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Wildroot Botanicals giveaway!

**CLOSED**
**WINNER: random​.org #120, congrats to Lily Kwan! Winner has been emailed and has 48 hours to respond before a new winner is chosen. Thanks to all who entered and thanks again to Wildroot Botanicals!**


I came across Wildroot Botanicals while searching Etsy for natural and organic products for myself and Ryan. It’s never as important as when you’re taking care of your baby – only the best for him! A little bit about this shop:

Wildroot is dedicated to using high quality earthen materials. We believe in the magic of what the Earth grows. Our herbs, oils and butters are organic, locally grown, ethically wildcrafted and fair trade certified. We support many small local farmers and harvest from our own gardens that follow organic standards and better. We believe in the importance of small scale and using our own hands to insure quality. Our products are made in small batches, creating and growing just like our grandparents used to do. Thank you for your interest!

For review, I was sent:

Earth and Sea Facial Mask. “White Clay, Sea Salt and Pacific Northwest Kelp draw out impurities helping to reduce blackheads and blemishes. The Sea Salt and the rough cut Oats give a bit of grainy texture for gentle exfoliation. Lavender provides antimicrobial properties while the Roses and Oats soften and refresh. It leaves your skin feeling silky and well taken care of.” I was skeptical of this really feeling like a mask, you know? But it felt great! I left it on for 5 – 10 minutes and the mask dried, felt tingly and tight! I LOVED it. Smells good too :) You take some powder in your hand, add a little bit of water, and it turns into like a clay.

Postpartum Tea. “Our delicious post partum tea promotes healthy uterine recovery with added benefits of lifting the spirit. We have crafted this tea to bring herbs known for centuries to aid in in the healing process for women after birthing.” I am not a tea person, first of all. But I figured I should give some a try because it’s good for you (= good for baby). Besides, it looks so pretty ;) and says it lifts your spirits! Worth a shot, right?! Anyway, I actually liked it! I had it hot and anything warm in the winter time is cozy and lifts the spirits! So I enjoyed it :)

Baby Bath. “This is a wonderfully fragrant blend of cleansing herbs to wash your little one with. These herbs have been used for both their antimicrobial and skin nourishing properties.” This comes with a little bag that you use to put some of the herbs in and soak it in baby’s tub. You can use the bag to wash your baby’s skin too if you want! I was so excited to try this out, because I think I would love it if it were for me, haha. It smells wonderful and if Ryan could talk, I bet he’d say it was soothing ;) Really though, I felt like it was moisturizing and pleasant for him. He likes his bath time!

Baby’s Bottom Powder. “Very gentle clays and antibacterial Echinacea powder combine with a lovely orange scent from organic pure sweet orange essential oil that will leave your baby’s bottom…soft as a baby’s bottom.” I love the idea of using baby powder and getting that wonderful “new baby” smell (yea, like new car smell)! But we never bought any for Ryan because.. I don’t know… they tell you not to use it these days, right? Well, I figured we couldn’t go wrong with powder that was all natural! This stuff is made without talc powder and it does smell good! After bath time, put some of this on, and mmmmm — you could just eat your adorable (clean) baby up!! Seriously. But who doesn’t want to eat their baby up all the time anyway? ;)

The Wildroot Botanicals shop has lots of other great items, including a whole section dedicated to Organic Mama and Baby. Want to WIN something for yourself?? One lucky reader will have their choice of item from the Organic Mama and Baby section of her shop!

Mandatory first entry: Leave a comment telling me which item from Wildroot Botanicals is your favorite!

Extra Entries: Please leave a separate comment for each additional entry.

1 entry – follow me on twitter (leave your twitter name in the comment)
1 entry – tweet about this giveaway: “RT @babydickey Win an Organic Mama and Baby product from Wildroot Organics! http://bit.ly/cw4R16” (can tweet once a day)
1 entry — become a fan of Wildroot on facebook
2 entries (leave 2 separate comments) – follow publicly with google friend connect (left sidebar)
1 entry – subscribe to this blog by RSS or email (top right of site)
1 entry – vote for us on Top Baby Blogs just by clicking this link (no other action needed)
1 entry – sign up for the Wildroots newsletter for special offers
3 entries (leave 3 separate comments) – put my blog button on your site
3 entries (leave 3 separate comments) - blog about this giveaway, leave a link to it
1 entry – enter any of my other current giveaways (one entry per giveaway)

**Giveaway ends February 19th 2010, at 11:59 pm CST. Random​.org will be used to choose the winner who will have 48 hours to respond to my email before a new winner is chosen. Good luck!**

