc.. An herb tea is made from the fresh or dried leaves.

 

CAUTION: In large quantities this plant, especially in the form of the extracted essential oil, can cause abortions so should not be used by pregnant women.

 

MEDICINAL USES: Abortifacient; Anodyne; Antiseptic; Antispasmodic; Aromatherapy; Carminative; Cholagogue; Diaphoretic; Refrigerant; Stomachic; Tonic; Vasodilator.

 

Black peppermint is a very important and commonly used herbal remedy, being employed by allopathic doctors as well as herbalists. It is also widely used as a domestic remedy. This cultivar is considered to be stronger acting than white peppermint (Mentha x piperita officinalis). A tea made from the leaves has traditionally been used in the treatment of fevers, headaches, digestive disorders (especially flatulence) and various minor ailments. The herb is Abortifacient, anodyne, antiseptic, antispasmodic, carminative, Cholagogue, diaphoretic, refrigerant, stomachic, tonic and vasodilator. An infusion is used in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome, digestive problems, spastic colon etc.. Externally a lotion is applied to the skin to relieve pain and reduce sensitivity. The leaves and stems can be used fresh or dried, they are harvested for drying in August as the flowers start to open. The essential oil in the leaves is antiseptic and strongly antibacterial, though it is toxic in large doses. When diluted it can be used as an inhalant and chest rub for respiratory infections. The essential oil is used in aromatherapy. Its keyword is 'Cooling'.

 

OTHER USES: Essential; Repellent; Strewing.

 

An essential oil is obtained from the whole plant. It is used medicinally and as a food flavoring. It is also an ingredient of oral hygiene preparations, toiletries etc.. Peppermint leaves are used as an ingredient of potpourri. They were formerly used as a strewing herb. The plant repels insects, rats etc.. Rats and mice intensely dislike the smell of mint. The plant was therefore used in homes as a strewing herb and has also been spread in granaries to keep the rodents off the grain.

 

pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Mentha+x+piperita+vulg...

 

Prevent flatulence today! Skim that foam!

Kebun Raya Bogor, Indonesia

(Bogor Botanical Gardens, Indonesia).

 

Hydnocarpus anthelminticus Pierre ex Laness. Achariaceae, pre. Flacourtiaceae. CN: [Malay and regional vernacular names - Pokok kusta, Becampoih (Sumatera), Kandar luntung (Sunda), Luteng (Jawa), Wanute (Sulawesi)], Chaulmoogra oil tree, Krabao oil, Dafengzi, dà fēng zǐ 大风子, Siamese chaulmoogra. Distribution - Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, China. trees or shrubs, more rarely evergreen, reaching a height of 7-20 (-30) m tall, with strictly straight trunk, gray-brown bark; twigs thick, slightly enlarged in the node. Petiole 5-15 mm, glabrous; leaf green leaf when fresh, often reddish brown, lanceolate, ovate-lanceolate or oblong, (7 -) 10-20 (-30) × 3-8 cm. The axillary inflorescences. Flowers mostly unisexual, yellowish green or pink, fragrant. The fruit is a globose berry, 8-12 cm in diameter. Seeds numerous, 30-50 (-100), 1.5 to 2.2 × 1-1.7 cm. a recognized alternative treatment for this infectious disease. Used centuries ago for patients with leprosy in Indian and Chinese folk medicine, this remedy entered Western medicine only in the 19th century, before sulfones and antibiotics had started their era. Given its anti-mycobacterial activity, The oil has also been prescribed against conditions caused by mycobacteria, such as the tuberculous laryngitis. The oil was applied externally, directly on the skin regions affected by leprosy. Also used to cure flatulence, eczema, decrease itchiness, lessen skin redness. lowering blood sugar and remedying psoriasis. It is one of the 50 fundamental herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine, where it has the name dà fēng zǐ (大风子).

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

apps.cs.ipb.ac.id/ipbiotics/user/organism/detail/detail_o...

www.liveandfeel.com/articles/hydnocarpus-anthelminticus-i...

es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnocarpus_anthelmintica

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achariaceae

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnocarpus_anthelminticus

Samara (21 months old)

 

"It was as though Samara was never meant to eat food. Since the day she was born she had difficulty digesting anything that passed her lips.

