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HomeOrganic FoodsHerbs & SpicesHimalayan Institute Neti Pot Salt 10 oz Jar |
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|  |  | | Customer Reviews: | | | Average Customer Review: ( 40 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 19 found the following review helpful:
Worth the Money to Me Nov 18, 2010
By John R. Mcelroy I have had the same jar of neti pot salt for over two years now and it is finally running low so I just ordered another. A number of people have complained that you can just buy bulk salt from the grocery store and it is much cheaper, but that doesn't really suit me. This stuff is going up each nostril, way up into the top of the sinus behind my eyebrows, and back down to come out the other nostril - I want it to be pharmaceutical grade, 99.99% pure, and provided specifically for this purpose.
Since I'm spending less than $3 a year on neti pot salt I wouldn't really be saving much money by using food grade salt. There are much better ways to earn, save, and invest money so I spend my time and effort on those things, not trying to save a couple of bucks a year by skimping on the salt that I wash the inside of my head out with.
35 of 42 found the following review helpful:
Expensive Feb 25, 2008
By LiddleBuddha I have not purchased this product. Here's why...
I buy 26-ounce sized non-iodized salt from my local Giant for 0.49 cents. I've been doing this successfully for years to treat my seasonal allergies, and allergic rhinitis.
I mix 1-teaspoon of the non-iodized salt into a quart container of luke-warm water. I then pour 8-ounces through each nostril using my neti pot, alternating between nostrils. This technique works quite well for me.
24 of 29 found the following review helpful:
save your money Nov 16, 2007
By D. Moore
"wagoner bulldog"
My pharmacist tells me this is nothing but table salt. I'm sure this doesn't cake as much as table salt. But when my jar was empty, I replaced it with table salt and I see no difference.
18 of 22 found the following review helpful:
Save your money, make your own Dec 01, 2008
By Stephanie Manley I would suggest that you buy sea salt, and mix it 2 parts salt to 1 part baking soda. Sinuclense uses both ingredients an costs a fraction of what this does. Use sea salt, kosher salt, or even pickling salt, you want to make sure the salt you are using is pure. Don't overpay for convience.
9 of 10 found the following review helpful:
Good clean salt that doesn't burn when in the right ratio Oct 09, 2008
By R. Edmiston I've bought this exact salt from several sources on Amazon and have been happy with it. When used as recommended with the included little spoon, or by putting a heaping teaspoon into 2cups of warm water, I get a solution which cleans out my nose without burning or unpleasant sensations. The container is a good size and can be refilled with bag salt of the same type. I can carry this little jar with my when I travel without any hassles from airport security. Pharmaceutical grade salt like this only gets so cheap but I prefer it to "natural sea salt" which has who-knows-what in it. Clean and pure without iodine or baking soda (both of which hurt like a SOB), this is the only salt I use now in my Neti Pot. I've experimented with other stuff but keep coming back to this and I don't experiment any more.
See all 40 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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