On your mat, get set, contort

The Independent (London, England) July 7, 1995 | Peter Guttridge Perspiring heavily, Sarah balances on her hands, her legs threaded back under her armpits, her ankles crossed behind her neck. Anne, a marketing executive for a London-based bank, slides into the splits on a drenched exercise mat. In one movement, Rob, an Oxford management consultant, drops from a standing position into a kind of press-up, makes his back concave, then swings his butt up to hold himself in an inverted V. Phew. this web site prana power yoga

It’s just another morning of astanga vinyasa yoga at the Practice Place in Crete. The popular perception of yoga is gurus, meditation and gentle stretching exercises. Not astanga vinyasa yoga. No dogmas, no meditation — just a lot of sweat. Regarded by its proponents as the truer yoga of which other hatha yogas retain mere fragments, it uses standard yoga postures (asanas) but puts them together into 90-minute flowing sequences that are very vigorous and very chic — celebrity practitioners include Sting, Kris Kristofferson, Koo Stark and the US basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

This aerobic yoga, which comes on like a gymnastic dance, was rediscovered by the yoga master Pattabhi Jois in the Thirties. It has been growing in popularity in America and Australia since the Seventies as a “work– out” yoga. It’s the Nineties now, and the new, muscular moniker is power yoga. A very catchy tag — adherents claim that in combining the raw energy of the modern aerobic fitness craze with a New Age interest in ancient, alternative approaches to well-being, power yoga’s time hascome. For the past 10 years Derek Ireland, 46, a former professional footballer, and his long-time partner, Radha Warrell, 47, once a Roedean sports coach, have run astanga vinyasa sessions throughout Europe. “We began in New York in the mid-Eighties,” Mr Ireland says. “We’d been teaching traditional yoga, but I took to this immediately because of its dynamism.” Living testimony to their calling, Mr Ireland and Ms Warrell have taught power yoga for the past six years at their centre in southern Crete. Sarah, Rob and Anne have all done the yoga before. They are “self-practising” under Mr Ireland’s watchful eye. “Most people we get are professional,” he says. “They spent 15 years getting their careers together but forgot about fitness.

We used to teach two classes a day. By the third day, nobody could move. We go easier now. ” During a 90-minute practice, the postures are arranged in a sequence that allows the skeletal system to go back into correct alignment and the muscles to open out. Performing the basic moves, known as the primary series, exercises the whole body — detoxifying, stretching and strengthening. It’s tough going. Everything depends on matching breath to movement. The breath (the vinyasa bit) releases the energy to complete the series and the heat generated allows the student to do advanced stretching exercises safely.

In another room, a dozen beginners are finding everything a bit of a shock. They include a personal fitness trainer and a group of yoga practitioners who study a more traditional form — iyenga.

Yoga students always find astanga difficult at first; it seems contrary to good yoga practice. “I was expecting something … gentler,” gasps one red-faced woman. But the personal fitness trainer thinks it’s “brilliant. There’s been nothing new in aerobics for years. I can see this taking over because you get the suppleness as well as the aerobic movement.” Those who like it love it. Anne, for instance, is going to India to study with Pattabhi Jois. Jois, now aged 80, is a hands-on teacher. His approach includes, on occasion, lying on top of people to get them into a posture. In a article in the US Yoga Joumal, some criticised him for his “risky or even violent” methods. Mr Ireland and Ms Warrell have a much gentler approach. Even so, there are one or two drop-outs on every course at the Practice Place who aren’t fit enough to persevere. People who aren’t particularly supple (most of us) can suffer niggling knee injuries and strains.Recently, in a UK yoga magazine, one yoga teacher told of a serious injury she had done to herself at the Practice Place. in our site prana power yoga

Mr Ireland says: “It’s important to be focusing on what you’re doing all the time. But we’ve developed a way of teaching so that most people have made remarkable progress by the end of two weeks. If they take it home and carry on with self-practice, it will keep them fitter, more energised. You won’t need any other exercise.” Still, he knows it’s not for everyone, certainly not those who want to do less than the recommended six times a week for a full 90 minutes. He laughs and shrugs: “It’s never easy. I’ve been doing the primary series for 15 years… and it still kills me.” Details of the Practice Place from 12 Beatty Avenue, Coldean, Brighton BNI 9ED, 01273 687071. ‘Power Yoga’, by Beryl Bender Birch (Prion Books, pounds 8.99). The Practice Place Peter Guttridge

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