Amor Mederi Herbals

Amor Mederi Herbals Crafters of heart centered herbal tinctures, herbal formulas and herbal blends. Amor Mederi is latin and means "love heals".

Everything that is created by Amor Mederi Herbals is done with love, respect & intention.

Chamomile  - so underestimated,  yet such an amazing herbal ally.  Prepared properly she can be a powerful remedy in you...
18/06/2026

Chamomile - so underestimated, yet such an amazing herbal ally. Prepared properly she can be a powerful remedy in your home wellness kit.

Want to dive deeper - click on the link in my latest story to read my blog on the benefits of Chamomile and I will also put the link in the comments, as well as a link to my premium grade certified organic chamomile flowers.

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My Ills & Chills Cold Season Support Tonic combines traditionally used herbs that support the body's natural response to...
15/06/2026

My Ills & Chills Cold Season Support Tonic combines traditionally used herbs that support the body's natural response to winter illnesses while providing targeted support for the respiratory system. Echinacea angustifolia has a long history of use during the early stages of seasonal challenges with her wide ranging antimicrobial effects and immune boosing properties, while Elecampane helps support clear airways and the healthy removal of excess mucus. Marshmallow and Licorice provide soothing, moistening support for irritated throat and respiratory tissues, and nutrient-rich nettle forms a nourishing base that supports overall wellbeing.

Together, these herbs create a balanced formula traditionally used during colds, coughs, sore throats, and seasonal respiratory discomfort.
Safe for the whole family this is a great remedy to always have on hand.

Digestion and elimination can be considered to be the foundation of all health. When these systems are healthy and funct...
14/06/2026

Digestion and elimination can be considered to be the foundation of all health. When these systems are healthy and functioning well, all organs of the body benefit and many seemingly unrelated health conditions can be resolved.

Our gut microbiome plays a major role in the health of our digestive system. It should be an entire thriving community of bacteria, viruses, fungi and other beneficial microorganisms, that play an important role in our nutrient absorption, immune functions and protecting us against harmful pathogens. Instead, our microbiome is under constant pressure from modern diets, chemical overload and excessive antibiotic, alcohol and coffee use.

When most of us think about gut health, we think of probiotics - kefir, sauerkraut and expensive supplements. But what if one of the most powerful ways to support our gut isn't adding more bacteria at all? What if it's feeding the beneficial bacteria that are already there?

This is where resistant starch comes in.

Over the past few months I've been diving deep into the research surrounding resistant starch and the gut microbiome, and I have read many scientific reviews exploring how resistant starch interacts with our gut microbes and the compounds they produce. What I like the most about all of this, is how simple the concept is. We're not talking about expensive supplements, we're talking about foods that many of us already eat. Potatoes, rice, legumes and green bananas. They are all foods that, when prepared in the right way, can become powerful fuel for the beneficial microbes living within us.

Most starches we eat are broken down and absorbed in the small intestine, When we eat freshly cooked rice, bread, pasta, or potatoes, digestive enzymes break those starches down into glucose, which are then absorbed into the bloodstream. Resistant starch does exactly what the name suggests, it resists digestion in the small intestine and passes undigested into the large intestine where it is fermented by our microbiota. You could say it acts like a fibre. Instead of feeding us, it feeds our microbiome.

Top dietary sources of resistant starch are: Beans, lentils, chickpeas and green peas. Oats, barley and wheat also contain large amounts when consumed in their unprocessed forms. Root vegetables such as potatoes, yams and kumera, especially when cooked then cooled. Green bananas and plantains are also a high food source. Pasta, when cooked and cooled is also a good source of resistant starch. Fermented rice and sourdough bread is also very high in resistant starch. Its not just about incorporating these foods into our diets though, its about combining them with other healthy foods. Variety is key. A healthy, varied microbiome thrives on a diet that contains a good balance of different foods and nutrients.

Our digestive tract is home to trillions of microorganisms collectively known as the gut microbiome. These microbes are essential to human health. They help us to digest food, produce essential vitamins, support immune functions, influence our inflammation processes, produce beneficial compounds and communicate with our nervous systems. Like every living thing, our resident bacteria need food, and resistant starch happens to be one of their favourite meals.

When resistant starch reaches our colons, the beneficial bacteria living there begin fermenting it. This fermentation is simply the process by which the microbes break down the compounds we cannot digest ourselves. During this process they produce a number of substances, the most notable being short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs). SCFAs are some of the most important compounds made inside our gut.