Samara was a breast fed baby with acid reflux and then when we began introducing solid foods at around 6months old, Samara began producing a number of symptoms that caused us more concern, such as hives, bloated stomachs, cramping, constipation, diarrhea, constant flatulence, crankiness, sleeping difficulties, face and body rashes, swollen tongue and lips, itchy watery eyes, runny nose, sneezing, tickly throat, and behavioral changes and these were only the ones I could read.

 

As you can imagine, having a baby with all these symptoms was a lot of hard work and a constant worry, I hated seeing Samara so uncomfortable and I was starting to pull my hair out about what I could feed her. She lived on a very bland diet of rice and stewed pears as these seemed to be the only foods that were not affecting her. I began to worry she wasn’t getting enough nutrients and what to do when she started refusing to eat pear or rice anymore!

 

People looked at me sideways when I said she was allergic/ intolerant to most food groups, especially when I said fruit and vegetables. They didn’t understand the symptoms we had to live with.

 

I couldn’t do this on my own anymore, so I started doing some research and discovered a treatment on the internet. that had helped others with this problem. I was overjoyed to see they had a clinic in Brisbane. I made an appointment and it was the best move I have ever made. Within a couple of visits Samara was able to eat apples and peas! No more hives, no more cries of pain! I couldn’t believe it, and the best thing is the treatment is pain, stress and needle free!

 

Samara is now 21months old and with the help of AP we have been able to work our way through the long list of foods that were affecting Samara and she is now able to eat and drink anything she wants! She is able to enjoy food again! I don’t know where we would have been without them!"

 

Claire R (Samara's Mum), Brisbane QLD

Lamington National Park

 

The Bassian Thrush is often difficult to see, as it is an unobtrusive species that forages among dense vegetation. When disturbed, it sometimes crouches on the ground and freezes, relying on its plumage to conceal its presence. The bassian thrush directs a stream of flatulence toward the site of a worm find. The gas apparently disturbs the worm and provokes movement. The otherwise ordinary-looking thrush is then able to effectively locate the worm and grab it for a quick meal.

 

Yellow Sapphire can do wonders if worn properly

 

Jupiter stone Yellow Sapphire is known by many different names like: Pukhraj, Gururatna, Pushparaag. Peetmani Pushpraag,Gurupriya , Guruvallabh, Vachaspati Vallabh and Pitmani.

 

The Yellow Sapphire is a gem of the corundum family, and is twin of ruby and blue sapphire. It is found in yellow, golden and orange colors. The highest quality is said to be of lemon-yellow color. The color in yellow sapphire because of iron and titanium.

 

Benefits of Wearing a Energised Yellow Sapphire (Lucky Pukhraj Stone):

 

Yellow Sapphires bring prosperity to anyone who wears it, thus making it one of the most popular and beneficial gemstones among the Navaratnas. It is believed to improve the financial status of the wearer as well as bestow him or her with wealth, good health, fame, name, honour and success. In the Indian culture Yellow Sapphires are considered to be auspicious, bringing peace and prosperity and ensuring continuation of the family. Yellow Sapphire represents divine grace.

 

One of the safest gemstones, Yellow Sapphire is the gemstone of knowledge, auspicious wealth and loving relationships and provides general well bring and spiritual knowledge of the wearer.

 

It is a fact mentioned in the sacred texts that all married women desirous of a harmonious married life and a happy family should wear a Yellow Sapphire for a harmonious and prosperous family life as in the chart of the female native, Jupiter is the significator of the Husband.

 

Benefits of wearing a Yellow Sapphire:

 

Yellow sapphire gives wearer good health, wisdom, property, longevity, name honors and fame and protects from evil spirits. It is one of the best Gemstones especially during the academic life. Students wearing Jyotish Quality Yellow Sapphires do well in their studies.

 

It removes the delay in the way of marriage for a female indiviual. If there is an obstruction in getting a suitable match for a girl, she gets a suitable match by wearing a yellow sapphire. It brings stability in married life and the wearer is blessed with children.

 

Besides removing obstacles in getting married and correcting imbalance in relationships it also serves as a favourite engagement ring/ wedding ring in Indian traditions because in a Female’s horoscope Jupiter-the ruling planet of Yellow Sapphire represents the husband and also represents all joys of conjugal bliss.

 

Yellow Sapphire unites separated lovers, renders marital bliss among the couple and ensures heirs.

