Product descriptions
Chestnut Bud The flower of learning
For those who don't learn enough from their experiences and experiences, and continue to learn life's lessons. For some, even a single experience is enough, yet most people feel they need more experience to learn the lesson of the moment. So they make the same mistake over and over again until they finally learn from it or learn at the expense of others.
Wildchestry is the essence of spiritual maturation and experience. It enhances learning at all levels. It helps you to gather and make the best use of experience. It opens the mind, improves perception and generally increases interest. It is therefore useful not only for children with school problems, but also for adults who do not develop sufficiently in their lives and keep making the same mistakes.
The Bach Flower Scenes are based exclusively on the original instructions and guidelines of Dr. Edward Bach and his colleagues (Nora Weeks, Victor Bullen).
Many of the plants can be found in the wild in our country (almost all of them in the former Great Hungary!), and we have tried to prepare them in the purest possible environment (national parks, protected areas).
Plants that do not live in the wild in Hungary (sylvanot, olive tree) were found in their original habitat and used to prepare the mother plants. The method of preparation (sunbathing or cooking) corresponded in all cases to the original descriptions.
We have given a number of the newly prepared series for testing and comparison to a number of experienced practitioners in the field who have been using Bach therapy and English essences for many years.
The feedback was surprisingly clear and positive: almost everyone considered the home series to be better than the English one. The reason for this is, on the one hand, the artisanal nature of the production (no machines are used in any step of the production of the essences, and the bottles are filled individually by hand, in compliance with food hygiene standards, in a laboratory controlled by the ÁNTSZ (the German Food Hygiene and Consumer Health Protection Agency), on the other hand, we have used, as far as possible, wild plants from the Carpathian Basin, which are obviously more in harmony with the people living here than Western European species.