I have had good success using a teaspoon of D-mannose in 12 oz distilled water.

"I offer my opponents a bargain: if they will stop telling lies about us, I 
will stop telling the truth about them." -- Adlai Stevenson, 1952 



> On Jan 10, 2017, at 1:54 PM, Ode Coyote <silverpuppy1...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Dang Reid, it HAS been quite a while!
> 
> I believe I've made a breakthrough on a simple cheap and easy way to make 
> oral EIS [CS] intake MUCH more effective
> 
> submitted by odecoyote on Wed, 12/17/2014 - 11:14
>   Before and after
> 
>  
> 
> Tactic that worked for me:  Treatment of UTI, obvious clearing of blood in 
> urine, relief of severe burning and pain within 4 hours.
> 
> 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon of Baking Soda in about 1/2 cup water
> 
> Drank it down, waited a few minutes.
> 
> Follow that with "Silver Water" ....maybe a cup.
> 
> Repeat now and then.
> 
>  
> 
> What that does:
> 
> The Baking Soda converts stomach acid into salt and carbon dioxide gas [BURP 
> ! ]
> 
> The salt absorbs into the blood making it "thirsty" for more water to flush 
> the excess salt out with.
> 
> Add "Silver Water" to satisfy the thirst....instant absorption and little or 
> no stomach acid to make "Silver Chloride"
> 
> Note: I still kept the doctor appointment set for 2 days later and there were 
> still a few blood cells in the urine and I did do the course of antibiotics 
> just in case....but that two days wasn't torture and there may or may not 
> have been an active infection left.  The doc didn't actually specifically 
> test for that, only a follow-up in a week to see if blood cells were still 
> present.
> 
> 
> 
>> On Tue, Jan 10, 2017 at 6:47 AM, Reid Harvey <reidharvey7...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>> Greetings.  By way of the necessary introduction, I'm Reid Harvey, a ceramic 
>> industrial designer, focused on environmental health in developing 
>> countries.  From past experience in this discussion, I've understood that 
>> topics of alternative medicine, in general, are acceptable.  Thanks!
>> 
>> As most here might understand, in the world that's developing, by comparison 
>> with that which is industrialized (particularly Europe and North America) 
>> people tend not to live as long.  There are daunting circumstances, such as 
>> pathogens and particles in the environment, less education and 
>> over-medication in hospitals.
>> 
>> Alternative medical interventions are urgently needed!  On a recent trip for 
>> assessment, in Tanzania and Kenya, several new partners prepared for 
>> projects in environmental health.  In Kenya this involves community-sized 
>> ceramic water filters, while in Tanzania this includes fabrication of 
>> insulating rocket stoves.
>> 
>> Prototypes of both are sustainable:  low cost with production widely 
>> replicable.  In the far west of Tanzania, town of Kibondo, clay workers have 
>> begun fabrication of insulating ceramic rocket stoves.  These are shown at 
>> the link:  http://reidharvey7734.wixsite.com/tzenvirohealth
>> 
>> In Kenya, at the University of Nairobi, faculty have been given the go 
>> ahead, to prepare granulated ceramic water filter material, to accomodate 
>> 1,000 households with safe drinking water.  Other disagreeable factors in 
>> every day life, however, also need urgently, to be addressed.
>> 
>> In Kibondo, Tanzania, a friend has just written that his brother has died 
>> and his son has been released from hospital, his condition said to be 
>> incurable.  People don't live nearly as long in Tanzania and neighboring 
>> countries.
>> 
>> Interventions such as several described on the Silverlist, could offer 
>> considerable help!  Such alternatives as those of ionic silver and blood 
>> electrification are seriously needed!  Now in the age of internet access, 
>> rural Tanzanians, for example, can readily access the interventions, life 
>> saving alternatives!
>> 
>> Personally, I'd like to acquaint them with the possibilities.  Its been 
>> twelve years, or so, since I've been on the Silverlist, but I'm happy to 
>> return.  To those in this discussion, many thanks for the good input!
>