Balm Perennial
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![]() lemon balm Perennial HEIRLOOM 350 Seeds Groco $1.00 Time Remaining: 6d 6h 26m Buy It Now for only: $1.00 |
![]() Monarda Bee Balm Panorama Mix Seeds+FREE SEEDS Free Ship on Additional Items $0.89 Time Remaining: 9h 37m |
![]() 5 Bee Balm Monarda RASPBERRY WINE 449 $4.49 Time Remaining: 25d 8h 58m Buy It Now for only: $4.49 |
![]() Beebalm Purple Bee BALM Monarda 900 Seeds Groco $2.00 Time Remaining: 25d 22h 2m Buy It Now for only: $2.00 |
![]() 2000 BEE BALM LEMON MINT MONARDA Flower Seeds +FreeGift $1.00 Time Remaining: 14d 9h 1m Buy It Now for only: $1.00 |
![]() 50+ MONARDA SPOTTED BEE BALM Flower Seeds DEER RESISTANT PERENNIAL GREAT GIFT $3.89 Time Remaining: 16d 3h 18m Buy It Now for only: $3.89 |
![]() Monarda Bee Balm Panorama Mix Seeds+FREE SEEDS Free Ship on Additional Items $1.99 Time Remaining: 2d 6h 25m Buy It Now for only: $1.99 |
![]() RUBY RED BERGAMOT Seed Perennial Bee Balm $3.00 Time Remaining: 25d 17h 10m Buy It Now for only: $3.00 |
![]() Bee Balm Monarda Raspberry Wine 5 root cuttings Flowering Perennial $5.99 Time Remaining: 1d 9h 30m Buy It Now for only: $12.49 |
![]() Beebalm Purple Bee BALM Monarda 460 SEEDS GroCo $1.40 Time Remaining: 25d 22h 2m Buy It Now for only: $1.40 |
![]() Monarda didyma PANORAMA MIX BEE BALM Perennial Seeds $2.00 Time Remaining: 9d 22h 28m Buy It Now for only: $2.00 |
![]() Perennial BEE BALM Monarda 40 seeds Butterfly gardenbird gardenhummingbirds $2.49 Time Remaining: 10d 4h 5m Buy It Now for only: $2.49 |
![]() 10 Panorama RED BEE BALM MONARDA DIDYMA Oswego Tea Flower Seeds +Gift CombSH $2.00 Time Remaining: 20d 47m Buy It Now for only: $2.00 |
![]() Bee Balm Monarda Raspberry Wine 5 root cuttings Flowering Perennial $12.49 Time Remaining: 5d 7h 25m Buy It Now for only: $12.49 |
![]() Lemon Balm Melissa Officinalis 200 seed+FREE SEED Free ship on additional items $0.99 Time Remaining: 3d 6h 20m Buy It Now for only: $0.99 |
![]() Bee Balm Monarda Raspberry Wine 3 root cuttings Flowering Perennial $0.99 Time Remaining: 1d 9h 30m Buy It Now for only: $8.99 |
![]() Fragrant Lemon BEE BALM Perennial Herb 100 Seeds $1.50 Time Remaining: 21d 53m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() Lemon Balm Perennial Seeds Fragrant Leaves Calming Tea $1.39 Time Remaining: 29d 20h 36m Buy It Now for only: $1.39 |
![]() Bee Balm Monarda Raspberry Wine 3 root cuttings Flowering Perennial $8.99 Time Remaining: 5d 7h 28m Buy It Now for only: $8.99 |
![]() 50+ PINK MONARDA BEE BALM FLOWER SEEDS DEER RESISTANT PERENNIAL GREAT GIFT $3.89 Time Remaining: 2d 4h 16m Buy It Now for only: $3.89 |
![]() 1500 LEMON BALM Lemonbalm Fragrant Herb Flower Seeds +Free Gift Comb S H $1.00 Time Remaining: 5d 4h 20m Buy It Now for only: $1.00 |
![]() BEE BALM FLOWERS 125 SEEDS DEEP RED NICE AROMA TOO $2.49 Time Remaining: 21d 21h 55m Buy It Now for only: $2.49 |
![]() BEE BALM Bergamot Panarama Red Shades SEEDS $3.79 Time Remaining: 29d 14h 8m Buy It Now for only: $3.79 |
![]() Lemon Balm Seeds Delightfully Lemony Scented Foliage $0.99 Time Remaining: 2d 23h 33m |
![]() Wild Pink Panorama Mix Red Purple Monarda 4 PACKETS BEE BALM BUNDLE $4.49 Time Remaining: 24d 1h 49m Buy It Now for only: $4.49 |
![]() PURPLE BEE BALM FLOWERS 200+ SEEDS NICE AROMA BUTTERFLIES LOVE BEE BALM $1.99 Time Remaining: 6d 16h 56m Buy It Now for only: $1.99 |
![]() WILD BERGAMOT Seed Bodacious Bee Balm Beauties $2.50 Time Remaining: 12d 1h 55m Buy It Now for only: $2.50 |
![]() PANORAMA BEE BALM MIX 30 SEEDS A BEAUTIFUL COLLECTION $2.50 Time Remaining: 10d 2h 47m Buy It Now for only: $2.50 |
![]() 50+ LILAC MONARDA BEE BALM FLOWER SEEDS DEER RESISTANT PERENNIAL LEMON SCENT $3.89 Time Remaining: 2d 4h 27m Buy It Now for only: $3.89 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Perennial Monarda Fistulosa 3000 Flower Seeds + GIFT $6.29 Time Remaining: 2d 22h 18m Buy It Now for only: $6.29 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM HORSEMINT Monarda Fistulosa 50000 Bulk Flower Seeds $48.99 Time Remaining: 1d 22h 28m |
![]() Lemon Balm Seeds Delightfully Lemony Scented Foliage $1.35 Time Remaining: 24d 9h 18m Buy It Now for only: $1.35 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Perennial 500 Flower Seeds + GIFT $2.99 Time Remaining: 3d 7h 13m Buy It Now for only: $2.99 |
![]() 20 SEEDS LEMON BALM $2.50 Time Remaining: 20d 18h 1m Buy It Now for only: $2.50 |