 

The wearer of yellow sapphire gets the knowledge of law, ethics, wit, wisdom, pleasure of getting issues, worldly happiness, Para physical bliss, physical power, cleverness, long life, good health, food grains, prosperity glory and mental peace, intelligence, physical strength, good health, better behaviour, long life, worldly happiness andprosperity in life and blessings to beget a progeny.

 

Medically it is effective in jaundice, throat infection, protects the livers, lungs, ears and blood circulation, dropsy, flatulence, dyspepsia, abscess, disorders of pancreas, tumours, skin troubles, cerebral congestion, catarrh, circulation of blood in the arteries and fat in the body.

 

Always wear a natural, unheated and flawless Yellow Sapphire just like the Dev Guru Brihaspati himself to get the best results.

 

findmystone.barishh.com/pukhraj-stones-meaning-benefits/

Ice cream van in Cardiff's Bute Park in November. It was about 10 degrees celsius. Not that the Welsh are mad or anything.

 

And apparently eating ice cream while walking your dog causes flatulence.

SGG project - Working note:

BN: Elettariopsis elan C.K.Lim. Zingiberaceae.

VN: Malay - Serai aceh, Serai ache, Tepus wangi, Puar kampung, Pud hom (Thai).

Source: SLN, Jerant, Ph

ACQ Date: 130813-0052-August 13, 2013

 

Distribution - Pen. Thailand to Pen. Malaysia. Creeping herb to 70 cm tall. Lemon scented leaves and used for flavoring culinary as lemon grass substitutes and also folk medicines.

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-243106

Journal of Thai Traditional & Alternative Medicine, Vol. 5 No. 3 September-December 2007

 

Note:

Indigenous but occasionally grown in the backyards in Malay villages as folk medicine. Decoction of roots and plant parts for treatment of food poisoning (muntah-berak) as carminative for flatulence and others.

After stock markets in Amsterdam, Paris and London collapsed almost in unison in 1720, revulsion against the speculative mania was widespread. This engraving shows securities being "distributed" through defecation and flatulence, vividly symbolizing what the public thought of the bankers and brokers and the stocks that had been sold -- and unforgettably capturing the double entendre in the Dutch term "windhandel," or air-trading, often used to describe short-selling and dealing in futures contracts.

 

Originally the frontispiece for an early edition of Pieter Langedijk's comic play of the same name that debuted in October 1720, the print is composed like a theatrical stage, with the curtains being drawn aside by a stockbroker, or "actionist," dressed as the character Scaramouche (on the left) and an "arlequyn" or harlequin (on the right). But the startling number of people swarming out of the background is probably meant to shock the viewer; since no theatrical stage could hold such a large crowd, the artist forces us to ponder whether he is putting the audience -- including us -- onto the stage.

 

In the center foreground, a wealthy fop stoops down to gamble against a monkey; for centuries, apes had symbolized greed and trickery (see mad.hypotheses.org/172). At the top of the frame, an owl -- which in the 17th and 18th century represented not wisdom but folly -- holds the title banner and anchors the swags of vegetables that swing across the upper edge. The huge bulbous objects are cabbages -- then, as now, a synonym for "the head," particularly an empty one. A sign on one of the buildings in the background, just to the left of center, reads: KOOL TE KOOP ("Cabbage for Sale").

 

On the stage-within-a-stage that dominates the center right of the image, two well-dressed financiers pour a sack of coins into a funnel jammed into the gullet of a securities distributor. In turn, he bares his buttocks and defecates paper certificates, "issuing" them in a flurry that wafts over the crowd below him. The seething mob of speculators surges forward, each desperate to get in on the windhandel; one elegant gentleman is about to club a woman over the head to keep her from getting ahead of him. In the center foreground, two junior financiers assist in the distribution; as they bend over to scoop up heaps of coins with both hands, they thunderously break wind ("Z-Z," "Miff").

 

The sign in the background reads QUINCAMPOIX, a coffeehouse in Amsterdam (see www.rijksmuseum.nl/nl/collectie/RP-P-OB-83.500) named after the street in Paris that was a center of securities trading. One certificate in the foreground is engraved VIANE[N], the town in Holland that was exempt from the bankruptcy laws that applied elsewhere in the Dutch republic; "to go to Vianen" meant "to go bankrupt."

Rijksmuseum, www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/search/objecten?q=actionist&p=1...

Active herbal colon cleanser (without goldenseal). Popular with colon hydrotherapists and detox clinic as part of their treatment programmes. Ideal support for a healthy digestive system and bowel regularity.

