Farm to Massage Table - Wall Street Journal
We sent an email to: Please click on the link inside the email to complete your registration Please register to gain free access to WSJ tools. This service is temporary unavailable due to system maintenance. The username entered is already associated withanother account. Please enter a different usernameThe email address you have entered is already in use. Please upgrade your browser now to enjoy a better experience: Why upgrade. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints tool at the bottom of any article or visitwww. Some of the benefits are obvious: The spas can tout their unique treatments, local growers get more business and clients can feel like they're using more natural products to clean, smooth and moisturize their skin. The Treatment: Lavender-Honey MassageThis Hudson Valley retreat has a 75-acre property that provides ingredients for its restaurant and day spa. Last fall the spa offered a special massage with lavender and honey from the property's beehives; this October, it will release a signature series of treatments using handmade oils infused with herbs like rosemary and thyme. The 20,000-square-foot spa also uses local, antioxidant-rich wild elderberries and elderberry flowers in facials, and grows heirloom-variety herbs that are incorporated into services. Depending on the time of year, the spa may whip up fresh batches of the scrub several times a week, using maple sugar of different coarseness for varying degrees of skin-smoothing power. They can be custom blended for treatments like this exfoliating scrub, which uses a blend of Hawaiian salts and the crushed hulls of island macadamia nuts, followed by a shower and body butter application. The spa director makes products by hand, using ingredients grown on the property or sourced at the local farmer's market. These two fall treatments, which include pumpkin seed flakes, organic spices and specially infused Massage Oil, are only available until Dec. The spa menu is constantly updated to reflect local harvests (expect figs soon), but honey is a year-round staple. For this treatment, fresh honey from the hotel owners' farm is combined with fruit and flowers. The treatment starts with a full-body scrub followed by a back mask, a firming serum made with local grapeseed extracts, a honey-based massage and a mini-facial with custom-blended preparations. Add a teaspoon of fresh chamomile flowers and let them steep for five minutes. Grate half of an apple and submerge in the brew to moisten fully. Fill empty tea bags or fabric sachets with the mixture and place in a bowl. All Rights ReservedThis copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visitwww. To view or change all of your email settings, visit the Email Setup Center. Is it possible that a world without religion can be, on the whole, a better place to live. Question of the Day Will Congress succeed in crafting funding legislation for fiscal 2012 before temporary funding measures run out. Question of the Day Do you support the "Buffett Rule," which would prevent millionaires from paying lower tax rates than the middle-class. To view or change all of your email settings, visit the Email Setup Center. Azim Jessani asks… Q: How will Japan surface in two years from the calamity they have faced. The language you used does not comply with community standards. The Journal Community encourages thoughtful dialogue and meaningful connections between real people. We require the use of your full name to authenticate your identity. The quality of conversations can deteriorate when real identities are not provided. Please enter your first and last name First name: Last name: Create a Journal Community profile to avoid this message in the future. Massage Oil