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Eating local honey for allergies ???

megablue

All-American
Oct 2, 2012
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Does anybody do this ??
Is this a myth … or does it help to combat Fall and Spring allergies ??

I LOVE honey and should be eating more of it anyway … just never seem to have it around the house … it’s nobody’s fault but mine !!

 
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I don’t know if it’s a myth or not but all I buy is local honey. There are 2 bee farms not that far from where I live and 1 about 20 minutes away that I get mine from. Maybe it’s just in my head but it tastes way better than anything else I get.
 
Hypothetically, if could POSSIBLY work. IOW, there is science behind it.
As a practical matter, it's pure horse sh*t.

The pollens that honey bees consume/process only cause allergy symptoms in a miniscule fraction of the pool of hay fever sufferers. The tree, grass, and weed pollens which are responsible for 99+ percent of pollen induced histamine production in people are not present (statistically measurable levels) in ANY honey, local or mass produced.
If you live in Kentucky; start taking two Loratadine tablets (one when you get up in the morning, and another in the early evening) around the middle of February (it takes a few weeks to work up it's most effective levels), and stop in the Fall, after the first really hard frost. Avoid the temptation to just take year 'round, for the rest of your life. I say that for a couple of reasons:

1. You don't NEED to (pollen levels drop like a rock, after the first REAL frost)
2. Your body will build a tolerance to it, and make it less effective when you need it. Also, if your body gets THAT dependent on it, if you DO decide to quit taking it, well, you're in for a miserable experience. Phantom skin itchiness, rebound congestion etc. Take a tolerance break over the Winter and early Spring.
 
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Hypothetically, if could POSSIBLY work. IOW, there is science behind it.
As a practical matter, it's pure horse sh*t.

The pollens that honey bees consume/process only cause allergy symptoms in a miniscule fraction of the pool of hay fever sufferers. The tree, grass, and weed pollens which are responsible for 99+ percent of pollen induced histamine production in people are not present (statistically measurable levels) in ANY honey, local or mass produced.
If you live in Kentucky; start taking two Loratadine tablets (one when you get up in the morning, and another in the early evening) around the middle of February (it takes a few weeks to work up it's most effective levels), and stop in the Fall, after the first really hard frost. Avoid the temptation to just take year 'round, for the rest of your life. I say that for a couple of reasons:

1. You don't NEED to (pollen levels drop like a rock, after the first REAL frost)
2. Your body will build a tolerance to it, and make it less effective when you need it. Also, if your body gets THAT dependent on it, if you DO decide to quit taking it, well, you're in for a miserable experience. Phantom skin itchiness, rebound congestion etc. Take a tolerance break over the Winter and early Spring.

I think I’ll just stick to honey.. plus I’m not allergic to anything, I just like honey.
 
Hypothetically, if could POSSIBLY work. IOW, there is science behind it.
As a practical matter, it's pure horse sh*t.

The pollens that honey bees consume/process only cause allergy symptoms in a miniscule fraction of the pool of hay fever sufferers. The tree, grass, and weed pollens which are responsible for 99+ percent of pollen induced histamine production in people are not present (statistically measurable levels) in ANY honey, local or mass produced.
If you live in Kentucky; start taking two Loratadine tablets (one when you get up in the morning, and another in the early evening) around the middle of February (it takes a few weeks to work up it's most effective levels), and stop in the Fall, after the first really hard frost. Avoid the temptation to just take year 'round, for the rest of your life. I say that for a couple of reasons:

1. You don't NEED to (pollen levels drop like a rock, after the first REAL frost)
2. Your body will build a tolerance to it, and make it less effective when you need it. Also, if your body gets THAT dependent on it, if you DO decide to quit taking it, well, you're in for a miserable experience. Phantom skin itchiness, rebound congestion etc. Take a tolerance break over the Winter and early Spring.
Been taking one loratidine every morning spring through fall for about 5 years and it works amazingly well for me.
 
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Tried it for a while. Not sure how much it helped, but may have had a "placebo" effect on me. My doctor said it has been beneficial for many people who battle annual sinus issues in central KY.
 
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I only eat anything local. Hard to eat it when it’s far away.

That reminds me of the time I was having phone sex with this lady. I was in KY and she was in California. She said “I want you to lick me all over” and I said, “I would but my tongue isn’t that long”
 
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