The Monster Energy logo is widely recognized among major beverages and
at sponsored events. The impactful design is composed of a vibrant large
green (or blue) ″M″ on field of black. The ″M″ is stylized in such a
way as to imply that it is formed by the claws of a monster ripping through the can.
Maybe burn is a bad word to state along side of the M claw.
The first person I think of when looking at the ingredients of M(onster) energy drink is Michael Phelps.
He used at least 10,000 calories per day when he was fit and winning metals. Michael Phelps would probably drink several a day and never completely satisfy his metabolic demand.
There is just no comparison when disputing any aspect of Monster energy drink. There are athletes in the USA that are not Olympic medalists, but, run the Boston Marathon that find these drinks helpful. It is activity that burns calories. The more active a person is the more calories they burn and the less they have to worry about a diet. They simply eat and go about life.
And for those in our society that are complete morons, ginseng is non-alcoholic. As is Monster Energy Drink. Monster Energy Drink has heritage ingredients.
9 July 2015
By Michael S. Rosenwald
The long tradition (click here) of ginseng-hunting in the United States can be traced from Daniel Boone, the folk hero frontiersman, to Glenn Miller, a retired concrete inspector.
Ginseng, a medicinal herb, has become a hot energy-drink ingredient and a trendy remedy for all sorts of maladies. Miller, carrying his $2 ginseng-hunting permit, typically finds the leafy plant in Maryland's Savage River State Forest on steep, shady slopes and digs up the gnarly roots with a long screwdriver.
"Once in a while out there, you run into a bear," said Miller, who lives in Lonaconing, a tiny western Maryland town. "Last year, I ran into an old female, and two cubs walked up to me. That's always exciting. Of course, occasionally you run into a rattlesnake."...
Maybe burn is a bad word to state along side of the M claw.
The first person I think of when looking at the ingredients of M(onster) energy drink is Michael Phelps.
He used at least 10,000 calories per day when he was fit and winning metals. Michael Phelps would probably drink several a day and never completely satisfy his metabolic demand.
There is just no comparison when disputing any aspect of Monster energy drink. There are athletes in the USA that are not Olympic medalists, but, run the Boston Marathon that find these drinks helpful. It is activity that burns calories. The more active a person is the more calories they burn and the less they have to worry about a diet. They simply eat and go about life.
And for those in our society that are complete morons, ginseng is non-alcoholic. As is Monster Energy Drink. Monster Energy Drink has heritage ingredients.
9 July 2015
By Michael S. Rosenwald
The long tradition (click here) of ginseng-hunting in the United States can be traced from Daniel Boone, the folk hero frontiersman, to Glenn Miller, a retired concrete inspector.
Ginseng, a medicinal herb, has become a hot energy-drink ingredient and a trendy remedy for all sorts of maladies. Miller, carrying his $2 ginseng-hunting permit, typically finds the leafy plant in Maryland's Savage River State Forest on steep, shady slopes and digs up the gnarly roots with a long screwdriver.
"Once in a while out there, you run into a bear," said Miller, who lives in Lonaconing, a tiny western Maryland town. "Last year, I ran into an old female, and two cubs walked up to me. That's always exciting. Of course, occasionally you run into a rattlesnake."...