![]() Melisa officinalis LEMON BALM Herb Seeds $2.00 Time Remaining: 2d 10h 58m Buy It Now for only: $2.00 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Seeds 500 Seeds + Free Seeds $1.88 Time Remaining: 24d 23h 34m Buy It Now for only: $1.88 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM 2500 Flower Seeds + Free Seeds $6.79 Time Remaining: 2d 5h 43m Buy It Now for only: $6.79 |
![]() Sweet Herb Seeds Lemon Balm seed 30 seeds D031 Melissa Officinalis Seeds $0.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 4d 3h 14m |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Perennial Monarda Fistulosa 5500 Flower Seeds + GIFT $9.79 Time Remaining: 1d 42m Buy It Now for only: $9.79 |
![]() Mintleaf Bee Balm 50 seeds Free shipping after 1st pkg $0.99 Time Remaining: 7d 12h 17m Buy It Now for only: $0.99 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Perennial 2500 Flower Seeds + GIFT $6.13 Time Remaining: 4d 2h 22m Buy It Now for only: $6.13 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM 5000 Flower Seeds + Free Seeds $11.59 Time Remaining: 2d 5h 44m Buy It Now for only: $11.59 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Perennial 5000 Flower Seeds + GIFT $9.17 Time Remaining: 28d 9h 19m Buy It Now for only: $9.17 |
![]() BERGAMOT BEE BALM Perennial 35000 Flower Seeds + GIFT $59.72 Time Remaining: 28d 17h 14m Buy It Now for only: $59.72 |
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BODYlogic Lavender Milk Hand Cream |
DescriptionA perennial favorite of herbal healers and old-fashioned romantics alike fresh lavender bloom enriches this nourishing hand balm with its gently uplifting fragrance. 6. 5 oz. This advanced vitamin enriched formula hand cream will moisturize to relieve dryness and fine lines... |
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Lavender Milk Hand Cream |
DescriptionA perennial favorite of herbal healers and old-fashioned romantics alike, fresh lavender bloom enriches this nourishing hand balm with its gently uplifting fragrance. 6. 5 oz. This advanced vitamin enriched formula hand cream will moisturize to relieve dryness and fine lines... |
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Balm In Gilead $11.49 Balm In Gilead |
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Aromatic Nutrivital Balm (Angelique Balm) $248.56 Aromatic Nutrivital Balm (Angelique Balm) by Decleor for Unisex - 3.3 oz Balm |
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Hydrating Balm $33.99 Hydrating Balm by Aquage for Unisex - 16 oz Balm |
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Smoothing Balm $9.99 Smoothing Balm by Biosilk for Unisex - 6 oz Balm |
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Purifying Balm $76.08 Purifying Balm by Darphin for Unisex - 0.5 oz Balm |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 360 vegicap bottle: HE $70.61 We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venoms and help insect bites. Arab doctors of the ninth and tenth centuries used Lemon Balm to dispel anxiety and heart palpitations and described it as a ''gladdening'' herb. Paracelsus ( |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 60 vegicap bottle: HE $15.47 We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venoms and help insect bites. Arab doctors of the ninth and tenth centuries used Lemon Balm to dispel anxiety and heart palpitations and described it as a ''gladdening'' herb. Paracelsus ( |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 600 vegicap bottle: HE $117.01 We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venoms and help insect bites. Arab doctors of the ninth and tenth centuries used Lemon Balm to dispel anxiety and heart palpitations and described it as a ''gladdening'' herb. Paracelsus ( |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 90 vegicap bottle: HE $20.65 We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venoms and help insect bites. Arab doctors of the ninth and tenth centuries used Lemon Balm to dispel anxiety and heart palpitations and described it as a ''gladdening'' herb. Paracelsus ( |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 Powder 10 lb box: HE $841.77 This is our BULK DISCOUNTED 10 lb plastic-lined cardboard bulk pack. We also have this herb at a further discount in our 25 lb pack, and in 1 lb bottles and capsules. To find the other pack sizes, just copy and paste the herb name into our Search. We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the n |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 Powder 25 lb box: HE $1988.67 This is our BULK DISCOUNTED 25 lb