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Aroma 203—module2--option 4: Researching Local EO Production

Aroma 203—module2--option 4: Researching Local EO Production.

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Aroma 203—module2--option 4: Researching Local EO Production

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  1. Aroma 203—module2--option 4: Researching Local EO Production Do some research in your area and see if there is any essential oil production or essential oil crops grown in your area. If you can, arrange a field trip to visit one of the farms you discover. Report on your findings… take photographs and use them to create a presentation of your field trip.

  2. Native ScentsIt was fun visiting Native Scents in Taos New Mexico many years ago. I returned there to do this project. It is a small, sole proprietorship, where Desert sage (Artemesia tridentate), pinon (Pinus edulis) juniper (Juniperus scopulorum) & jemez pinon (Pinus Ssp) are steam distilled. I use to purchase the sage oil for aromatic candles. Alfred, the distiller & owner, wildcrafts the plant material—hence, “Wildcrafted” would be the quality grade indicator for these essential oils.

  3. Desert Sage (Artemesia tridentate) …or Big Sage is like grass in northern New Mexico—abundant & everywhere! It has taken over the indigenous grasses after overgrazing and mismanagement of the land.(Big Sage & Juniper—Sangre De Christo Mountains)

  4. Old-timers say there wasn’t nearly as much sage growing when they were young. The volatile oil in sage prevents anything else from germinating around it save rabbit brush, juniper, pinon and lichen. It is a shrubby, drought tolerant “rough & rugged” plant with an amazingly beautiful smell. On a rainy day the air is saturated with the glorious aroma. The Native Americans traditionally collect it into bundles called smudge sticks, burned as incense to purify.

  5. Big Sage--Artemisia trientata [full sun, low water, zone 4]A silver-grey evergreen shrub 3-4 ft. tall in New Mexico, up to 6 ft. tall in its northern range. Very rugged. The picture of the Old West. Strongly aromatic foliage. A handsome specimen or foliar accent in your unwatered or watered garden. Inconspicuous flowers. Sow in fall or spring.(Plants of the Southwest nursery, Santa Fe NM)

  6. White or California sage (Salvia apiana), Culinary sage (Salvia officionalis) and Spanish sage (Sage lavandulifolia) are not related to Desert Sage. It is actually in the same family as wormwood. Like wormwood, it has high ketone content. In 2000, Albert was in negotiations to produce sage essential oil for Aveda, so he had a copy of the gas chromatogram for the sage. It indicates 45% ketones. This gives it a medium therapeutic margin for toxicity; beneficial to liver & skin in proper dosage

  7. The Distillation Process I was unable to connect with Alfred this time around. I was hoping he could send me a picture of his still. It is a large (approx 6ft tall x 5ft wide) still in which he stuffs the material. The oil is bottled by hand with a computerized label which indicates the batch # and the Latin name of the of the plant. The cargo car Alfred has made into his distillery—behind the store front

  8. Alfred has experimented distilling other plants like Osha root & white sage seen here in a decorative bottle. He was unsuccessful in distilling sweetgrass-a sweet smelling grass native to the Great Plains.

  9. California Sage, juniper & Big Sage smudge sticks “Native Scents distills essential oils of southwest flavor: Desert Sage, White Sage, Pinon and Juniper” www.nativescents.net

  10. I found Desert Blends new location by accident while looking for Alfred’s place—not easy to find after all these years. Desert Blends is another local cottage-industry that makes use of local herbs. Toni, the owner, makes her own custom line of body & bath amenities which she sells locally. Her business is expanding rapidly in blending for hotel and spa private labeling. Toni doesn’t distill essential oils. However, she uses Alfred’s sage oil in some of her products. For instance, I made Toni aromatic candles, with her signature EO blend, for her 2002 Christmas season gift baskets. Herbal Sage is the key ingredient in her signature line of cosmetics. She says our Big Sage has very nutritive and regenerative properties for the skin.

  11. Toni wildcrafts local herbs to make tinctures, oil infusions, teas and decoctions which she uses in her cosmetics. I’ve never visited Tony at her studio before, so I was impressed to see the extent of what she does and how she does it. She consults with a cosmetic chemist to formulate parts of the blends—specifically the proportions & base ingredients—all else is her energy & philosophy. I learned that her life philosophy, training, blending techniques and product purpose is Ayurvedic & holistic. The entire process is infused with blessing & gratitude from beginning (wildcrafting plants) to end (packaging).Drying wildcrafted evening primrose seeds--high in EFA for skin nourishment

  12. Main Production Area

  13. Tony graciously let me snoop into her shelves. She is brewing many herbs. There are bottles of essential oils and high-grade cold-pressed vegetable oils. Eventhough she focuses on using plants from our New Mexican desert, she will wild craft other plants that grow in other deserts—like chaparral which grows closer to California & Mexico.

  14. This field trip revealed to me just how pure, fresh & high quality the products & process are; from the Raw materials to the final products. Toni is on the cover of the October issue of New Mexico Magazine, with a feature article inside. She has a retail space in the John Dunn Plaza, Taos NM, and a website. www.desertblends.com

  15. “ Desert Blends of Taos … provide innovative formulas and products that are unique to the land of enchantment, using indigenous and organic ingredients…mindful awareness of our environment and hold a reverence for traditional ways and practices of the native people, Mother Earth and her healing plants. • We buy Organic from small farms and wildcraft (harvest) out in nature. Green lush Sage from arroyos in Taos; Watercress from clean fresh mountain water acequias; Chapparal wildcrafted in the southern region of New Mexico; Blue Corn from Velarde farms, lavender flower from Chimayo, red clay from the mesa in southern Colorado, sea salt and volcanic ash from the salt beds of Utah and continually researching and blending! • We believe in sustainable business practice by buying local, recycling and supporting our greater community. What is good for us is good for the whole. • In an on going partnership with the community, Desert Blends has pledged a portion of it's proceeds to Terra Nova Children's Foundation. www.terranovataos.com “

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