When it comes to using essential oils for horses (or any animal), the quality of the oils used is critical. Poor quality oils can cause great harm to animals. This is one of the reasons that they get such a bad rap when it comes to topical and internal use for animals. People think they can just go get a cheaper oil at the health food store or online without realizing what they are purchasing and the difference between grades of oils. The British model of aromatherapy was built under the premise that all essential oils can cause harm if applied topically or taken internally in direct response to the wide availability and misuse of poor quality oils. I learned and follow the French model which recognizes the therapeutic benefits when pure therapeutic grade essential oils are used in all three application methods – inhalation, topical application, and taken internally. They kicker is how do you know which essential oils are truly pure and unadulterated?
This week, I'm so happy to introduce my friend and mentor, Kayla Howard, as a guest author. Kayla Howard loves doing business from her home in the woods where she is the master real food chef, homeschool teacher, goat shepherdess, head gardener and holds a certificate of studies from The Pacific Institute of Aromatherapy. Her passion is vibrant health in beautiful homes! In this week's article she shares three ways that you can tell if an essential oil has been adulterated.
3 Ways Essential Oils Are Adulterated and How You Can Tell
by Kayla Howard
Essential oils are not cheap to make. In fact, pure essential oils are expensive, labor intensive, and subject to all kinds of hard work. They are pricey, as any pure product, carefully grown and extracted should be. In order to make essential oils less costly, some companies will “extend” essential oils. That means, they will stretch them by diluting them in some way.
Essential oil blends are often blended with a fatty oil base, and if it is sold as such, that is NOT adulteration. Some oils however are sold a “pure” essential oil, when they actually have been extended in some way, and then sold cheaper. Here are some basic ways that essential oils may be “extended” and how you can identify if it is pure, if it is what the label says it is, or if it is contaminated.
Extended with Fatty Oil
As stated before, essential oil blends are often blended with fatty oils such as almond oil, coconut oil or jojoba oil. In the case of essential oils being clearly marked as a blend, and the fatty oil being listed in the ingredients, this is NOT an adulteration! This is a great way to use essential oils.
If however, your oil is labeled and sold as 100% pure essential oil, and DOES NOT include the fatty oil in the ingredients, you have an impostor! You can tell if an oil has been extended with fatty oil by the greasy feel on your skin. A pure essential oil will not leave a greasy feel on your skin after a few moments. You may also tell if an EO has been extended with a rancid fatty oil simply by the smell. Most of us are familiar with the smell of rancid fatty oils. YUCK!
Another test is to place your essential oils on paper. A pure EO will not leave an oily mark when dried.
Extended with Alcohol
Another common way to extend an essential oil, and therein making it cheaper, is by adding alcohol to the EO. Ethyl Alcohol is a common substance added to EO to extend them. It’s very hard to detect this by smell, but it is possible. You’ll need to become familiar with the scent of ethyl alcohol in order to identify this adulteration (which is in my opinion, a true adulteration).
Extended with Another Similar Oil or Surfactants & Emulsifiers
Finally, EO may be extended by adding a similar smelling EO which is cheaper to produce to a more expensive oil. For example, true lavender may be extended with lavandin, or Rose EO could be extended with geranium (although most often, Rose oil is simply purely synthetic). This is the hardest form of adulteration to detect, and can only be really guarded against by knowing your supplier.
Surfactants & Emulsifiers may be added to EO to extend them as well. A simple way to test your essential oil for this adulteration is by placing a drop in water. Pure essential oils will float on the top. Emulsified mixtures will dissolve in water and produce milky or opaque solutions.
There you have it – lots of tools to test your essential oils! Obviously, essential oils can be contaminated or adulterated in other ways. These are simply the most common and easy to identify!
With Love,
Kayla
http://www.KaylaHoward.com
https://www.facebook.com/KaylaHowardBiz