The three major SCFAs are:

🌿 Acetate. Acetate is the most abundant short-chain fatty acid. Once produced, it can travel throughout the body and be used as an energy source by various tissues.

Research suggests acetate may play roles in our energy production, metabolic regulation, appetite signalling and the communication between our gut and other organs. Additionally, studies have found that circulating acetate can cross the blood-brain barrier and influence brain functions, especially in regulating appetite, this is one of the reasons why we have the feeling of being full for so long after eating resistant starch. Honestly, I can eat resistant starch for breakfast around 6am and not get hungry again until 1 or 2 pm. Its really amazing. Acetate also has anti-inflammatory properties, and may modulate inflammatory responses and aid chronic inflammatory disorders. Think of acetate as the microbiomes most widely distributed messenger and fuel source for the body.

🌿 Propionate. Propionate is largely processed by the liver. Research suggests it may help support healthy blood sugar regulation as well as our metabolic balance and glucose metabolism. Propionate appears to help the body communicate more effectively about energy use and storage. Another intriguing aspect of propionate is its capacity to influence the gut-brain axis. Research suggests that it can signal the brain to produce appetite-regulating hormones, potentially influencing satiety and energy intake. This is why resistant starch plays such a big role in weight management. In terms of immune regulation, propionate also exerts anti-inflammatory effects in the body.

🌿 Butyrate. Butyrate is often considered the superstar of the microbiome world. Unlike acetate and propionate, butyrate is primarily used locally within the gut. The cells lining the colon rely heavily on butyrate as their preferred fuel source, and without adequate butyrate production, the intestinal lining may not function as effectively. The latest research suggests butyrate helps support: gut barrier integrity, digestive health, healthy immune regulation, balanced inflammatory responses and a healthy intestinal environment. Butyrates role in maintaining the gut barrier function is vital in preventing unwanted substances from entering the bloodstream, thereby averting potential inflammatory responses and allergic reactions that can be traced back to gut and microbiome dysfunction. Butyrate does much more than nourish the cells lining the colon. Research suggests it can influence how certain genes are switched on and off, helping regulate cell growth, repair, and normal cell life cycles. Butyrate has a potential role in supporting colon health and reducing the risk of abnormal cell growth, as it encourages damaged or abnormal colon cells to undergo normal programmed cell death (apoptosis). Butyrate also has powerful anti-inflammatory effects. It appears to help calm excessive immune responses and encourages the development of specialised immune cells that help maintain balance within the digestive tract. This is one reason butyrate is receiving significant attention in research into inflammatory bowel conditions and overall gut health.

SCFAs as a whole also modify gut pH and move it towards an environment that is favorable towards the growth of beneficial bacteria, but inhospitable to pathogenic strains.

🫐 My gluten and dairy free resistant starch breakfast 🫐

As I began exploring resistant starch, I noticed something. All the recipes I found online revolve around overnight oats (If you can eats oats, overnight oats are an excellent source of resistant starch). The problem? I don't eat gluten or dairy. While some people can eat oats and tolerate them perfectly well, they aren't the right option for me, if I eat any foods containing gluten and diary I get very bad flare ups of inflammation which leads to pain and mobility issues in my legs. All the recipes I found online also contained a gluten and diary free option. Swap the oats out for buckwheat goats or quinoa they said..... I'm not sure if the people who say these things have ever tried what they write, but let me tell you. Buckwheat groats or quinoa soaked overnight is not a nice thing. And they really doesn't soak up any of the liquid or soften that much. In one word.... yuck! I want my food to be good for me and taste good as well!

So I started experimenting. After quite a bit of trial and error, and many inedible dishes, I came up with a simple overnight rice recipe that combines several different microbiome-supporting foods in one bowl. And so here is my.......

Gluten & Dairy Free Overnight Rice

Ingredients

• 1 cup cooked organic jasmine rice (starchy rice varieties work best. Basmati rice will not work in this recipe.)

• ½ cup kefir (water or coconut milk kefir, raglan makes a coconut kefir milk now which is delicious, or if you tolerate dairy you can use that too)

• ¼ tsp Ceylon cinnamon

• Pinch of salt

• 1 Tbsp chia seeds softened in 3 Tbsp water for 10 minutes (if you can tolerate chia, if not leave this step out.)

