eBay
Omega 3 DHA 400mg Dose - Vegetarian , Vegan from sustainably farmed algae

You are bidding for 1 pot of V Pure omega 3 DHA EPA 400mg Dose of 2 capsules - 1 month supply of 60 capsules per pot. Each serving of 2 capsules contains 400mg DHA 10mg EPA -
Lot 611039 Best by 07/2013. Produced by NuIQue.

Recommended normal price £14.95 + Postage per pot.

BUY NOW Option - Special Half Price offer for National Vegetarian Week Buy 2 get 2 free. 4 pots for price of 2. 4 months supply

Now that you can get a 400mg dose of Omega 3 pure DHA EPA long chain essential fatty acids it's a wonder why anyone is still buying cod liver oil capsules. The seas are polluted with not just PCBs and mercury but a host of chemicals most of which are not even screened for in fish oil.

Cod liver oil is also over 60% fats we don't need more of in our diet such as saturated and monounsaturated oils.

The international fishing industry has decimated our seas to the point of marine catastrophe to feed animals and for fish oil such as cod liver oil.

Algae oil is sustainably farmed and provides an ethical mercury free pure DHA solution for those who need a boost to their essential fatty acid balance for mood, fertility, pregnancy, sport, muscle repair and performance, heart health, skin, diabetes, high triglycerides and hormonal issues.

OFFER - Half Price - BOGOF - Buy 2 get 2 free!

To encourage you to tell your friends about sustainable, ethical, mercury free alternatives to fish oil for National Vegetarian Week we are are offering a half price NVW deal on NuIQue's V Pure vegetarian / vegan omega 3 DHA .

Nutritionist Yvonne Bishop-Weston, Harley Street Clinic, London says "If you are at all worried about your essential fatty acid status or displaying any of the classic symptoms of a lack of omega 3 we offer a simple laboratory blood test to verify your body's balance."

"Now that algae offers a 400mg DHA dose, free of contaminants from sewage in the sea, sustainably farmed and without the saturated fat found in cod liver oil buying fish oil on the UK high streets makes little sense even for non vegetarians or vegans"