Weleda Skin Food Original vs Light: Which One Is Right for Your Skin?

BROOLED WELEDA JOURNAL Weleda Skin Food Original vs Light: Which One Is Right for Your Skin? The classic green tube or the lighter everyday version? Here is a practical, skin-friendly guide to texture, finish, dryness, routine and how to choose the right Skin Food for your life. 🌿 Natural skincare ⏱ 12–15 minute read 💚 Skin Food guide Shop Skin Food Original + Light → Visit My Weleda Advocate Page → Skin Food Original Rich, protective, comforting care for very dry and rough skin. Skin Food Light Quickly absorbed moisture for everyday face and body use. Best answer: many people keep both — Original for richer rescue care, Light for faster daily moisture. Two Skin Food favourites, two different moments Weleda Skin Food has become one of those products people talk about with genuine affection. It is not just a moisturiser sitting quietly on a bathroom shelf. For many people, it is the green tube they reach for when their hands feel cracked, their elbows are rough, their skin feels weather-beaten, or their face needs that extra cushion of comfort before bed. Then there is Skin Food Light: the fresher, lighter, quicker version that gives the Skin Food feeling without quite the same richness. It is often easier for daytime, easier under clothing, easier on the face for some skin types, and easier when you need fast comfort but do not want a heavy finish. The question is not really “which one is better?” The better question is: what does your skin need today, and where will this product fit into your routine? Skin Food Original and Skin Food Light share the same family character, but they serve different practical purposes. Once you understand the difference, choosing becomes simple. Quick answer Choose Skin Food Original when your skin is very dry, rough, exposed, hard-working or needs a richer protective layer. Choose Skin Food Light when you want faster absorption, a lighter feel, or everyday moisture for face and body. Compare in a Gift Set → 🛡️ Original = richer rescue care Best for very dry patches, rough hands, elbows, feet, winter skin, outdoor exposure and overnight nourishment. ✨ Light = daily flexible care Best for quick hydration, morning use, face and body routines, travel, warmer days and a smoother, lighter finish. Why Skin Food has such staying power Skin Food Original was first formulated in 1926, and part of its charm is that it still feels beautifully straightforward. It is rich, herbal, protective and unmistakably Weleda. In a beauty market that constantly pushes new trends, Skin Food has survived because it does something simple and useful: it comforts dry, rough skin with a deeply nourishing texture. Its appeal is also emotional. A product with real substance can feel reassuring. You can feel where you have applied it. You can use it on hands after washing, on elbows after a shower, on feet before socks, on cold-weather dry patches, or as a small amount pressed over facial moisturiser when the skin needs extra glow and protection. Skin Food Light was created for a different need. Many customers love the idea of Skin Food but want something easier for everyday use. The Light version keeps the family’s botanical character but has a more fluid, quickly absorbed texture. That makes it especially useful when you are getting dressed, going out, applying it to larger areas, or using it in the morning when you do not want to wait for a rich cream to settle. Original vs Light: the practical comparison Skin Food Original The classic choice when your skin wants richness, protection and a more substantial layer of care. Rich, thick, balm-like cream texture. Excellent for dry, rough and exposed areas. Ideal for hands, elbows, feet and targeted dry patches. Good for night-time use when you want deeper comfort. Can create a beautiful glow when used sparingly on the face. Skin Food Light The flexible everyday choice when your skin wants moisture, comfort and a lighter finish. Lighter cream-lotion feel with faster absorption. Useful for face and body when you want quick hydration. Better for mornings, travel, work bags and on-the-go use. Good when Original feels too heavy for daytime. Leaves skin feeling smooth without such a dense finish. Original: richer comfort for rough, dry and weather-stressed skin. Light: faster daily moisture for face, body and busy mornings. Best routine: keep both and use according to skin need. Which one should you choose by skin type? Skin type is useful, but it is not the whole story. Your skin can be dry in winter, oily by midday, sensitive after shaving, rough on the hands, dehydrated on the cheeks and perfectly normal somewhere else. That is why the best choice depends on skin area, season, texture preference and the time of day. Skin need Best first choice Why it works Very dry hands, elbows or feet Skin Food Original The richer texture gives a more protective, comforting layer on rough, hardworking areas. Dry face but you dislike heaviness Skin Food Light The lighter texture is easier to spread and usually more comfortable for daytime facial use. Cold weather or outdoor exposure Skin Food Original It feels more shielding when skin is exposed to wind, cold or repeated washing. Morning routine before work Skin Food Light It absorbs more quickly, which helps when you are dressing, commuting or applying make-up. Overnight dry-patch care Skin Food Original A richer layer before bed gives the skin more time to feel softened and supported. Travel, gym bag or handbag Skin Food Light Quick, flexible and easy to reapply during the day without feeling too heavy. Texture is the real difference When customers are unsure, I always bring it back to texture. Texture decides whether you will actually use a product every day. A cream can be wonderful on paper, but if it feels wrong for your lifestyle, it will sit unused. Skin Food Original and Skin Food Light both belong to the same nourishing family, but the
