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  • Writer's pictureStephanie Tourles

Got Tired, Hot Feet? Give ‘Em A Refreshing Peppermint Treat . . . Ahhhh!

Updated: Nov 20, 2019

for Mother Earth News


Folks, it doesn’t have to be summertime for you to experience dog-tired, hot, sweaty feet. Just ask anyone who routinely spends a lot of time on their feet . . . landscapers, brick masons, carpenters, massage therapists, sales clerks, waiters, parents of young children, runners, school teachers, hair stylists, exercise instructors, nurses, etc. Their poor tootsies take a beating all year long!


Your feet are your foundation – ever think about that? They literally connect you with the earth, stabilize your being, take you from point A to point B, and enable you to jump, run, ski, bike, swim, and enjoy life, often with grace and style. It’s very difficult to get along without them. At the end of the day, after being on them for hours, your poor fatigued, throbbing, sweaty, swollen “barking dogs” are in need of refreshment, rejuvenation, and relief! For all the support they give, regular soothing care is recommended to keep them (and you) happy! In this blog, I offer a simple, natural, soothing, aromatic solution that you can make in 5 minutes flat – a few minty spritzes will leave you with comfortable, cool feet so you can step lively once again!


I’m a practicing foot reflexologist and the DIY spritzer recipe below is one that I use nearly every day in my treatments. I spray a light mist on my client’s feet and lower legs at the end of their session and massage it in real good! They’re usually quite relaxed after 75 minutes of foot work, so this minty-fresh spray perks them up a bit, hydrates their skin (which is often dry), and sends them out the door with feet feeling ultra-revived!

Bonus uses? You bet! This spray doubles as a superior room freshener – perfect to deodorize both bathrooms and mud rooms where stinky shoes are stored. Simply spritz into the air a few times (and into shoes, too) and say good-bye to staleness and odor.


Make yourself a batch, won’t you? This recipe is also perfect for gift-giving – design a decorative custom label with directions, ingredients, and date made. I don’t know anyone who wouldn’t love to receive a bottle of this pleasingly fragrant spritzer.


Lini-Mint: Peppermint Foot Chiller Recipe

Refreshing herbal relief is a quick spray away with this super-easy-to-make foot chillin’ formula. Vodka, along with peppermint and lavender essential oils, combine to form a menthol liniment of moderate intensity, with a cool-to-cold energy that evaporates rapidly, removing heat along with sweat and odor and leaving you feeling footloose and fancy-free. I recommend stashing a small bottle in your gym bag to use as a postworkout foot refresher – especially if there’s no time to shower – it’ll put some spring back in your step!


Ingredients:

1 cup unflavored vodka (use either 80- or 100-proof)

30 drops peppermint (Mentha piperita) essential oil

10 drops lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) essential oil (optional, but blends beautifully with peppermint, and adds anti-inflammatory, muscle-relaxing properties, too)

½ teaspoon vegetable glycerin

1 8-oz dark-glass spray-top bottle


Directions

Combine the vodka, peppermint and lavender (optional) essential oils, and glycerin in your spritzer bottle and shake vigorously to blend. 


Label and store on a counter (out of the sun) or in a cool cabinet.  No refrigeration is required, but chilling the formula makes it even more cooling. 


For maximum freshness and potency, please use within 1 year.


To Apply:  Shake well before each use as the essential oils will naturally separate out and float to the top.  Immediately spray on bare feet and lower legs whenever they’re feeling weary, hot, and generally uncomfortable.  Give feet and legs a good rub down.  If you can coerce a friend or family member to do this for you, all the better!  Allow feet to air-dry before putting on socks or hosiery.


Yield: Approximately 1 cup

Recipe excerpted from “Hands-On Healing Remedies: 150 Recipes for Herbal Balms, Salves, Oils, Liniments & Other Topical Therapies,” (c2012 by Stephanie Tourles). Used with permission from Storey Publishing.

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