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  Green Tip of the Month

Planting the Seeds

As part of their greening efforts, some spa owners are growing organic ingredients in their business's own backyard. Grown in a small veggie garden or tiny pots of herbs, these ingredients ensure freshness and add home-grown flavor to a spa's treatments, skin care and cuisine. If you're thinking of growing your own spa ingredients, you don't have to go it alone. Whether you're known for your green thumb or struggle to keep cacti alive, these resources can help your garden grow:

  • Composting101.com
    By creating your own compost, you can give your garden the nutrition it needs without spending a penny on expensive fertilizers.
  • Gardeners.com
    Here you'll find a variety of how-to articles on gardening and the supplies you'll need, including prefab raised garden beds and insect colonies to control pests.
  • Greenspanetwork.org
    Visit this site's 'professionals' page to read Lisa Roger Sykes' overview on how to build a raised garden bed.
  • Organicgardeningguru.net
    This resource offers gardening advice and articles on everything from planning and design to pest control and planting techniques.

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Wellness

 

A Purposeful Path

 

Click to tour a web-based labyrinth!
Hosted by and special thanks to Labyrinth Online.

Can walking in circles actually be good for you? It can if those circles are contained within a labyrinth. An ancient symbol of healing dating back more than 3,000 years, a labyrinth is basically a circuitous path that ends where it begins. It can be built on ground for people to walk through, or made symbolically on walls, paper and even online.

 
“Unlike a typical maze, a labyrinth isn’t meant to be difficult to navigate. Its single path begins from an outside point to the center and back out again. Spiritually this connotes the idea of visiting one’s individual “center” and then returning to the outside world. The journey is a right-brained activity meant to facilitate meditation and healing. The more open and reflective the individual is during the labyrinth walk, the more apt he or she is to experience the emotional release it’s designed to encourage..

 
Health professionals all over the world have embraced the idea of labyrinths in helping to reduce anxiety and ultimately resolve such maladies as insomnia, high blood pressure and chronic pain. In the past 10 years, labyrinths of all sizes have begun to pop up in several U.S. hospitals, such as Johns

 

photos.com
 

Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore. Educational institutions such as Boston College and Harvard University have installed labyrinths at their facilities as well. Not surprisingly, many spas and wellness centers are incorporating labyrinths into their gardens and spare spaces. Experts say it’s surprisingly easy to do. To find out more, go to The Long and Winding Road.

 

 

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