Corona virus precaution.

Ian

Notorious member
Lanolin and beeswax makes the best lip balm in the universe. I'm not big on putting petroleum products on my skin (get WAAAAYYY too much of that at work even wearing nitrile gloves most of the time) so I make my own stuff. I have a balm concoction that I need to make more of for scaly kneecaps, elbows, and knuckles which is mostly a mix of oils (vitamin E, cod liver, jojoba, grape seed, almond, and tea tree oil thickened up with a little lanolin and beeswax. It smells like a wet sheep on the deck of a tuna boat and you don't want to get it on the touching surfaces of your hands but it's good stuff and does absorb well with time.

I think glycerine and cetyl alcohol are the usual 'creme" suspects because a) cheap, b) not "greasy", and c) are emulsifying carriers of small amounts of oil, usually of the petroleum variety. Thing is, "greasy" natural oils are what heals. Our skin depends on lipids/oil to remain healthy, not water, so don't believe the "super-moisturizing" hype of almost all lotioney goop.
 

358156 hp

At large, whereabouts unknown.
The mention of lanolin made my tired mind perk back up. I knew I should have some around here somewhere, I bought a few pounds ages ago to make bullet lube. I found it pretty quickly:
lanolin.jpg
Anybody from the olden days remember this stuff? I still have a pound and a half of it. Talk about memories...
 

358156 hp

At large, whereabouts unknown.
Aquaphor and Eucerin are brand names.
Anhydrous lanolin is somewhat harder to find but can be found in many drug stores in the nursing section as a product called Lansinoh. Women use it for chapped nipples.
Mix lanolin with Vaseline maybe 50-50 so it applies a bit easier.
I just got back from the store and found a tub of Eucerin. About $7.00, I'll try it tonight. I also tossed out the organic hand soap I had in the bathroom. Even though it's sold as a moisturizing soap, it always felt like it was drying my hands out even more.
 
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fiver

Well-Known Member
if you wanna suck moisture into the skin use some glycerin.
that stuff will suck water out of the air in Wyoming.
 

358156 hp

At large, whereabouts unknown.
I actually have glycerin here already! We're running out of hand sanitizer at work so I've been running around scrounging materials to make some. Our favorite farmassist pfarmisist pharmassis apothecary helped me out with the details.
 

Brad

Benevolent Overlord and site owner
Staff member
Glycerin is a good humectant, that means it adds moisture to the skin. Coupled with lanolin it would be good stuff. Glycerin would be fine in small amounts or else it would be kinda slimy.
Heck,most of this stuff is diluted with something like Vaseline for a reason.
 

Tom

Well-Known Member
Not sure what's in it, or what the brand name is, but the stuff they marketed as "the fisherman's friend" always worked good for my hands if I didn't wait too long after drying my hands to apply it.
Just popped into my head. Nuetrogena.
 

Mitty38

Well-Known Member
Corn Huskers works well, just do not put it in your home made hand sanitizer. Whole new meaning of sticky
 
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popper

Well-Known Member
Got this from my brother last nite.

"One of my daughter-in-laws recently had Coronavirus and was in bad shape, but she finally was able to get the hydroxycloroquine medicine and she is now doing well. So, I would suggest that if you get the virus, and you don't have a medical reason to not take it, take it!"

Properly guessed it is his east coast kid's wife.
My response:
"Figure if I get it I'm a gone'r, docs probably not give it to me due to side effects. "
Stay safe.
 

JWFilips

Well-Known Member
Here is a prophetic quote.....makes you think!

"In around 2020 a severe pneumonia-like illness will spread throughout the globe, attacking the lungs and bronchial tubes and resisting all know treatments. Almost more baffling than the illness itself will be the fact that it will suddenly vanish as quickly as it arrived, and attack again ten years latter, and then disappear completely."
Sylvia Browne: "End of Days" 2008

(Sylvia Celeste Browne was an American author who claimed to be a medium with psychic abilities.
She passed in 2013 )
 

Brad

Benevolent Overlord and site owner
Staff member
County in eastern Iowa, Louisa County, has a huge problem. They are now at a per capita rate higher than NYC!
186 positive tests at a single Tyson Packing plant in a coumy of 11,000 residents.
My daughter is a bit concerned as her boyfriend is a from a farm a stones throw from the plant.
Not even rural America is spared.
 