Understanding Anthroposophic Skincare: Weleda’s Holistic Approach

BROOLED WELEDA JOURNAL Understanding Anthroposophic Skincare: Weleda’s Holistic Approach A grounded, beautiful introduction to Anthroposophy, Rudolf Steiner, Ita Wegman and the nature-led philosophy behind Weleda skincare. 🌿 Natural skincare ⏱ 12–15 minute read ✨ Holistic beauty Shop Skin Food 30ml → Visit My Weleda Advocate Page → 🌼 Rooted in nature Skincare as care for the whole person Weleda’s approach sees the skin as living, expressive and closely connected with the rhythms of nature. A different way to think about skin Most skincare advice begins with a surface question: is the skin dry, oily, sensitive, blemish-prone or mature? Those categories are useful, but Weleda’s philosophy asks a deeper question as well: what is the skin trying to communicate, and how can we support it rather than simply cover over it? Anthroposophic skincare is built around the idea that the human being is not only a physical body. We are also shaped by habits, seasons, emotions, sleep, food, environment, stress, warmth, movement and inner rhythm. In this view, skin is not treated as a separate object. It is part of a living whole. That is why Weleda products often feel different from conventional beauty products. They are not designed only to give an instant cosmetic effect, although they can feel wonderfully comforting on the skin. They are designed to work with the skin’s own capacity to restore, protect and balance itself. Article focus This article explores Weleda’s heritage and skincare philosophy in plain language. It is not medical advice. For persistent skin conditions, irritation or allergies, seek guidance from a qualified healthcare professional. Browse Brooled WELEDA Shop → 1 What Anthroposophy means 2 Rudolf Steiner and Ita Wegman 3 How Weleda applies it 4 Products to start with What is Anthroposophy? Anthroposophy is a philosophy associated with Rudolf Steiner. The word is often translated as “wisdom of the human being” or “knowledge of the human being.” At its heart is an attempt to understand people as more than chemistry alone: body, mind, soul, spirit and environment are seen as connected. In everyday language, this means Anthroposophy looks for relationships. How does the body respond to the seasons? How does warmth affect comfort? How does rhythm influence wellbeing? How do plants, minerals and natural processes interact with human life? Rather than seeing nature as a warehouse of ingredients, anthroposophic thinking sees nature as a living context in which human beings participate. Applied to skincare, that worldview leads to a more respectful, less aggressive approach. The goal is not to force the skin into silence. It is to support the skin’s own intelligence. Dryness, for example, is not merely a cosmetic problem. It may reflect a need for protection, nourishment, warmth, barrier support or gentler daily habits. Sensitivity may call for simplicity, calm and fewer harsh interventions. Dullness may invite better rhythm: cleansing, moisturising, rest, fresh air and consistent care. This is why Weleda often speaks about balance, regeneration and the skin’s natural functions. A product is not just an isolated active ingredient. It is a complete formula, with oils, waxes, plant extracts, texture, scent and ritual working together. The experience matters: the scent of rosemary, the richness of lanolin and beeswax, the softness of plant oils, the soothing character of calendula and chamomile. In anthroposophic skincare, the sensory quality of a product is part of the care. Rudolf Steiner: the vision behind Anthroposophy Rudolf Steiner was an Austrian philosopher, educator and social reformer whose work influenced education, agriculture, medicine, architecture and the arts. Many people know his name through Waldorf education or biodynamic farming, but his influence also reaches into Weleda’s founding story. Steiner’s approach was ambitious. He wanted to explore how modern knowledge, observation and spiritual understanding could meet. For health and care, this meant asking physicians and pharmacists to look not only at isolated symptoms but at the whole human being. In skincare terms, that can sound surprisingly contemporary. Many of us now understand that sleep, stress, climate, hormones, nutrition and emotional load can all show up on the skin. Weleda’s skincare heritage begins with a broad view of the human being: not skin as decoration, but skin as a living boundary between