“That would be funny....if anybody on the planet Earth knew what neem oil was besides you.”
Neem oil is some sort of evergreen sap from a tree in India. It is used in a lot of cosmetic products, balms, and massage oils. Sometimes it can be found in the black hair products section. It is used on horses to keep their coats in good condition and to repel flies. Tractor Supply sells a brand called “Happy Horse” that is 100% pure cold pressed neem oil.
It has excellent anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, and insecticide properties. It is good to use on the scalp if one has folliculitis, ringworm, psoriasis, lice, or too many of the mites we all have. It is also slows down graying.
The best kind is 100% pure cold-pressed. It is too strong to be used straight— it should be mixed with a higher amount of coconut or some other oil.
Some people put it on plants to kill fungus and to repel bugs.
As I told that guy who came up with the chocolate syrup idea on the thread it came from, he was probably just lucky that he found one of the dumbest Karens out there to tell that too, for while all Karens are dumb, they aren’t that dumb.
You could tell the Karens that castor oil, which also has good topical medicinal and beauty uses, wards off the ‘the rona, but while more would fall for that than the chocolate syrup, many wouldn’t.
Neem oil is exotic and multi-cultural. I would tell them it goes on smelly but when it dries it smells nice, hence why I would put on a whiff of some nice-smelling essential oil.
What else will I learn before I croak?
I'm sure it is a large number. And I'm in the right place for it.
Sometimes it is not known.
Interesting. So it would also work on a baseball glove to keep the leather pliable?
I’m not into all of that natural weird tree sap bee honey stuff........
I like chemicals!
Lice? Gasoline.
Ring worm? Gasoline.
Bug repellant? Gasoline.
Protesting? Gasoline.
#NotMessinAround #NittyGritty