W e l c o m e T o H e a l t h y l i f e
Treatment by margosa
Baldness:
- Applying Margosa oil on hte Bald position preferably at night and washing the head in the morning stops the falling of hair and helps in hair growth.
Dysentry:
- Taking 10gms juice of margosa in morning helps in curing it.
- taking decotion of margosa(prepared by boiling margosa rind in double quantity of water) in a day activates the system and controls dysentry.
Piles:
- Taking 2-3 Nimbolis regularly helps in stopping excessive bleeding in piles.
Leuchorrhoea:
- Taking the juice of the rind of margosa with white curnin seeds checks lechorroea.
- Drinking cow's milk with littls Margosa oil in it at night regularly cures this.
Labour pains and Delivery:
- Applying Margosa root in the waist of pregnant woman helps in early child birth(Cautis: it should be thrown away after the child is born.
- Taking margosa water will make the delivery less painful.
- Taking juice of fresh margosa leaves on 1st day of child birth helps in contraction of uterus and works as an antiseptic.
Chronic fever:
- Taking Margosa water (boil 500gm water with 21 Margosa leaves and 21 black pepper seeds till the water is 125 gm)twice a day cures chronic fever.
Diabetes :
- Taking decotion of rind of Margosa (40 gms of hte rind of margosa to be boiled in 100 gm,water tell 30 gm is left strain it)in the morning before breakfast eleminates sugar count in the urine.
Blister in the mouth:
- Applying the margosa in mouth cures blister.
Sore throat:
- gargling with lukewarmwater juice of margosa leaves and water cures soreness of hte throat,% drops of honey and 2 drops of ginger juice may be added to extract the phlegm and eleminates the infection.
Worms:
- Giving 3-4 drops of margosa tel to childeren and 5-6 drops to adults helps in killing the worms in intestines.
- Taking 2 tsp fresh margosa leaves juice with 1 tsp honey kills the worms.
- Taking the paste of 1 tsp of juice of fresh margosa leaves with a little heeng in it kills the worms.
Headache:
- Dropping one or two drops of juice of fresh margosa leaves i the nostrils cures headache.
M A R G O S A
Neem (Azadirachta indica, syn. Melia azadirachta L., Antelaea azadirachta (L.) Adelb.) is a tree in the mahogany family Meliaceae. It is the only species in the genus Azadirachta, and is native to India and Burma, growing in tropical and semi-tropical regions. Other vernacular names include Margosa, Nimtree, Nimba, Vepu, Vempu, Veppam (Tamil language) and Indian-lilac.
Neem is a fast growing tree that can reach a height of 15-20 m, rarely to 35-40 m. It is evergreen but under severe drought it may shed most or nearly all of its leaves. The branches are wide spread. The fairly dense crown is roundish or oval and may reach the diameter of 15-20 min old, free-standing specimens.
The trunk is relatively short, straight and may reach a diameter of 1.2 m. The bark is hard, fissured or scaly, and whitish-grey to reddish-brown. The sapwood is greyish-white and the heartwood reddish when first exposed to the air becoming reddish-brown after exposure. The root system consists of a strong taproot and well developed lateral roots.
The alternate, pinnate leaves are 20-40 cm long, with 20-31 medium to dark green leaflets about 3-8 cm long. The terminal leaflet is often missing. The petioles are short. Very young leaves are reddish to purplish in colour. The shape of mature leaflets is more or less asymmetric and their margins are dentate with the exception of the base of their basiscopal half, which is normally very strongly reduced and cuneate.The flowers (white and fragrant) are arranged axillary, normally more-or-less drooping panicles which are up to 25 cm long. The inflorescences, which branch up to the third degree, bear 150-250 flowers. An individual flower is 5-6 mm long and 8-11 mm wide.
Protandric and bisexual flowers and male flowers exist on the same individual (polygamous).The fruit is a glabrous olive-like drupe which varies in shape from elongate oval to nearly roundish, and when ripe are 1.4-2.8 x 1.0-1.5 cm. The fruit skin (exocarp) is thin and the bitter-sweet pulp (mesocarp) is yellowish-white and very fibrous. The mesocarp is 0.3-0.5 cm thick. The white, hard inner shell (endocarp) of the fruit encloses one, rarely two or three, elongated seeds (kernels) having a brown seed coat.But Neem is far more than a tough tree that grows vigorously in Difficult sites. Among its many benefits, the one that is most unusual and immediately practical is the control of farm and household pests. Some entomologists now conclude that neem has such remarkable powers for controlling insects that it will usher in a new era in safe, natural pesticides.
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