Flowable topical medications that are applied to or poured onto the buds

These include strong, sharp waters, for example, waters in which quicklime, potash and arsenic were boiled; they are boiled again and then mixed with lime and potash. Waters with alum, if consumed as a drink or washed with them, are among the means to stop bleeding. The ointment is taken from one fresh coloquint, cut into four parts, placed in a vessel and filled with the urine of camels, preferably Arab camels grazing in pastures. Then they keep it in the scorching sun while it is hot, and add urine whenever there is less of it. This helps a lot, and the bumps will definitely disappear. Sometimes the cones are smeared with bile, because bile eats them away, as well as with the juice of fresh horns. A piece of wool is immersed in it and applied to the pine cones, and it certainly destroys them; if you constantly rub the cones with such an ointment, it will also have the same effect; it also acts on warts, like the kiss of fresh capers.

For rubbing use old ghee, peach kernel oil, apricot kernel oil, camel's hump fat, yellow violet oil and henna oil.