Gary

SE Kansas
Price of meat jumped the last couple of weeks. Ground Beef (the standard stuff, not chuck or loin) hit $4.49/lb here last weekend. They said it was because of Packers being off the job.
 

uncle jimbo

Well-Known Member
Same thing happened in a Smithfield pork plant in South Dakota. Resulted in it's closing. Get ready for a run on meat. :headbang:

The owners for Smithfield, ( A Chinese corp.) closed the the other two Smithfield packing plants in other states today also.
 

462

California's Central Coast Amid The Insanity
After finding out Smithfield is Chi-com owned, we switched our pork loin buying to Armour.
 

Rick

Moderator
Staff member
I didn't know that either so I googled it, yep sure enough Chicoms bought it in 2013. :sigh: They are now the world's largest producer of pork products and many of the hams sold here are imported from China and not from American farms.
 

uncle jimbo

Well-Known Member
Yes, it is a big conglomerate. Found this.


"Virginia-based Smithfield Foods is the world’s largest hog farmer and pork processor, vending packaged meat products in the U.S. under a variety of brand names such as Smithfield, Eckrich, Farmland, Armour, John Morrell, Kretschmar, Curly’s, Carando, Cook’s, Margherita, Gwaltney, and Healthy Ones.


In September 2013 Smithfield Foods was acquired by China’s biggest meat processor, Shuanghui International Holdings, in the largest acquisition ever of a U.S. company by a Chinese one — a deal that raised concerns in America about a Chinese food company’s controlling a major U.S. meat supplier.


In particular, alarmist messages shared via email and online message boards claimed that hogs raised in the United States would be slaughtered and packaged for sale in China before being shipped back to the U.S. to be sold to restaurants, supermarkets, and schools for consumption. Moreover, these messages claimed, U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) rules would permit pork products handled in this way to be labeled “Raised in the USA,” without specifying they were processed in a foreign country.


However, we could find no verification for the statement made in the item quoted above that henceforth, Smithfield “hogs will still be raised here [in the U.S.], but slaughtered and packaged for sale [in China] before being sent back here,” labeled simply “Raised in the U.S.A.” under FDA regulations. (The sale of domestic and imported meat in the U.S. is regulated by the Department of Agriculture, not the Food and Drug Administration.)


The major factor behind Shuanghui’s acquisition of Smithfield was to secure a supply of pork to feed rising demand in China (a country that is now the world’s biggest pork market), not to export pork products from China to the U.S. Forbes magazine reported that:

The Chinese company is looking to reduce supply uncertainties that come along with the scarcity of livestock feed in order to be able meet the rising demand [for pork] at home. It also aims to reduce quality concerns at the same time by selling “American” meat to consumers in China.
Pork is the most popular meat in China as it forms more than three-fourths of total meat consumption in the country. The nation produced more than half the world’s total pork in 2012, while consumers spent around $183 billion consuming it. Moreover, demand for the meat is only rising as disposable incomes of more than 1.3 billion people in China are rising.

As to the ultimate destination of the meat processed in China, Forbes reported that it would not be making its way back to America:


A Chinese acquisition of a U.S. processor doesn’t mean that Americans will be eating crock Chinese cuts. The trade in pork is all the other way, and so is the technology transfer that Chinese firms crave as they seek to consolidate a fragmented, poorly run industry. Shuanghui isn’t looking to offload Chinese pork in Los Angeles. What it wants is to become the leading player in China.

Moreover, people engaged in that industry have told us that the notion of a Chinese-owned company raising hogs in the U.S., shipping them live all the way to China for slaughtering and processing, then exporting the meat back into the U.S. would be prohibitively cost-inefficient — especially since the slaughtering and processing infrastructures already exist in the U.S., and the Chinese domestic market for pork is far, far larger than the U.S. market for pork."
 
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