![]() Leaves your hair flat, with a slight lingering residue that will build in a few days (at least with my long hair - you shaved-heads may like it). ![]() Makes a poor shampoo, though, by the way. Love this stuff!!! I still do the hot-cold thing, but I wash with Dr. I quit using soap in high-school when I realized that my face had **less acne** (almost no acne) when I only showered in hot-hot water to open my pours and washed with only a washcloth (no soap), then rinsed in cold-cold water to close my pours to keep the dirt out and soap always left me feeling a residue on my skin. And the product ingredients are listed as 'organic', and 'fair trade', and the bottle is 100% post consumer recycled plastic. Bathe with it and people may comment on how nice you smell. I find it interesting that the Peppermint seems to cut the grease better than the others. ![]() Use it straight - only a few drops if need be, then rinse it. I find it surprising that the other reviewer claims it didn't cut grease well. Bronner's (no water) along with a scrub brush gets that out. If you've been working on brake systems, the brake dust can get into your skin and be worse than grease to remove. Bronners or Ivory Liquid !!!)Ī palmful rubbed on the grease - no water - lifts it right out of your skin. (note that Dawn dish-washing liquid does NOT lift automotive grease off your hands like Dr. The other 'natural' product that works well is Ivory liquid, but I'd bet there is petroleum in there somewhere, but I don't know for sure. Bronner's Liquid Peppermint soap works the best of any product I've found, including stuff like GoJo that was made for removing automotive grease. They also offer bar soaps that don't leak in your pack, but I prefer the liquid. I use it at home as well as the field when backpacking. I saw the other guy's review, and I thought I'd add my 2 cents.
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