plastic-lined cardboard bulk pack. We also have this herb in our 10 lb bulk pack, and in 1 lb bottles and capsules. To find the other pack sizes, just copy and paste the herb name into our Search. We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' a |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 Powder 1/4 lb bottle: HE $32.56 This herb is BULK DISCOUNTED in our 10 lb & 25 lb bulk packs. To find the bulk packs, just copy and paste the herb name into our Search, or refer to our Bulk By The Kilo & Ton category. We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venom |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 Powder 1/2 lb bottle: HE $59.12 This herb is BULK DISCOUNTED in our 10 lb & 25 lb bulk packs. To find the bulk packs, just copy and paste the herb name into our Search, or refer to our Bulk By The Kilo & Ton category. We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venom |
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Lemon Balm Leaf 4:1 Powder 1 lb bottle: HE $112.24 This herb is BULK DISCOUNTED in our 10 lb & 25 lb bulk packs. To find the bulk packs, just copy and paste the herb name into our Search, or refer to our Bulk By The Kilo & Ton category. We use only 100% Gluten-free, Vegetable Cellulose ''00'' capsules for all of our encapsulated products. We offer both bulk powder and capsules. Obviously our bulk bottles are bulk powder, not capsules, but the capsule weight is included to give you a way of judging the recommended dosage. Lemon Balm - Botanical Extract 4:1 -- Approximately 600 mg. each capsule. 1/2 teaspoon of powder is about equal to one capsule. Powder can be consumed by sprinkling it over your food or mixing it with a syrup such as maple or chocolate. You could also mix it with orange juice. The citric acid in the orange juice will help to mask any unpleasant powder tastes. Other common names: Melissa, Balm, Balm Mint, Bee Balm, Blue Balm, Cure-all, Dropsy Plant, Garden Balm, Sweet Balm, Heart's Delight, Honey Plant Lemon Balm calms! The herb has been used for centuries to ''restore the joy of life to even the most melancholy'' and will not only alleviate stress and anxiety, but is said to improve memory and mental function. Try Lemon Balm for a good night's sleep. It also helps to relieve indigestion, cramps and combat cold sores. History: Lemon Balm is one of the most fragrant of herbs. Its origin is somewhat ambiguous, but it appears to have originated in the Middle East and southern European areas of the Mediterranean. Others argue that the herb was brought from the Orient to Spain by Arab traders; however, this perennial plant is now naturalized all over Europe and parts of the United States, where it grows to a height of three feet in fields and along roadsides in almost any type of soil. It is easy to grow; but when cultivated, it is a highly ornamental plant that may frequently be found in beautiful mounded shapes, preferring rich, sandy, loamy soil in sun or partial shade. Lemon Balm is widely cultivated as a culinary herb with the leaves used in herbal medicine, and its value as an important therapeutic herb goes back thousands of years. Lemon Balm's botanical genus, Melissa, is derived from the Greek, meaning ''bee,'' referring to the great attraction Lemon Balm flowers held for bees. (The plant was a favorite of ancient beekeepers, because of the honey they produced.) The word, Balm, is also derived from the Greek, balsamon, an oily, sweet-smelling resin (i.e., balsam). Finally, the name, Lemon, describes the plant's fragrance when the leaves are bruised. Virtually all the herbal physicians and naturalists of the past, including Dioscorides and Pliny, revered Lemon Balm as a treatment for a variety of problems, including nervous disorders, headache and as an antiseptic for healing wounds. It was greatly esteemed for all complaints that ''proceeded from a disordered state of the nervous system'' and was also thought to combat poisonous venom |
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Lip Balm $21.81 Lip Balm by Dr. Hauschka for Unisex - 0.14 oz Lip Balm |
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Renewing Balm $77.14 Renewing Balm by Darphin for Unisex - 15 ml Renewing Balm |
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Perennial $24.33 No Synopsis Available |
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Aromatic Nutrivital Balm(Angelique Balm) $57.2 Aromatic Nutrivital Balm(Angelique Balm) by Decleor for Unisex - 0.5 oz Nutrivital Balm |
