1 minute read

All Around the Shire HOME REMEDIES

When I was young, there were lotions, potions, creams and medicines in the bathroom cabinet, some of which have stood the test of time, while others have not.

Take for example Germoline. It used to come in a small tin and be applied to cuts and grazes, with or without a plaster. Its smell was so pungent that germs dare not intrude into the wound.

Advertisement

What was Milk of Magnesia for? We were given a spoonful of the chalky, milky mixture if we complained of tummy ache. It has now been withdrawn from sale for not complying with EU recommended sulphate levels.

Calamine lotion is still available: pink and cooling for chicken pox sufferers.

Who remembers Delrosa Rose Hip Syrup? The sticky, sweet liquid provided a vitamin boost for young children as did the welfare orange juice and dried milk.

Cod liver oil was universally disliked but helped provide a vitamin D boost - protection against developing rickets. For constipation was syrup of figs, senna pods or liquorice root. For fever, junior aspirin, crushed between two teaspoons with a drop of milk added.

Virol was a brand of malt extract which included bone marrow and designed as a nutritional supplement for the feeding of infants. This was remembered as having a pleasant, malty flavour.

The most bizarre home remedy by far was the use of butter. On burns and bumps on the head, butter was rubbed into the affected area.

Just some memories of a childhood in which children’s health was of national importance. What are yours?

Janet

This article is from: