The Down Under Sudser is just what the name implies with ingredients from Australia (tea tree, eucalyptus, and emu oils) and lots of suds. The suds make it great as an all-body cleanser and shampoo.
Handmade in Maine by Human Nature, a natural ingredient bath and body products company. As with all handcrafted soap makers, the recipe for this special soap is unique to Human Nature. The soap was made using the age-old cold process method and retains natural glycerin and its moisturizing qualities. Human Nature uses food-quality and natural ingredients, including: nut butters, seed extracts, specialized oils, and plant-based essential oils or fragrance oils for scent.
Full bar size: Approximately 4.2oz
Note, weight will vary slightly, as these bars are hand cut. Soap bars come with a wavy cut across top, banded and shrink-wrapped.
Ingredients: Saponified Oils of Olive, Coconut, Palm, Emu, Castor, Shealoe Butter, Shea Butter, Illipe Butter, Essential Oils of: Tea Tree, Eucalyptus, Rosemary, Ground Rosemary (great for hair), Ultramarine Blue & Yellow Oxide (natural colorant), Tocopherol (Vitamin E).
October 24, 2011
I spent years wondering off and on why commercial shampoos and other hair-care products—even high-end “salon” products and those from the health-food-store—contain so many ingredients.
One day early last spring I counted the ingredients of three shampoos and two conditioners sitting on a bathroom shelf; each contained at least 20 ingredients, many of them unpronounceable and three or four of them suspected toxins. Two contained fragrances that made me sneeze.
That day, I decided to try one of the no-fuss natural methods I’d read about for years, but that had always seemed too hokey. I’ve never looked back.
Borax (or baking soda) and cider vinegar
My new strategy calls for an alkaline washing ingredient—either borax or baking soda—followed by an acidic rinse of apple cider vinegar. That’s it!
To my surprise, the two-ingredient method worked well, leaving my hair clean, shiny, and more manageable than any of the hundred products or combination of products I’ve used through the decades.
Cheap, easy, remarkably effective, and probably a lot safer. I always have these ingredients on hand for various household uses.
Like me, you probably won’t believe that the baking soda or borax methods (either works equally well for me) will actually clean your hair, so you’ll want to give it your first try on a vacation or weekend day when you have the time to repeat with your usual routine if you don’t like the results.
I’ve seen dozens of “recipes” for this natural approach to hair care. I don’t think the exact proportions matter. I just fiddled around until I found what worked well for me.
Here’s how I do it:
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I pour a bit less than half a cup of either baking soda or borax (either or a mixture of both works equally well for me) into a small bowl and ½ cup of cider vinegar into another, then add a couple of cups of warm water to each bowl.
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I pour the dissolved baking-soda or borax solution through my wet hair.
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Then I rinse my hair well. Borax may leave some undissolved grit, but that rinses away quickly.
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Finally, I pour the vinegar solution thorough. I usually don’t rinse it out, but you can. Either way, the vinegar smell disappears within minutes.
It took me a while to get used to the idea that just pouring a solution through my hair with no scrubbing or lathering could get it clean, but it really does.
I haven’t found a need for conditioning, but I haven’t tested my new shampoo through a dry New England winter yet. Advocates of this hair-care method suggest adding a few drops of olive, sesame, castor or some other oil to the washing solution for frizz or static control. I’ll give that a try if it seems necessary.
Learn more
Check the safety rating on the personal-care products you use for yourself and your family. Environmental Working Groups staff scientists compare the ingredients on personal care product labels and websites with information in nearly 60 toxicity and regulatory databases.
Safety data for borax
Safety data for baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)
Safety data for cider vinegar
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