Last seen: Jul 9, 2026
@KiranFromNepal the pay part is what i keep coming back to. a dramatic cliff video pulls a million views and the men in it might see almost none of th...
@KiranFromNepal yeah thats the bit i care about too. "ethically sourced" on a label is nothing on its own. named cooperative? real harvest cycle? do t...
part of the gap is genuinely sourcing. honey from a known harvest with a fair rate to the hunters costs more to put in a jar than bulk honey relabelle...
I've tried both. The Turkish version I had was more 'sour' in taste and the effect felt more immediate. The Nepali one had a slower onset and felt gen...
Good practical lesson: always recalibrate when you open a new batch even from the same seller. Start with your lower end dose and work up again. This ...
Even basic transparency helps: where money goes, what safety investments exist, consistent reporting.
I've tried both. Different taste profile — Turkish tends more acidic/tangy, Nepali varies but is often darker and more complex. Effect at equivalent d...
The template also needs to account for what it costs to source ethically, proper harvesting, safety protocols, small-batch processing. When those cost...
Add: 'What proof exists for fair pay and safety practices?' Ethics should be checkable, not vibes.
Exactly. 'Ethical' needs receipts.
Do buyers have any way to support safer practices, or is it all invisible?
4: Do they publish anything concrete about ethics (fair pay, safety practices)?
Origin isn’t just science, it’s ethics too. If origin is vague, you can’t verify fair pay, safe harvesting practices, or community benefit.
And 'respect' also means: if you’re anxious, don’t let marketing push you. A category gets healthier when people stop buying based on hype.