inner life and the world. BROOLED WELEDA JOURNAL It is important to talk about this heritage honestly and practically. Anthroposophy is not a quick marketing slogan. It is a full worldview, and not everyone will relate to every part of it. You do not have to adopt a whole philosophy to appreciate what it has contributed to natural skincare: respect for plants, attention to farming, careful formulation, rhythmic routines and a belief that beauty is connected with wellbeing. That is where Weleda has become accessible to modern customers. You may come to the brand because your hands are cracked, your face feels tight, your baby needs gentle care, or you simply want products with a more natural feel. Behind that immediate need is a deeper tradition: care should work with life, not against it. Ita Wegman: physician, pioneer and co-founder Dr Ita Wegman was a physician whose role in Weleda’s story is essential. She worked with Rudolf Steiner in the development of anthroposophic medicine and helped bring the ideas into medical practice. Where Steiner contributed a philosophical and spiritual framework, Wegman brought clinical seriousness, practical care and direct medical experience. Her contribution matters because it reminds us that Weleda did not emerge as a beauty trend. It grew from a healthcare environment where medicines, plant preparations and skin applications were part of a wider approach to human wellbeing. The skin was understood as part of the organism, not merely as a surface to decorate. Wegman’s legacy can still be felt in Weleda’s tone: gentle, therapeutic, deeply connected with plants and attentive to the person using the product. The best Weleda routines are simple but thoughtful. They are not about chasing every new ingredient. They are about finding what the skin needs and returning to it consistently. Oskar Schmiedel and the laboratory tradition Weleda’s founding story also
The Benefits of Biodynamic Ingredients in Weleda Products Explain Weleda’s farming philosophy, sustainability, and why it matters.

🌿 Biodynamic Beauty • Weleda Philosophy The Benefits of Biodynamic Ingredients in Weleda Products Why soil, rhythm, plant wisdom, sustainability and human wellbeing all matter when you choose natural skincare — and how Weleda’s biodynamic roots show up in much-loved products such as Skin Food and Calendula care. Shop Skin Food 100 Years Meet Mark, Your Weleda Advocate Biodynamic Weleda garden illustration A stylised biodynamic garden with calendula, chamomile, bees, sun, moon and a Skin Food tube. Skin Food Calendula • Chamomile Biodynamic ingredients are not simply “natural ingredients with a nicer label”. In Weleda’s world, they represent a whole way of thinking about the relationship between soil, plants, people and the wider living environment. A calendula flower is not treated as an isolated raw material. It is understood as part of a living garden: the soil that feeds it, the insects that visit it, the seasons that shape it, the hands that harvest it, and the purpose it will serve in a carefully made product. That is why biodynamic farming matters so much to Weleda. It connects skincare to something deeper than texture, fragrance and packaging. It asks a bigger question: what kind of agriculture should stand behind the products we use every day on our skin? For Weleda, the answer has always been rooted in respect — respect for the earth, respect for plant life, respect for the human being, and respect for the rhythms of nature. When you pick up a product such as Skin Food, or choose a gentle Calendula product for delicate skin, you are not only choosing a cream, balm or wash. You are touching a story that reaches back to medicinal plant gardens, anthroposophic ideas, and a belief that true beauty should never be separated from health, sustainability and responsibility. What does biodynamic farming mean? Biodynamic agriculture is often described as an advanced form of organic growing, but that description only tells part of the story. Like organic farming, biodynamic growing avoids synthetic pesticides and artificial fertilisers. But it goes further by viewing the farm or garden as a whole living organism. Soil, compost, animals, plants, trees, water, insects and human care are all seen as interdependent. In practical terms, this means biodynamic growers work to build living soil, create biodiversity, reduce dependency on external inputs, and cultivate plants in harmony with natural rhythms. Compost is not treated as waste, but as a living source of fertility. Habitats are created for pollinators and beneficial insects. Seed saving, careful harvesting and soil preparation become part of a wider ecological responsibility. Living soil Biodynamic practice starts with fertile, active soil. Healthy soil is not a background detail; it is the foundation of resilient plants and responsible skincare sourcing. Biodiversity Flowers, hedges, meadows and insect-friendly spaces help create balance. A biodynamic garden aims to be alive with relationships, not stripped into a monoculture. Natural rhythms Biodynamics pays attention to cycles: day and night, seasons, growth and rest. The result is a slower, more observant form of agriculture. For skincare customers, this