This unicorn is being called a "jerkacorn" because even though he has two pairs of roller skates on, he fails to realize that this song is "couples only". Why does he fail to realize such a blatant roller-rink status while being propelled round and round by magical flatulence? Because he is so thrilled at getting half of The Smiths inked on his flank (he's still saving for Johnny Marr). He's so caught up whistling the eighth-note from the bridge of "Vicar In A Tutu" that he forgot all amount the sprinkle donut he put on his horn as a quick energy boost. Live Mike and I sure know how to hang out at a bar on a Friday night!!

Parsley is used for urinary tract infections (UTIs), kidney stones (nephrolithiasis), gastrointestinal (GI) disorders, constipation, jaundice, flatulence, indigestion, colic, diabetes, cough, asthma, edema, osteoarthritis, anemia, hypertension, prostate conditions, and spleen conditions.

Amazondiscovery.com

Phone:1-570-668-3491

Argan (David Margulies) attempts to lay a big smooch on his less than enthusiastic wife, Beline (Christine Calfas) in The Imaginary Invalid by Moliere in an adaptation by Constance Congdon, directed by Chris Coleman. Now playing on the Portland Center Stage Main Stage through February 6. Tickets and information available at www.pcs.org/invalid

Angmering, West Sussex.

 

Nigella is a genus of about 14 species of annual plants in the family Ranunculaceae, native to southern Europe, north Africa, south and southwest Asia. Common names applied to members of this genus are Nigella, Devil-in-a-bush or Love in a Mist.

 

The species grow to 20-90 cm tall, with finely divided leaves; the leaf segments are narrowly linear to threadlike. The flowers are white, yellow, pink, pale blue or pale purple, with five to 10 petals. The fruit is a capsule composed of several united follicles, each containing numerous seeds; in some species (e.g. Nigella damascena), the capsule is large and inflated.

 

The seeds of N. sativa, known as kalonji, black cumin (though this can also refer to Bunium persicum), onion seed or just nigella, are used as a spice in Indian and Middle Eastern cuisines. The dry-roasted nigella seeds flavor curries, vegetables and pulses. The black seeds taste like a combination of onions, black pepper and oregano, and have a bitterness to them like mustard seeds. It can be used as a "pepper" in recipes with pod fruit, vegetables, salads and poultry.

 

Several species are grown as ornamental plants in gardens. Nigella damascena has been grown in English cottage gardens since Elizabethan times, commonly called love-in-a-mist. Nigella hispanica is a taller species with larger blue flowers, red stamens, and grey leaves. Nigella seeds are self-sowing if the seed pods are left to mature.

 

In India, the seeds are used as a carminative and stimulant to ease bowel and indigestion problems, and are given to treat intestinal worms, nerve defects, to reduce flatulence, and induce sweating. Dried pods are sniffed to restore a lost sense of smell. It is also used to repel some insects, much like mothballs.

 

The dried seed capsules can also be used in flower arrangements.

SGG project - Working note:

BN: Elettariopsis elan C.K.Lim. Zingiberaceae.

VN: Malay - Serai aceh, Serai ache, Tepus wangi, Puar kampung, Pud hom (Thai).

Source: SLN, Jerant, Ph

ACQ Date: 130813-0052-August 13, 2013

 

Distribution - Pen. Thailand to Pen. Malaysia. Creeping herb to 70 cm tall. Lemon scented leaves and used for flavoring culinary as lemon grass substitutes and also folk medicines.

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-243106

Journal of Thai Traditional & Alternative Medicine, Vol. 5 No. 3 September-December 2007

 

Note:

Indigenous but occasionally grown in the backyards in Malay villages as folk medicine. Decoction of roots and plant parts for treatment of food poisoning (muntah-berak) as carminative for flatulence and others.

 

Jeniang, Kedah, Malaysia.

 

BN: Elettariopsis elan C.K.Lim. Zingiberaceae.

VN: Malay - Serai aceh, Serai ache, Tepus wangi, Puar kampung, Pud hom (Thai).

Distribution - Pen. Thailand to Pen. Malaysia. Lemon scented leaves and used for flavoring culinary as lemon grass substitutes and also folk medicines.

