Product Description
Oak - The flower of endurance
For those who are fighting with all their might against their illness or everyday life problems. They fight hard, try everything, even when their cause seems completely hopeless, they keep fighting. They are dissatisfied with themselves if the illness prevents them from fulfilling their obligations or helping others. Brave people who face the greatest challenges without fatigue.
Oak is a remedy against inflexibility and stubbornness. It makes one more flexible, adaptable, and willing to compromise. It weakens the need to excel, strengthens acceptance of fate, and brings a sense of relaxation. It also extends to the body and is able to alleviate the damage caused by excessive, stubborn, and tension-induced inability to surrender. It is beneficial for reducing degenerative diseases of the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems.
The Bach flower remedies are exclusively prepared based on the original guidance and principles of Dr. Edward Bach and his associates (Nora Weeks, Victor Bullen).
A significant part of the plant species can also be found in the wild in our country (almost all of them in the former territory of Great Hungary!), and we have tried to prepare them in the cleanest possible environment (national parks, protected areas) whenever possible.
We found non-indigenous plants in Hungary (artichoke, olive) in their original habitat and prepared mother tinctures from them on the spot. The method of preparation (exposure to sunlight or boiling) always corresponded to the original descriptions.
We provided the freshly made series for testing and comparison to experienced local professionals who have been using Bach therapy and English essences for years.
The feedback was surprisingly clear and positive: almost everyone considered the domestic series better than the English one. This can be explained partly by the artisanal execution (we do not use machines in any step of production, bottles are filled one by one manually in compliance with food safety regulations in a laboratory checked by the NPHS), and partly by the fact that, to the best of our ability, we used domestically and from the Carpathian Basin those wild plants that are closest to the people living here, which obviously harmonize better with them than Western European specimens.