matters because the quality of a plant extract begins long before it reaches the laboratory or the product jar. It begins in the way the plant was grown. A biodynamic ingredient carries the intention of the whole process: careful cultivation, ecological awareness, respect for the living landscape and a refusal to separate product quality from environmental quality. Weleda’s farming philosophy: in harmony with nature and the human being Weleda was founded in 1921, and medicinal plants have been central to its identity from the beginning. The company’s approach is built on the idea that human health and the health of nature belong together. This is why Weleda’s gardens are not just decorative spaces or marketing symbols. They are working medicinal plant gardens where cultivation, observation and sustainability meet. In a biodynamic garden, the aim is not to dominate nature but to collaborate with it. That shift in attitude is important. Modern agriculture often focuses on maximum output, standardisation and speed. Biodynamic cultivation asks for attentiveness instead: what does this soil need, what is this plant expressing, what rhythms are present, and how can the garden become more self-sustaining over time? Weleda’s philosophy therefore has both a practical and ethical dimension. Practically, it supports traceable, carefully grown botanicals. Ethically, it recognises that the beauty industry cannot talk about “natural skincare” while ignoring the land from which nature is taken. A truly natural product should not exhaust the natural world that provides it. Why this matters: biodynamic skincare is about joined-up thinking. It brings together ingredient quality, soil health, biodiversity, responsible sourcing, product formulation and a more conscious relationship with nature. This is one reason Weleda has such a strong identity. The brand is not simply chasing the latest skincare trend. It has a philosophical backbone. The same values that guide its cultivation of calendula, chamomile, rosemary, arnica, birch and other plants also guide the way it speaks about human wellbeing: gently, holistically and with respect for the whole person. Anthroposophy, Rudolf Steiner and Ita Wegman To understand Weleda properly, it helps to understand the word anthroposophy. Anthroposophy is the philosophical and spiritual movement associated with Rudolf Steiner. It is concerned with the human being as more than a purely mechanical body. It looks at life, health, development, education, agriculture, art and medicine through the lens of relationship, meaning and inner growth. Rudolf Steiner’s ideas influenced biodynamic agriculture, Waldorf education, eurythmy and anthroposophic medicine. In Weleda’s history, these ideas were not abstract theories sitting on a shelf. They became practical: gardens, remedies, skincare, rhythmical processes, and a way of approaching health that pays attention to body, soul and spirit. Dr Ita Wegman is equally important in this story. As a medical doctor, she worked with Steiner in the development of anthroposophic medicine. Where Steiner brought a broad philosophical and spiritual framework, Wegman brought clinical medical experience and a profound interest in treating the individual human being, not merely the isolated symptom. Their collaboration helped shape the
From Ashes to Anthroposophia

Anthroposophy, Weleda & the Living Spirit From Ashes to Anthroposophia: The First Goetheanum, Pentecost, and the Living Spirit Behind Weleda In 1923, after the First Goetheanum was destroyed by fire, Rudolf Steiner called members of the Anthroposophical Society away from mere outward activity and toward a living connection with the spiritual worlds. That appeal still speaks today — to seekers, gardeners, healers, makers, and everyone who senses that true care must be rooted in spirit as well as nature. Shop my BROOLED Weleda Store Visit my official Weleda Advocate page The First Goetheanum in Dornach before the fire. Image: Wikimedia Commons / public domain. There are moments in spiritual history when an outer event becomes more than an event. A building falls, a community is shaken, and something that once stood visibly in wood, colour, carved form, and shared labour must be rediscovered inwardly. The burning of the First Goetheanum in Dornach on New Year’s Eve 1922/23 was such a moment. For those who had worked, travelled, studied, performed, prayed, and sacrificed around the Goetheanum, the loss was not simply architectural. It was intimate. The building had gathered years of devotion. It had been intended as a home for a new kind of culture: art, science, spiritual research, medicine, education, agriculture, social renewal, and human self-knowledge. When the flames consumed it, they also tested whether anthroposophy could remain alive when its most visible form had disappeared. Rudolf Steiner’s response was striking. He did not ask members of the Anthroposophical Society merely to look outward, rebuild administratively, or be consumed by external opposition. He urged them to forge a connection with the radiant spiritual light of the heavenly worlds. He asked them to relate to anthroposophy not as a doctrine to possess, nor as an organisation to manage, but