Bavrac, or sulfur, or ox gall, or coloquinte pulp, or wine grounds, or mustard, or larkspur, or burnt glass, or harbak, or tapsia, or something similar, is mixed with hair washing products. Either they take Kimolos clay, mix it with cow bile, consume it and leave it on the head for two hours, or take equal parts of ban seeds and bean flour, boil it in water and wash the head with it.
They also take wine grounds - ritl, soap - one uqiya, bavrak - four darakhmi, tie it all up and put a mud cake on the head, then wash it off with beet juice and chickpea flour and after that use myrtle oil.
Sometimes the head is smeared with cow feces, and this helps a lot; the patient is allowed to rest for one night, and the next night they are lubricated again. Washing your hair with camel urine, especially Arabian camel, is also very beneficial.
Grated glass is a powerful remedy for malignant dandruff, as well as the water in which kalkand and larkspur were soaked. Or they take equal parts of bavrak and kalkaid foam and lubricate the head with it after it has been shaved, sometimes both medicines are combined with olive oil, or they rub the larkspur in olive oil and lubricate it with this.
They also take equal parts of sulfur, kalkand and bavrak, bind it with incense dissolved in mastic oil, and leave it on the head, sometimes adding harbak.