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There Is A Balm $22.99 Cd Baby:321346 |
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Obsession After Shave Balm $45 After Shave Balm. |
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ChopSaver Lip Balm for Musicians $3.85 ChopSaver Lip Balm for Musicians |
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NRS Boater's Balm $12.95 NRS Boater's Balm |
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Perennial/House Of Worship $159 Perennial/House Of Worship |
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Eye Balm $85.12 Eye Balm by Skin Ceuticals for Unisex - 0.5 oz Eye Care |
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Night Balm Ylang Ylang $60.65 Night Balm Ylang Ylang by Decleor for Unisex - 0.5 oz Night Balm |
All About Perennial Herbs
A Perennial Plant is one that lives for two years or more. Annual plants germinate, flower, and die in one year. I am writing about herbaceous plants, which are also perennials. Other perennials include woody plants such as shrubs and trees.
Perennials grow and bloom during spring & summer. They die back during the autumn and winter, returning in spring from root stock rather than seeding as an annual plant does. So, you don't have to re-plant perennials each year because they come back by themselves. In harsher climates, many perennial herbs are treated as annuals, because they cannot survive the winter outside of their natural environment.
Perennial herbs originated from and grow best in temperate climates, which are the regions between the tropics and polar circles. Flavor comes from oil in the cell walls of the plant. Spices, on the other hand, come from tropical climates.
Perennial plants have stems that die at the end of the growing season. Parts of the plant survive under or close to the ground from season to season. New growth emerges from tissues on or under the ground such as roots, caudex (a thickened part of the stem found at ground level) or from various underground stems: bulbs, corms, stolons, rhizomes and tubers.
It is recommended to start most perennial herbs from young plants. Should you choose purchase seeds, be sure to get the best quality Organic Seeds. I personally like getting seeds from a source that also sells medicinal herb plants and seeds because I feel that they are more caring about the quality of their plants.
Here is a short list of perennial herbs that I like and recommend:
Echinacea- Used to prevent common colds medicinally, this plant has large, showy flowers that bloom from early to late summer.
Sage- Evergreen, with woody stems, grayish leaves, and blue to purplish flowers. A member of the mint family. Native to the Mediterranean. Has medicinal and culinary uses.
Lavender- Also a member of the Mint family, with medicinal and culinary uses. Native to the Mediterranean region south to tropical Africa and to the southeast regions of India
Thyme- A good source of iron. Often used to flavor meats, soups and stews
Sweet Marjoram- Sweet pine and citrus flavors. Indigenous to the Mediterranean area. Known to the Greeks and Romans as a symbol of happiness.
Chives- A member of the onion and garlic family, like a tiny green onion, cylindrical, hollow stems with flowers on top.
Mint- Aromatic, cooling. Good for digestion. A genus of 25 species, and many hundreds of varieties, of the Mint family. Due to its invasive nature, Mint must be grown in pots or contained in a garden.
Oregano- Widely used in Greek and Italian cuisine. Often used in tomato sauces, with fried vegetables, and grilled meat. Together with basil, it contributes to the distinctive character of many Italian dishes.
Savory- Aromatic. Related to Rosemary and Thyme. Used mainly for seasoning game meats and in stews. Also good for seasoning beans.
Lemon Balm- Related to Mint. The leaves have a gentle lemon scent. At the end of the summer, small white flowers full of nectar appear, which attract bees. Can be used for cooking or medicine.
There are many others. More information about perennial herbs can be found at other sources online, including some of the herbs books that I recommend at my website.
About the Author
As a practitioner of Chinese Medicine, Mark Perlik, a licensed acupuncturist in California, understands the power of medicinal and culinary herbs. He has created http://www.mygrowingherbs.com to provide information and resources to people interested in growing herbs.
Bee Balm Perennial
















































