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Seven+ is the synergistic gathering of the earth's seven most powerful botanicals. They are:
- Gac - The deep orange, spiny gac fruit is harvested at the end of the rainy season throughout Southeast Asia. Known in traditional Chinese as the mubiezi, the fruit's vibrant color makes it easy to spot amidst the lush greenery. Smooth skin and bright eyes have been attributed to this revered Gac fruit and science now backs those beliefs.
- Acai - The mysterious Amazon Rain Forest holds many healing secrets. One of these powerful healing botanicals is the acai berry. Pronounced ah-SIGH-ee, this berry has long been regarded by natives as the most powerful nutrition in the forest. For thousands of years the healers of the Amazon have used it to treat a variety of illnesses.
- Goji - Journeying to the Himalayan Mountains and the valleys of Tibet, we discover the potent goji berry (Lycium Barbarum). Its nutrition is legendary among these people, who have used it to maintain active, healthy lifestyles and startling longevity.
- Noni - Over 2,000 years ago, the noni fruit's distinctive flavor and aroma singled it out to explorers. These Asian travelers, also, acquired knowledge of the healing virtues of the noni fruit. The explorers carried the noni fruit to the Polynesian Islands, and its healing virtues became part of the culture's legends and mythology.
- Fucoidan - Rooted in the pristine, sparkling waters of the South Pacific is an astonishing brown seaweed. They attribute their long lives and glowing health to this plant. Its secret? A nutrient called fucoidan. Modern science marvels at how closely its nutrition resembles human breast milk.
- Mangosteen - Growing in the Southeast Asian tropics is a fruit so prized it is known as the Queen of Fruits. Healers down through the ages, as well as modern locals, revere it not just for its flavor, but for its amazing restorative and medicinal properties.
- Seabuckthorn - The mountainous regions of Russia and China are home to a hardy, golden berry. Ghengis Khan, the 13th century conqueror, was aware of the astonishing nutrition of the berry. He is said to have attributed the might and vitality of his warriors, in part, to Seabuckthorn.
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