Mix together and leave in the fridge overnight or for at least 8 hours.

The following morning top with:

• Walnuts

• H**p seeds

• Blueberries

Optional sweetener if you think you need it you can drizzle 1 tsp of either maple syrup, coconut sugar or honey on top. And I promise you..... this recipe is absolutely delicious. It provides a thick creamy breakfast. I usually let it warm up to room temperature before I eat it and you can heat it very gently on a low temperature if you prefer. But do not heat to high temps as that will destroy the resistant starch and the probiotics.

🌸 Tip - when you cook your organic rice, don't rinse it, you need all the starch to make this work. I found jasmine rice to be the best. I cooked 1 cup of rice in 1 ¼ cups of water using the absorption method. Bring the rice to a simmer, cook for 10 mins covered, then take off the heat and let it stand with the pot lid on, for 10 mins. This made 3 cups of very sticky rice which is perfect for this and makes 3 breakfasts.

This recipe supports the gut biome in the following ways:

The cooked and cooled rice provides the resistant starch. The kefir provides beneficial microorganisms (probiotics) and other fermentation products. The chia seeds provide soluble fibre and mucilage that helps nourish our microbes and also helps to repair our gut mucosa. The walnuts contain fibre and polyphenols that gut bacteria can utilise, and the h**p seeds provide healthy fats, minerals and additional fibre. The Blueberries.... well they are worth a mention all on their own, they provide anthocyanins and other polyphenols that may support beneficial microbes including Akkermansia. More about this below. In many ways this recipe combines four important microbiome-supporting categories:

✓ Resistant starch

✓ Fermented foods

✓ Soluble fibre

✓ Polyphenol-rich foods

Meet Akkermansia - one of the most interesting gut bacteria we have. Akkermansia muciniphila lives within the mucus layer lining our digestive tract. At first that sounds concerning because Akkermansia actually feeds on our mucin, the substance that forms our mucus layer. However, by doing so it appears to stimulate the body to produce fresh mucus. Think of it like pruning a fruit tree in your garden. A little removal encourages renewal.

Healthy populations of Akkermansia have been associated with: a stronger gut barrier function, improved metabolic health, better blood sugar regulation, reduced inflammatory markers and greater microbial diversity. And here is where the blueberries come in, blueberries are rich in compounds called polyphenols. More specifically, they contain anthocyanins, the pigments responsible for their deep blue-purple colour. Many of these compounds survive digestion and reach the colon where they interact with the microbiome. And these polyphenols are one of the favorite foods and they help encourage the growth of beneficial bacteria including Akkermansia. This is one reason blueberries are often highlighted in gut health research. They are not simply a source of antioxidants. They may also act as food for beneficial microbial communities.

‼️ An important note. Not everyone responds to resistant starch in the same way. People with IBS, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), sensitive digestion and existing bloating and gas issues may need to introduce resistant starch gradually and slowly. When beneficial bacteria suddenly receive more food, fermentation increases, for some people this can temporarily lead to an increase is gas, bloating, abdominal discomfort and changes in bowel habits. This doesn't necessarily mean resistant starch is unsuitable for you, It may simply mean the microbiome needs time to adapt. Research has shown that with persistance, the microbial environment will change for the better and the symptoms will ease. A gradual approach is often best. Start with small portions and observe how your body responds.

There is no universal response to dietary changes. Two people can eat the exact same food and experience completely different microbial changes. Why? Because each person's microbiome is unique. The bacteria living inside you today is different from those living inside someone else. This is why personalised nutrition is so important.

The more we learn about the gut microbiome, the clearer it becomes that health isn't simply about feeding ourselves. It's also about feeding the trillions of organisms that live alongside us.

Resistant starch provides a simple, affordable way to do exactly that. Whether it comes from cooled rice, potatoes, legumes, or green bananas, resistant starch can help nourish beneficial bacteria and support the production of compounds such as acetate, propionate and butyrate. And sometimes supporting your microbiome doesn't require another supplement. Sometimes it starts with yesterday's rice, a handful of blueberries, and understanding that the bacteria living inside you need feeding too.

Let your food be your medicine.

Kim x

08/06/2026

Hi, my name is Kim and I am the founder of Amor Mederi Herbals. Amor Mederi Herbals was born because I believe herbal medicine should be more than bottles of extracts made by large faceless corporations. That true herbal medicine is made through relationships with the plants themselves.