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

www.theplantlist.org/tpl/record/kew-243106

Journal of Thai Traditional & Alternative Medicine, Vol. 5 No. 3 September-December 2007

 

Note:

Indigenous but occasionally grown in the backyards in Malay villages as folk medicine. Decoction of roots and plant parts for treatment of food poisoning (muntah-berak) as carminative for flatulence and others.

Ball massage is a modern technique of infant massage. It is very useful for while massaging a baby on ball all the muscle groups are involved, and a baby learns to control his body. developachild.net/massage/ball-massage/

 

The rear courtyard of Matheson Senior's Residence, under snow.

 

Due to a recent rule change, the smoking area for this home to 400+ tenants is inside that circle of shrubs. With large numbers of unmasked senior smokers crowding into that eleven-foot circle, I don't know which is the scarier threat, covid or flatulence.

 

----------

 

Comment Rules: Please, no graphics, invitations, awards, emojis, chain letters, clichés, robo-comments, hyperbole, or spam.

 

This collection is 100% bot-free.

 

Photo & Text © 2021 W.H.Wilson

 

Thank you.

 

The girls found this crater in the sand and determined that it was created by either a meteorite, or the flatulence of a really large person.

Please add your favorite gas-related tag. I've filled in a few.

 

 

All content of this and other eric Hews flickr sets, both visual and verbal, are Copyright © 2010 eric Hews.

 

www.erichews.com

 

Thanks for contacting me about the usage of my stuff.

Roast beef. Yum. That is all.

Argan (David Margulies) attempts to lay a big smooch on his less than enthusiastic wife, Beline (Christine Calfas) in The Imaginary Invalid by Moliere in an adaptation by Constance Congdon, directed by Chris Coleman. Now playing on the Portland Center Stage Main Stage through February 6. Tickets and information available at www.pcs.org/invalid

Interesting composition featuring man behind (Bag filled with flatulence)

Symbolic representation of hiding behind a bygone ideal whilst doing the nasty

GUEST, Charles Ernest. Private 282035 Labour Corps, formerly served as Private 32016 Royal Berkshire Regiment died 24th May 1918 aged 42. He was born in February 1877 to Albert and Mary of Dudley, Staffs and he was the husband of Rose Ellent, of 67, Birmingham Road, Stratford-on-Avon. In 1911 he named himself as Charles Ernest and he was living with his wife and children at 43, Shakespeare Street, Stratford on Avon. He was working as a labourer in a brickyard.

Some notes from what remains of his army record.

He joined up at Stratford on Avon on the 31st March 1915 aged 38 years and 26 days. He was married with children and he lived at 67 Birmingham Road, Stratford on Avon, and he gave he occupation as a labourer. He was posted to the Royal Warwickshire Regiment as private 11420. He was stationed on the 10th April 1915 at Windmill Hill Training Camp. Sailsbury Plain which was a tented camp (under canvas) After he completed his training he was posted with his battalion to France on the 31st July 1915. While in France he was transferred as private 32016, to the Royal Berkshire Regiment on the 2nd September 1917. In 1915 in France he reported sick suffering from Rheumatic Fever. He was treated in a Causality Clearing Station, for about a fortnight, from there to a medical facility (not record as to what type) in Boulgone for another fortnight and then he was invalided to England in December 1915 where he was admitted to Wimborne Hospital for two months and then he was transferred to (looks like Heath Hospital) for about another fortnight after which he was discharged fit to return to duty in France. On the 15th June 1916 he once again reported sick suffering from appeared to be appendicitis and he was treated at 49, Field Ambulance, same day transferred to 20th Causality Clearing Station and then onto 12th General Hospital, Rouen. Still on the same day, 26th, he was invalided to England on Hospital Ship, Asturias. There is no record as to the name of the hospital he was admitted and what he was doing until he was admitted again into Parkhurst Military Hospital on the 28th May 1917 suffering from Dyspepsia, (indigestion) and on the 31st May he was discharged from the hospital fit for duty. On the 30th June 1917 he was transferred to 629th, Home Service Employment Company, Labour Corps. On the 2nd Janua1918 into the 5th Southern General Hospital suffering from Valvular Disease of the Heart. Major, J Phillips, R.A.M.C. reported that this man has palpitation, dyspepsia in gastric and precordial pain. Had Rheumatic Fever in France in Nov 1915. A loud mitral murmurs present. He also has dyspepsia in the form of gastric pain, heart burn and flatulence. He was medicaly discharged to pension on the 4th March 1918 as being physically unfit for war service , para 392(XVI) King's Regulation. He died on the 24th May 1918 of Valvular Disease of the Heart. He leaves a widow and four sons. He was married as Charles Ernest on the 27th October 1900 to Rose Ellen nee Holtom at the Parish Church, Stratford on Avon. Their first born was a daughter, Kathleen Mary born 22nd April 1901 who appears to have died before the 1911 census. The other children are as follows. Charles Alfred born 30th December 1903, Ernest John, born 22nd December 1905 and Harold , born 16th July 1908 all at Stratford-on-Avon. He is at rest in Stratford on Avon Cemetery, Warwickshire.

