Local
Honey, Health and Allergies
by Tom Ogren
As one who makes his living by writing about allergies and asthma I am
often asked about the potential health benefits of using local honey.
Honey
contains bits and pieces of pollen and honey, and as an immune system
booster, it is quite powerful. I have often in talks and articles, and in
my books, advocated using local honey. Frequently I’ll get emails from
readers who want to know exactly what I mean by local honey, and how
“local” should it be. This is what I usually advise:
Allergies
arise from continuous over-exposure to the same allergens. If, for
example, you live in an area where there is a great deal of red clover
growing, and if in addition you often feed red clover hay to your own
horses or cattle, then it likely you are exposed over and over to pollen
from this same red clover. Now, red clover pollen is not especially
allergenic but still, with time, a serious allergy to it can easily arise.
Another
example: if you lived in a southern area where bottlebrush trees were
frequently used in the landscapes or perhaps you had a bottlebrush tree
growing in your own yard, your odds of over-exposure to this tree’s
tiny, triangular, and potently very allergenic pollen is greatly enhanced.
In the two examples used above, both species of plants are what we call
amphipilous, meaning they are pollinated by both insects and by the wind.
Honeybees will collect pollen from each of these species and it will be
present in small amounts in honey that was gathered by bees that were
working areas where these species are growing. When people living in these
same areas eat honey that was produced in that environment, the honey will
often act as an immune booster. The good effects of this local honey are
best when the honey is taken a little bit (a couple of teaspoons-full) a
day for several months prior to the pollen season.
When
I’m asked how local should the honey be for allergy prevention I always
advise to get honey that was raised closest to where you live, the closer
the better since it will have more of exactly what you’ll need.
It
may seem odd that straight exposure to pollen often triggers allergies but
that exposure to pollen in the honey usually has the opposite effect. But
this is typically what we see. In honey the allergens are delivered in
small, manageable doses and the effect over time is very much like that
from undergoing a whole series of allergy immunology injections. The major
difference though is that the honey is a lot easier to take and it is
certainly a lot less expensive. I am always surprised that this powerful
health benefit of local honey is not more widely understood, as it is
simple, easy, and often surprisingly effective.
Pharmaceutical
companies have huge budgets and can fund studies, but with honey this
scientific research doesn't seem to get funded... thus most evidence we
have is what we see, anecdotal evidence. That however can be, and often is
important; sometimes, often actually, such evidence proves very useful.
Let me give you one such anecdotal example of the powers of local honey. I
was asked to look over the yard of a family that had just moved to this
area (Central coastal California) to see if I could figure out what was
triggering the allergies of their five-year-old son. The boy was
experiencing classical allergic responses, runny nose, itchy eyes,
persistent cough. This family had only recently moved to California, from
the Midwest, so a pollen allergy was surprising, as they generally take a
number of years of exposure to develop.
The
boy had started having these symptoms a few months after moving here. At
his house I didn’t find the usual allergy culprits of the landscape,
male cloned trees or shrubs, but I did note that next to the house was a
row of towering blue gum eucalyptus trees. I knew the eucalyptus trees
were shedding plenty of pollen, as you could see it on the windows of the
cars parked underneath them. I checked some of this pollen with a
microscope and it was indeed from these blue gum trees. Eucalyptus pollen
is fairly large in size and is triangular in shape, making it easy to ID.
I suggested that at the local farmers market they could buy some
eucalyptus honey and recommended that the boy be given several spoonfuls
of this every day.
The
family did as I advised and the boy ate the strongly flavored eucalyptus
honey every day for four months. By the end of the first month the
allergic symptoms were starting to ease up. By the end of the second month
all his symptoms had disappeared. Some ten years then passed and while in
high school this same boy again started having allergic symptoms. I
visited the high school at the request of his folks and found that they
had a multitude of huge eucalyptus trees growing there. I again advised
the local honey and once again, it seemed to do the trick.
Now,
let me be clear here, I am not suggesting that local honey will replace
allergists. But what I am saying is that since visits to allergists are
expensive and the series of immunology shots, although generally very
effective, are costly, it makes perfect sense to give the local honey a
try first. Many times, as many others and I have seen firsthand, the local
honey will take care of the problem, quickly, safely, and inexpensively.
____________________
Thomas
Leo Ogren
Mr. Ogren is the author of five published books, including Allergy-free
Gardening, and also of, Safe Sex in the Garden. Tom does consulting on
allergies and landscaping for, among others, the USDA urban foresters, the
American Lung Association, for county asthma coalitions, landscape,
nursery and arborists’ associations, and for www.Allegra.com
Tom’s own website is www.allergyfree-gardening.com