Amor Mederi Herbals is a return to grass roots herbalism. A return to the ancient. A return to our heritage.

Every single remedy is crafted in relationship with our green brothers and sisters, with love, intention and respect. All made in house, from scratch. No mixing of pre-made extracts. Just plants and the medium they do best in. All organic - no chemicals, no sprays, no toxins. The most common comment I get from my customers is that my products are so much more effective than the bottle of tablets they had. This is the difference between herbs squashed into tablets and those prepared with reverence and respect. I do not use plants for my remedies. I enter into relationship with them. Its a big difference.

Amor Mederi Herbals. Grounded in the belief that herbal medicine is the birthright of us all.

Claim your health, your body and your right to live in relationship with yourself and the plants that surround you.

Love Kim ###

P.S. You can read more about me and how I ended up here on my website. Link in bio

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Coffee is one of the most loved beverages in the world, and I'm one of the people that loves it.  For many people, it is...
02/06/2026

Coffee is one of the most loved beverages in the world, and I'm one of the people that loves it. For many people, it is part of a morning ritual. The smell, the warmth, the comfort of wrapping your hands around a steaming mug before the day begins. For some, it feels almost sacred.

Yet coffee is also one of the most misunderstood substances when it comes to health. Depending on who you ask, coffee is either a superfood packed with antioxidants or a digestive disaster that should be avoided entirely. As with most things in health, I don't believe the answer is quite that simple, I always believe the answer lies somewhere in the middle.

I think coffee is one of those substances that can be both helpful and harmful, depending on the person sitting in front of you. The question is not "Is coffee good?" or "Is coffee bad?" The question is: Is coffee right for my constitution, my body, and my current state of health?

Let's start with the positives of coffee, because there are many. Coffee contains hundreds of biologically active compounds, including antioxidants known as chlorogenic acids. Research has associated moderate coffee consumption with benefits such as: improved mental alertness, improved physical performance, reduced risk of type 2 diabetes, reduced risk of certain neurodegenerative diseases and increased antioxidant intake.

Interestingly enough, coffee may also support the gut microbiome. Some studies suggest that coffee consumption increases populations of some beneficial bacteria and may contribute to a greater microbial diversity. This is one of the reasons coffee can be so confusing. Something that aggravates one person's digestion may actually support another person's gut ecosystem.

The human body is rarely black and white, which is why I have always believed that there is no such thing as one size fits all.

Coffee is also a powerful stimulant. When we drink coffee, several things happen almost immediately. The stomach increases acid production. The nervous system becomes more activated. The bowels become more stimulated. Stress hormones can rise. For somebody with a strong digestive system and a resilient nervous system, this may not create any noticeable problems, but for somebody with underlying inflammation, digestive sensitivity, anxiety, adrenal depletion, reflux, gastritis, or a highly reactive nervous system, the story can be a very different one. Coffee can become less of a nourishing morning ritual and more of a daily irritation.

One of coffee's most noticeable effects is its ability to stimulate digestion. Many people joke that coffee is their morning laxative. That affect is real. Coffee encourages movement throughout the digestive tract and can increase contractions in the bowel. For somebody struggling with sluggish digestion, this can be beneficial. For somebody already dealing with irritation, inflammation, diarrhoea, IBS, reflux, or gut sensitivity, it can sometimes add fuel to the fire. Coffee also stimulates gastric acid production. Again, this is not automatically bad.

Healthy stomach acid is essential for digesting protein, absorbing minerals, and protecting us from pathogens. The problem occurs when excess stimulation meets an already irritated digestive tract. That is often when symptoms such as: heartburn, reflux, burning sensations, upper abdominal discomfort, nausea and gastritis begin to appear.

One of the lesser-known effects of coffee is its ability to increase cortisol, one of the body's primary stress hormones. Cortisol is not the enemy, in fact we need it to wake up in the morning, regulate blood sugar, and respond to the demands of daily life. The issue arises when coffee is layered on top of an already stressed system. Drinking coffee on an empty stomach, skipping meals, working long hours, poor sleep, emotional stress, and physical exertion can all raise cortisol independently. When combined with caffeine, the result can be a significant stress signal to the body. For some people this may show up as anxiety, jitters, disrupted sleep, digestive discomfort, or heartburn. This may be one reason coffee feels wonderful on some days and leaves us feeling depleted on others.

