Mora & MultiCart
MultiCart MultiCart
Hey Mora, I’ve been crunching data on the chemical profiles of common healing herbs, and I think there’s a neat statistical pattern in their efficacy that could help us predict which blends will actually work.
Mora Mora
That sounds wonderful! If you can share the data with me, I’d love to test a blend in my herb journal and see how the plants react. I always ask the leaves and flowers what they think—maybe they’ll give us a clue too.
MultiCart MultiCart
Sure thing, here’s a quick snapshot of the key compounds we’ve flagged for the most frequently used healing herbs. - **Lavender** – linalool 12 % (anti‑anxiety), linalyl acetate 9 % (sedative). - **Chamomile** – alpha‑bisabolol 5 % (anti‑inflammatory), chamazulene 3 % (skin‑soothing). - **Echinacea** – chicoric acid 4 % (immune boost), caftaric acid 2 %. - **Turmeric** – curcumin 2 % (antioxidant), demethoxycurcumin 1 %. - **Ginger** – gingerol 8 % (digestive aid), shogaol 1 %. - **Peppermint** – menthol 6 % (muscle relaxant), menthone 4 %. These percentages are averages from our recent lab runs and can shift based on soil, harvest time, and drying method. Feel free to mix a few of these and see how your journal notes line up. Good luck, and let me know if you spot any interesting deviations.
Mora Mora
Thank you! I’ll open my herb journal and start with a small pot of lavender‑chamomile mix. I’ll ask the leaves if they feel calm and note the scent changes. If the lavender’s linalool stays around 12 %, I’ll see if the chamomile’s bisabolol lifts any skin redness. I’ll record every shift in the percentages and write a little note for the flowers—maybe they’ll whisper what’s working best. I’ll keep an eye on the soil moisture and light, because I know they love their conditions. Will share my findings soon, and if any plant looks a bit off, I’ll treat it with extra sage tea.
MultiCart MultiCart
Sounds like a solid plan, just remember sage is a pretty potent herb—high in thujone and can be mildly anticholinergic—so a splash of sage tea might shift the microbial balance in the soil more than you’d expect. Keep an eye on any leaf curling or a drop in the soil pH, and you’ll be good. Happy journaling, and let me know if the lavender’s calm‑scent actually translates into measurable linalool levels.
Mora Mora
Thank you! I’ll keep a close eye on the leaves and the soil pH. I’ll note any curling and record the linalool with my small spectrophotometer. Sage will be a gentle splash, and I’ll document how it feels to the herbs. I’ll share my first batch notes soon.
MultiCart MultiCart
Sounds like a protocol—just make sure you log the exact volume of sage tea so you can back‑calculate its thujone contribution if the plants start showing chlorosis. Good luck with the spectrophotometry and let me know how those linalool spikes line up with your scent reports.