http://www.bewellbuzz.com/superfoods/what-is-ormus/Ormus-rich plants and edibles include:
* Almonds
* Aloe vera
* Apricot kernels (the inner pit of the stone)
* Bee pollen (wild, especially from volcanic regions)
* Bloodroot
* Blue-green algae from Klamath Lake, Oregon
* Carrots (depends on the Ormus content of the soil)
* Chamae Rose
* Chocolate (organic chocolate contains Ormus nickel according to MiraculeWater.com)
* Coconut water (wild)
* Flax oil
* Garlic
* Goji berries (in the polysaccharides)
* Grasses and grains (if grown with diluted ocean water or with the proper fertilizer; grasses and grains include wheat, barley, corn, rice, sugar cane, etc.)
* Grape seeds
* Honey (wild, especially from volcanic regions)
* Larch bark
* Medicinal mushrooms (reishi, cordyceps, coriolus, Fomes fomentarius, shiitake, maitake, etc.)
* Mustard (brown and stone-ground as reported by MiraculeWater.com)
* Noni fruit
* Propolis
* Royal jelly
* Sheep sorrel
* Slippery elm bark
* St. John’s Wort
* Vanilla (whole beans)
* Watercress
* White pine bark