One thing I love about traditional herbal medicine is that it recognizes that people are different, that the same plant can help one person and aggravate another. Coffee is a perfect example. Energetically, coffee is generally considered to be hot, dry, stimulating and moving. For someone who is naturally cold, sluggish, damp, stagnant, and low in energy, coffee may actually feel wonderful. It brings movement, creates warmth and cuts through heaviness. But for someone who is already hot and dry? The story may be very different. Adding more heat to an already overheated system is rarely a recipe for balance. Adding more dryness to a dry constitution often creates even more dryness. Over time this may contribute to heartburn, reflux, irritation, restlessness, anxiety, insomnia, dry tissues, dehydration, and nervous system depletion

In traditional systems of medicine, balance is often achieved by moving in the opposite direction. If the body is hot and dry, we seek cooling and moistening influences.

Enter Dandelion roasted root. For some people she is a perfect swap out for the morning coffee. Roasted Dandelion root has a rich, coffee like flavour that scratches some of the same itch as coffee without the intense stimulation.

Unlike coffee, dandelion root is considered: bitter (something many of us are lacking in our diets), cooling, gentle, nourishing to digestion and supportive of liver functions. Rather than pushing the nervous system harder, she works with the body's digestive processes. The bitter principles stimulate digestive secretions in a far gentler way than coffee's caffeine-driven effect.

Dandelion root is often described as a liver herb, but that hardly does her justice. Traditionally regarded as both a bitter tonic and an alterative, dandelion works by gently stimulating digestive secretions from the moment she touches the tongue. Her bitter compounds signal the stomach, liver, gallbladder and pancreas to prepare for digestion, increasing the flow of digestive juices and encouraging the release of bile. Bile is not only essential for breaking down fats; it is also one of the body's major routes for eliminating cholesterol, hormones, toxins and metabolic waste. In this way, dandelion can be thought of as a herb that restores movement where there is stagnation. Rather than forcing the body, she encourages flow. Flow of bile, flow of digestion, flow of elimination.

Traditional herbalists have long turned to dandelion when there are signs of sluggishness, heaviness, congested skin, poor fat digestion, constipation, or a general sense that the body's cleansing pathways are not moving as freely as they should. As an alterative, she is believed to gradually improve the quality of the body's internal terrain over time, helping organs of elimination work more efficiently rather than acting as a harsh purge. Perhaps this is why dandelion has remained one of the most respected herbs in traditional medicine for centuries. She is not a quick fix. She is a restorer of healthy function.

Dandelion root is also rich in prebiotic fibre.

The main prebiotic fibre in dandelion root is inulin, a type of fructan. Inulin is water-soluble, which means it does extract into a decoction. In fact, one reason roasted dandelion root has traditionally been used as a beverage is that a portion of the inulin moves into the water during preparation. This is another reason why Dandelion decoctions are so beneficial to the gut.

Many people find roasted dandelion satisfying as a transition beverage when reducing coffee consumption. She still offers the same morning ritual without overstimulation and with all the amazing health benefits I mentioned above.

If you are someone who is still looking for the energy hit that coffee brings you could consider adding a few drops of siberian ginseng tincture (Eleutherococcus senticosus) to your dandelion coffee. Coffee gives energy by stimulating, Siberian Ginseng helps with energy by building resilience. In herbal medicine this herbal ally is considered to be an adaptogen. Adaptogens don't simply push the body harder, instead, they help the body adapt to physical, mental, and environmental stress.

After consistently using Siberian Ginseng many people notice: better stamina, improved resilience to stresses, more stable energy with less energy crashing and a better capacity to handle the daily stresses life hands to us. The feeling is often steadier and more sustainable than the quick lift and subsequent drop many people experience with caffeine.

For me, a mug of roasted dandelion root with a small amount of Siberian Ginseng tincture feels like a beautiful compromise. The ritual remains. The warmth remains. The morning pause remains. But the harsh stimulation does not and I know I am doing my body a big favor.

One of the lessons herbal medicine has taught me over many years is that symptoms are often information, not enemies, not inconveniences.

Not something to simply suppress.

Information.

Sometimes the body is telling us that what once worked no longer does. Sometimes a remedy, food, or habit that suited us ten years ago no longer suits us today. This is simply a sign that our body has changed.