 

Had brain flatulence (yes; a brain fart) and revamped my Rodilius Organic Flow technique and voila.

 

ref: www.fontplay.com/freephotos/imagesn/fpfreefoto036.jpg

Kebun Raya Bogor, Indonesia

(Bogor Botanical Gardens, Indonesia).

 

Hydnocarpus anthelminticus Pierre ex Laness. Achariaceae, pre. Flacourtiaceae. CN: [Malay and regional vernacular names - Pokok kusta, Becampoih (Sumatera), Kandar luntung (Sunda), Luteng (Jawa), Wanute (Sulawesi)], Chaulmoogra oil tree, Krabao oil, Dafengzi, dà fēng zǐ 大风子, Siamese chaulmoogra. Distribution - Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, China. trees or shrubs, more rarely evergreen, reaching a height of 7-20 (-30) m tall, with strictly straight trunk, gray-brown bark; twigs thick, slightly enlarged in the node. Petiole 5-15 mm, glabrous; leaf green leaf when fresh, often reddish brown, lanceolate, ovate-lanceolate or oblong, (7 -) 10-20 (-30) × 3-8 cm. The axillary inflorescences. Flowers mostly unisexual, yellowish green or pink, fragrant. The fruit is a globose berry, 8-12 cm in diameter. Seeds numerous, 30-50 (-100), 1.5 to 2.2 × 1-1.7 cm. a recognized alternative treatment for this infectious disease. Used centuries ago for patients with leprosy in Indian and Chinese folk medicine, this remedy entered Western medicine only in the 19th century, before sulfones and antibiotics had started their era. Given its anti-mycobacterial activity, The oil has also been prescribed against conditions caused by mycobacteria, such as the tuberculous laryngitis. The oil was applied externally, directly on the skin regions affected by leprosy. Also used to cure flatulence, eczema, decrease itchiness, lessen skin redness. lowering blood sugar and remedying psoriasis. It is one of the 50 fundamental herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine, where it has the name dà fēng zǐ (大风子).

 

Ref. and suggested reading:

apps.cs.ipb.ac.id/ipbiotics/user/organism/detail/detail_o...

www.liveandfeel.com/articles/hydnocarpus-anthelminticus-i...

es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnocarpus_anthelmintica

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achariaceae

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydnocarpus_anthelminticus

 

By Nancy Gardner

 

There are various solutions for the individuals who desire to lose some fats. These may be drugs and other pills, others are natural. They work under different mechanisms that help you reduce extra pounds in your body. Some makes you have reduced appetite so that you will eat few calories. Others tends to function in human body by reducing absorption of fatty nutrients in their body while others burns the fat faster hence reducing calories. There are various popular and best weight loss supplements for women.

Extracts from Garcinia Cambogia are commonly known worldwide for its function as a diet pill. It is a fruit with a pumpkin shape and is normally small and green in color. Its skin has hydroxycitric acid that inhibits the enzymes that produces fat inside the body and this as a result serotonin levels increases and this reduces cravings. This extract does not have many noticeable side effects.

Chromium picolinate contains chromium mineral which effects the functioning of the insulin, which is a hormone that is vital to metabolism. Mostly required in the body to facilitate the storage of fats, carbohydrates and also proteins. This mineral functions by lowering your appetite, cutting the body fat, helping to burn much calories and also it boosts mass of your muscles.

It however has side effects such as headache, irritability and insomnia.Not usually recommendable for those people who have problems with their kidney and liver as it is found to have incidences of people developing kidney damage and also liver damage while using chromium. Those individuals with such problems require consulting a doctor before choosing weight loss supplements. They will be able to avoid those that are not recommendable to their ill health.

