Post by ANTHILL on Sept 14, 2009 2:13:43 GMT -5
Hi all yesterday I decided to go fishing up cub river canyon not too far from where I live -hiking to the different holes on the river proved to be a bit difficult due to the heavy brush and hardly growing along the river --
I did good I caught three things two beautiful cut throat trout that were under the size limit so I had to throw them back and a mild case of poison oak that I got to take home with me I think I would of rather kept the fish and left the poison oak there !
As you may know it's the acrid oil on the poison oak leaves that cause all the trouble --I have been using a aqueous solution of sodium perborate for a number of years topically and it has done a good job of keeping my morgellons in check more than any thing else has
I got to thinking sodium perborate is an alkaline the opposite of acid and also it is about the best thing there is to clean up oil and grease in laundry
Since the acidic poison oak oil is the culprit the thought crossed my mind that the alkaline composition of the preborate would neutralize the acid while the extraordinary oil cleaning ability's of the perborate would break up the oil I decided to try my hypotheses post haste because I was starting to itch pretty bad and it seemed to be spreading not to mention get annoying
I got me a cotton cosmedic pad and dipped it in the perborate solution already made up for my morgellons and rubbed it in the the poison oak rash I had almost instant relief and the rash was gone by this afternoon amazing!
The moral of this fish story is if you happen to get poison oak fishing -----think sodium perborate
I did good I caught three things two beautiful cut throat trout that were under the size limit so I had to throw them back and a mild case of poison oak that I got to take home with me I think I would of rather kept the fish and left the poison oak there !
As you may know it's the acrid oil on the poison oak leaves that cause all the trouble --I have been using a aqueous solution of sodium perborate for a number of years topically and it has done a good job of keeping my morgellons in check more than any thing else has
I got to thinking sodium perborate is an alkaline the opposite of acid and also it is about the best thing there is to clean up oil and grease in laundry
Since the acidic poison oak oil is the culprit the thought crossed my mind that the alkaline composition of the preborate would neutralize the acid while the extraordinary oil cleaning ability's of the perborate would break up the oil I decided to try my hypotheses post haste because I was starting to itch pretty bad and it seemed to be spreading not to mention get annoying
I got me a cotton cosmedic pad and dipped it in the perborate solution already made up for my morgellons and rubbed it in the the poison oak rash I had almost instant relief and the rash was gone by this afternoon amazing!
The moral of this fish story is if you happen to get poison oak fishing -----think sodium perborate