as a living being: unseen among them, asking for responsibility. That appeal feels powerfully contemporary. We live in a time of constant external noise: notifications, crises, brand activity, organisational busyness, and never-ending commentary. Steiner’s 1923 challenge asks something deeper. Can a movement, a shop, a medicine, a garden, a product, a ritual of care, or a community remain connected to its living spiritual source? Can we still recognise wisdom when the outer container changes? Fire The burning of the Goetheanum was an outer catastrophe, but also a spiritual test for the movement around it. Anthroposophia Anthroposophy was to be taken not merely as teaching, but as a living spiritual presence asking for responsibility. Weleda Weleda belongs to this wider stream: a practical expression of reverence for nature, rhythm, body, soul, and spirit. The Night the Visible Form Was Lost The First Goetheanum had been built in Dornach, Switzerland, through years of remarkable collaboration. It was not designed as a conventional hall. Its rounded forms, double domes, carved columns, painted ceilings, coloured glass, and living sculptural language were intended to make anthroposophy visible. In the Goetheanum, idea and form were not separate. Architecture became a gesture. Art became a path of knowledge. Space became a teacher. The building was destroyed by fire during the night of 31 December 1922 into 1 January 1923. The shock was immense. The Goetheanum had carried the labour of many hands and the hopes of a movement. It was linked with the founding impulses of Waldorf education, biodynamic agriculture, anthroposophic medicine, eurythmy, the arts, and a renewed spiritual understanding of the human being. Yet Steiner’s answer to the catastrophe was not despair. He recognised the pain, but he also pointed beyond the ruin. If the building had been a vessel of love, that love could not be reduced to ash. It had to be sought now in Spirit. What had been outside had to be awakened inside. The ruins of the First Goetheanum after the fire. Image: Wikimedia Commons / public domain. Anthroposophy: Anthropos and Sophia The word anthroposophy is often translated as “wisdom of the human being”. The Greek anthropos points to the human being; Sophia points to wisdom. But the word is richer when approached imaginatively. It suggests that the human being is not complete merely by existing physically, socially, or intellectually. The human being becomes whole by being filled with wisdom — not abstract cleverness, but living, divine, cosmic wisdom. In this sense, the First Goetheanum was more than a cultural centre. It was an attempt to give artistic form to the meeting of Anthropos and Sophia: the human being standing open to cosmic wisdom. Its architecture was not meant to decorate anthroposophy from the outside. It was meant to express a living relationship between the human being and the spiritual worlds. When the Goetheanum burned, the question became unavoidable: had anthroposophy lived only in the building, or could it live in human hearts? Was it a structure, or was it a being? Was it a programme, or was it a responsibility? Steiner’s challenge still matters: external work without inner fire becomes administration. Inner experience without responsible action becomes private mysticism. The living middle is spiritual connection that becomes moral responsibility. Steiner’s Urgent Appeal In January 1923, Steiner spoke with urgency to the members. The Society could not survive merely through outer activity. Rebuilding, fundraising, lectures, committees, and programmes had their place, but they were not the centre. The centre was the inner bond with spiritual reality. That is why his appeal to connect with the radiant spiritual light of the heavenly worlds is so important. He was not recommending escapism. He was not telling people to ignore the world. He was asking them to find the spiritual centre from which meaningful earthly work can proceed. The phrase “living being” is equally significant. To take anthroposophy as a living being means that we do not treat it as a museum, a slogan, or a closed belief system. A living being asks to be met. A living being changes the one who encounters it. A living being asks for care, truthfulness, humility, courage, and devotion. This is perhaps one of the great tests for any
Weleda & Hay Fever: Natural Seasonal Support for Pollen-Heavy Days

Seasonal Wellness • Hay Fever • Weleda Natural Medicines Weleda & Hay Fever: Natural Seasonal Support for Pollen-Heavy Days Spring and summer should feel like an invitation: longer walks, garden days, sea air, sunshine, open windows and flowers in bloom. But for hay fever sufferers, pollen season can turn those beautiful months into a cycle of sneezing, blocked noses, itchy eyes, tiredness and constant tissue-hunting. If that sounds familiar, this article is for you. Weleda Seasonal Wellness Bundle — three natural seasonal essentials in one easy set. 