Posts Tagged ‘natural’

Additives in skin, body, bath and hair products

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008
Good Morning from the Goat Woman!!!

As I sit here in my warm, cozy home heated by the wood that my family so carefully gathered this summer and fall, I feel we need to discuss additives. Specifically Sodium Lauryl Sulfate and Sodium Laureth Sulfate with a little DEA and Propylene Glycol thrown in for good measure.

I have so much competition at craft fairs and yes, the grocery store, health food stores and the specialty soap shops in the mall. I’m not worried – but you should be if you’re not reading labels! Go past the pretty pictures of herbs on beautiful bottles of shampoo that cost many times more than the grocery store brands. Go past the extremely cheap price on warehouse type stores and really READ what’s in your shampoo, toothpaste, body & bath products. “Natural”, “herbal extracts”, etc. do not mean anything!

I will make up a product based on a customer’s wants as long as it does not conflict with my beliefs and limited knowledge of additives. This time it’s bath fizzys/bombs and shampoos. They all seem to list the most dangerous chemical ingredient used (in my opinion) in shampoos, bath and body gels, bubble baths, etc. This chemical Sodium Lauryl Sulfate is used in engine degreasers and garage floor cleaners. It cleans by corrosion. Is used as a skin irritant so they can test healing agents on  irritated skin.  (Just what I want on my head and body – how ’bout you?).

This chemical detergent has a warning label on it in children’s bubble baths . . . it’s on you a little longer than the wash off product called shampoo. Terrible irritant and can cause lots of problems. It’s so dangerous bubblebath is regulated by the FDA!

The dangers of DEA were noted by Doctor Samuel Epstein, M.D. of the University of Illinois and one of the world’s most foremost toxicologists on CBS This Morning. DEA is “a potential carcinogen” and that even in small doses, repeated use of DEA increases the risk of cancer. (The European government has taken action to phase out its use since the 1980’s).

Propylene Glycol, also known as the main TOXIC ingredient in industrial antifreeze – commonly used in shampoo to give it “glide” and in order to prevent the drying of the product. Known to be an irritant even in low levels of concentration.

My shampoo that I make – Simply Shampoo – may not be thick and gel-like, but it cleans the hair and doesn’t have any of these terrible ingredients in it. My bath fizzys have recognizable, simple ingredients – most of them in your spice pantry. By law I do not need to disclose any ingredients on my soaps unless I make a claim. But we put every single ingredient on each and every bar of soap. Look at the soaps/detergent bars that you are buying . . . do you KNOW what’s in it?

Whether you buy Weber Farms handmade products or not, PLEASE READ YOUR LABELS! It could mean life or death – either from the chemicals that give products “something extra” or from allergens not listed.

Please look “google” Diethanolamine (DEA) – Propylene Glycol – SLS or Sodium Lauryl Sulfate and SLES or Sodium Laureth Sulfate and walk in wisdom, she’s a great teacher!

Let’s all get a little healthier together by reading labels and enjoying simpler things . . . like lighting that little 100% beeswax candle and letting the aroma fill the living area while we watch Christmas and Thanksgiving (the turkeys) come down and forage by the oak trees. (You could too – just come visit!).

with your health in mind, The Goat Woman

The Goat Woman

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Why goat woman?

Ask my favorite Irish cheerleader – Reggie. Once, when given our handmade goat milk soap to take home with him after a visit to the states – he critiqued the soap and called it very queer. Of course, I was stunned – until his son translated. Queer is the absolute best testimonial word that could be used. He loved that the bar was hard & had all the qualities that he loved in soap . . . Reggie does NOT like liquid soaps. Now, when he talks to his son, he almost always asks how the Goat Woman is . . . and Reggie, I’m loving my new name and all that it encompasses – THANK YOU!!!

Why goats?

I wanted a cow . . . a Jersey cow to be precise. Only I knew nothing about them. I also wanted to be able to transport whatever I bought in a Suburban . . . enter 4H & my teenage daughter. We started in Reno with several Toggenburgs that were already bred. My daughter got a crash course in showing goats and her 1st year milker took first place at the NV State Fair. Our goats got a 3 sided shelter in a very large fenced-in field and a separate, small fenced in area for a birthing pen. They ate all the sagebrush they could find . . . 11 acres of it. We bought pure alfalfa hay – never have seen any hay since like the hay from Northern California. We tried to drink the milk – but sage-flavored milk was not our favorite . . . but we did find a recipe for goat milk soap. . .

Our natural, homemade goat milk soap came from this very simple first recipe. I still have bars left from those days – still wonderful, moisturizing, gentle cleansing, soap -

Then, the transfer came . . . I had to sell my goats. A goat-herder woman came and got all my goats . . . sad day – but they went to a good home at a fraction of what I’d paid for them. When you want milk and healthy animals, and don’t show them – you don’t need all the fancy paperwork . . .

Enter Kentucky and 5 years later – we buy a small piece of property and set out to find milking does. Ooops – no Toggs here . . . Alpines? Nubians? Well, after much searching we found a farm in Indiana with some beautiful Alpines and a herd was started.

We’ve added and now have Alpines – because we LOVE them and Nubians because of the goat milk cheeses we make, yogurt and amount of higher-fat milk they put out. We cannot sell raw milk because of Kentucky law, but we’re working on teaching about goat care, cheese making classes, making goat milk lotion and goat milk soaps – for the health conscious. We also sell great quality stock to get you started.

We use organic principles in raising all of our animals as far as we can. We believe that by giving them the best care, food and shelter available that they will be the most healthy. If an animal needs treatment by medical intervention to save it’s life – it will get it. With good care and hygiene an animal usually will not need intervention.

Watch for more day to day activities around the farm – it’s time to make sure the ladies get bred so we have plenty of milk and products for next Spring . . .

Off to do the best job anyone could have, feed, water & milk the outside family

Have a blessed day,

the Goat Woman