Orlistat is a pill for tonnage loss and it is sold over the counter. This pill restrains fat breakdown inside gut and this makes a person to take in calories in very small amounts from the fat. This results to tonnage loss and it also reduces blood pressure. This makes one to have less risk of being diagnosed with diabetes. It has side effects such as flatulence and may cause deficiency of vitamins which are fat soluble. Therefore, it is recommendable to take them in small quantities.

Extracts from green tea are also known popularly to contain supplements for weight loss. It has anti oxidants that burn the fat. Some people believe that it increases the norepinephrine activity; which is a hormone that enhances the burning of fat. It mostly burns the fat around the belly. Its side effects are however there for the users who are sensitive to caffeine as it contains caffeine.

Extract from the bean of green coffee is also associated with mass loss. Their content composes of chlorogenic acid and caffeine which functions to increase the fat burning process and inhibiting the carbohydrates breakdown in the gut respectively. It also contains other benefits lie lowering the levels of blood sugar and blood pressure. Its side effects may be diarrhea especially to those people with allergic reactions to caffeine.

Use of these extracts in the right amount will reduce incidences and effects of their side effects to your body. Again, using them correctly will amaze you when you will have reduced fats in the body. They most recommended substances to use are mostly natural extracts from plants and they bring out amazing results.

 

About the Author:

 

If you need to find information about the best weight loss supplements for women, you should pay a visit to our web pages online here today. Additional details can be seen at ift.tt/1MhGCVy now.

 

ift.tt/1hAUTUp

The effect of drinking healthy taho.

Turns out a lot of this stuff is just as funny in a photo as it is if you spent the $2.99 to take it home.

Must know things about Ulcerative colitis:

 

Ulcerative colitis is a group of chronic inflammatory bowel diseases. This disease is characterized by provocative infection of the colon and rectum. Crohm’s disease is about spreading inflammation from the rectum and on the intestinal mucosa but this disease is limited. 000 inhabitants. Women and men both are affected by this disease in same manner. The average age of people who suffer from this disease is between 20 and 40. After having been increasing in Europe and North America this disease has begun to stagnate there. This disease was not so popular in Asia; Africa and South America. New cases has been increased accordingly today. Ulcerative colitis should not be ignored in anyway and if it is detected at early stages then the Ulcerative colitis treatments might be more effective

 

Important Ulcerative colitis symptoms:

 

The course of Ulcerative colitis is not predictable. Often the onset is insidious. There are also severe acute phases and gradients.

 

Some severe Ulcerative colitis symptoms are:

 

* Relapsing

* Diarrhea

* Intestinal bleeding

* Colic.

 

Problematic symptoms in everyday life are:

 

* Bowel movements that are compulsive and fecal incontinence

* Body weakness

* Administered drugs’ side effects

* Severe bloating can push for increased stool frequency

* The shear-dependent flatulence is part of thrust-related glucose intolerance

 

Acute exacerbation is a typical symptom of Ulcerative colitis. This disease is characterized by painful urination and bowel movement and bloody diarrhea. Stool rate can go up to 40 times in 24 hours. Wide range of Ulcerative colitis treatments is available that is meant to help

 

Some common Ulcerative colitis treatments:

 

There are huge number of drugs available for the Ulcerative colitis treatments but most of them have more or less side effects. As the cancer risk is less and inflammation suppression is more Mesalazine and some other 5-ASA preparations are used as per the medical instructions. The amount of side effect of Mesalazine is minimum. If the 5-ASA is not adequate cortisone is used locally (rectally as enema or foam) or systemic (oral or intravenous) is used for a short time. Budesonide foam is used with other steroid preparations as it only functions locally when the disease is limited. Mesalazine may also be administered rectally. People can get help from E-Coli and Nissle. These pro biotic bacteria can be found in pharmacies in the name of Mutaflor and have been used in remission maintenance in several studies as an effective replacement of 5-ASA preparations. The drug Mutaflor is covered by health insurances. There is a need for cooling of this drug continuously. It is better if you take immediate steps when you notice the Ulcerative colitis symptoms.

After a dinner of lasagna which left me with some serious flatulence I wandered back to the point for some night photography. The moon wasn't out so it was truly dark with only the stars for light. I had neglected to carry my tripod on this trip and so used a steel post and finder to take the long exposure.

  

A strong probiotic with 4 billion friendly bacteria per capsule! 8 strains of bacteria for full spectrum support of the small and large bowels.

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