🌿 Shop the Seasonal Wellness Bundle When Hay Fever Gets in the Way of Real Life Hay fever is one of those seasonal concerns that can sound minor until you are the one living with it. A high pollen day can affect your work, sleep, mood, exercise, social life and ability to enjoy being outdoors. It can make you feel foggy and tired. It can make your eyes water when you are trying to concentrate. It can make your nose feel dry, irritated, blocked or constantly runny. And because pollen season can stretch across several months, many people are not looking for a one-off product. They are looking for a seasonal routine that feels gentle enough to use regularly and practical enough to keep with them. That is where Weleda’s seasonal approach is so helpful. Instead of thinking about hay fever as one isolated symptom, Weleda’s natural medicine tradition looks at the whole person: the nose, the eyes, the breathing, the body’s rhythm, daily exposure to pollen and the way the season affects wellbeing as a whole. This is very much in keeping with Weleda’s wider philosophy: nature, human health and daily care all belong together. At BROOLED’s Weleda Shop, I have created a simple seasonal solution for customers who want to be ready before pollen-heavy days arrive: the Weleda Seasonal Wellness Bundle. It brings together three carefully chosen Weleda products that work beautifully as a seasonal toolkit: Rhinodoron Nasal Spray, Hayfever Relief Oromucosal Spray and Mixed Pollen 30C Tablets. 🌼 The Seasonal Wellness Bundle: Your Weleda Hay Fever Toolkit The Seasonal Wellness Bundle is designed for the months when pollen is high and your body needs extra care. It is a convenient way to have the main Weleda seasonal support products together, rather than buying them one by one or waiting until symptoms have already disrupted your day. The bundle contains: 🌿 Rhinodoron Nasal Spray 20ml — a natural nasal spray with aloe vera and isotonic saline solution to moisturise, cleanse and care for dry nasal passages. 🌸 Hayfever Relief Oromucosal Spray 20ml — a homeopathic medicinal product used within the homeopathic tradition for the symptomatic relief of hay fever and other forms of allergic rhinitis. 🌾 Mixed Pollen 30C Tablets — a homeopathic medicinal product for seasonal symptoms, traditionally recommended by homeopaths as part of a seasonal routine. For many customers, the real benefit of the bundle is simplicity. Pollen season can be unpredictable. One day you feel fine, the next day the air is warm, windy and heavy with pollen. Having a ready-to-use seasonal kit at home, in your bag or in your bathroom cabinet gives you one less thing to think about when symptoms begin. 🛒 Add the Bundle to Your Basket 1. Rhinodoron Nasal Spray: Gentle Care for Dry, Irritated Noses Rhinodoron Nasal Spray 20ml One of the most frustrating parts of hay fever season is nasal discomfort. Your nose can feel blocked, dry, crusty, irritated or overworked from constant blowing. Rhinodoron Nasal Spray is a gentle, natural way to care for the nasal passages during pollen season. It contains a natural saline solution with organic aloe vera, designed to moisturise, cleanse and care for dry nasal passages. The formulation is simple and purposeful. Rhinodoron contains sodium chloride and potassium chloride in an isotonic solution, alongside aloe vera gel and water for injections. In plain English, that means it helps support daily nasal hygiene without feeling harsh. The aloe vera adds a soothing, moisturising quality, while the saline solution helps clean and care for the inside of the nose. This makes Rhinodoron a very practical product during pollen season. It can be used when the pollen count is high, when the air feels dry, after being outdoors, or as part of a morning and evening seasonal routine. It is suitable for vegans and can be used for daily nasal hygiene over longer periods, always following the product label and leaflet. For customers who want one product to start with, Rhinodoron is often the easiest entry point. It is not complicated, it is not messy and it fits into everyday life. Keep it by the sink, in your work bag, beside your bed or wherever you are most likely to remember to use it. Shop Rhinodoron Nasal Spray 20ml → 2. Hayfever Relief Oromucosal Spray: Pocket-Sized Homeopathic Support Weleda Hayfever Relief Oromucosal Spray is a pocket-sized homeopathic medicinal product used within the homeopathic tradition for the symptomatic relief of hay fever and other forms of allergic rhinitis. It is designed for adults, the elderly and children over 12 years of age, and it is especially useful for people who want something portable and quick to use when symptoms start. Unlike a nasal spray, this product is sprayed directly into the mouth. That makes it easy to carry and use throughout the day, whether you are commuting, gardening, walking, travelling, working or spending time outdoors. It is small enough to keep in your pocket or bag, which is exactly what you want during unpredictable pollen days. The active homeopathic ingredients are Allium cepa 6X, Euphrasia officinalis 6X and Gelsemium sempervirens 6X. Within the homeopathic tradition, these ingredients are associated with the kinds of symptoms many people recognise during hay fever season, including streaming eyes, runny nose, sneezing and that general seasonal discomfort that can make you feel worn down. Allium cepa is red onion. Anyone who has chopped an onion knows how quickly it can bring on watery eyes