Coffee may be a wonderful ally for some people. For others, it may be a hidden source of irritation, the key is learning to listen. Not to the latest health trend. Not to social media. Not to dogma.

But to our own bodies. Because ultimately, you are the expert on what belongs in it. We just need to start listening to what it is saying.

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I have Dandelion root available in certified organic dried, roasted. I also have it and Siberian Ginseng available in tincture form. I will post links to all the products in the comments.

We are taught to fear every symptom.To silence the fever.Suppress the rash.Stop the mucus.Fight the process.But what if ...
28/05/2026

We are taught to fear every symptom.

To silence the fever.
Suppress the rash.
Stop the mucus.
Fight the process.

But what if sometimes our bodies are not failing…
What if they are just trying to restore some balance?

I love the idea of the healing crisis through the lens of terrain theory (and I try to look at my garden in the same way), the belief that the state of our terrain matters just as much as the microbes themselves.

And instead of asking ourselves: “How do I fight this?”
perhaps we begin asking: “How do I nourish myself through this while I heal?”

I have also included a basic guide to human constitutions and some of my favourite nourishing herbs for different body types. As there is no such thing as one size fits all. I couldn’t include every nourishing herb here, there are so many! But if you see me at a market you can always stop and chat and ask what might suit you.

Because herbalism is never just about symptoms.
It is about understanding the person that has the symptoms.

Love,
Kim x

Ive written a new blog where I explore the deeper relationship between emotions, the nervous system, sleep and the plant...
27/05/2026

Ive written a new blog where I explore the deeper relationship between emotions, the nervous system, sleep and the plants themselves. Not just how herbs like valerian, skullcap and passionflower affect the brain chemically, but why traditional herbalists like me, have long believed plants can help soften the emotional patterns we carry in our bodies.

Because sometimes our exhaustion is not simply physical.

Sometimes it is years of holding everything together.
And sometimes healing begins the moment the body realises it no longer has to stay braced against life.

You can find the link to my latest blog in my latest story.

Live Now!Can't believe it has been one year.  Time to collapse in an exhausted heap! 🤣
25/05/2026

Live Now!
Can't believe it has been one year. Time to collapse in an exhausted heap! 🤣

One year ago, on the 26th of May 2025, Amor Mederi Herbals came into the world.This little apothecary has grown from a d...
25/05/2026

One year ago, on the 26th of May 2025, Amor Mederi Herbals came into the world.

This little apothecary has grown from a deep love of plants, healing, and the belief that herbal medicine still has an important place in our modern world, and that it needn't only be clinical. That it can still be effective, but magical and mystical all at the same time.

To celebrate one full year of Amor Mederi, I’ll be holding my biggest sale of the year for one day only on May 26th.

This is simply my way of saying thank you.
Thank you for supporting small handmade herbal medicine. Thank you for every order, message, conversation and kind word over my first year. It’s been quite a ride. Its brought out every fear and insecurity I've ever had and has prompted so much growth. I'm definitely not the same person that started this business.

Thank you guys
From the bottom of my heart.

And to all the plants everywhere… may we all learn to see you exactly as you are..... living, breathing, sentient beings.
My work is in honour of you all.
My hope… is that I may continue to do justice to all that you are. 🙏

Love Kim xx

Amor Mederi is for those who want more than convenience.For those who care how their remedies are made, not just what th...
22/05/2026

Amor Mederi is for those who want more than convenience.

For those who care how their remedies are made, not just what they claim to do.

Amor Mederi is for people who value purity over speed, whole plants over isolated extracts,
and remedies made by human hands, not machines in factories.

Everything here is created from scratch.
From wildcrafted or certified organic herbs, slowly prepared, intentionally combined, and handled with reverence at every stage.

No outsourced extracts made by faceless corporations.

I don’t blend pre-made anonymous ingredients.
I work with the plants directly - because relationship matters.

What guides the process:
🌸 Whole-plant integrity
🌸 Organic & ethically sourced herbs
🌸 Traditional herbal wisdom, practiced with precision
🌸 Care for the body as something intelligent and worthy of respect

This is herbal medicine for people who listen to their bodies. Grass roots herbal medicine at its best.

For those who believe healing should feel supportive, not forceful.
For those who understand that love is a valid medicine.
All remedies are prepared with love.
Always with intention.
Always with care.

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Whangarei

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