Discover Medicinal Plants And Tonic Herbs Most Essential For Women’s Health

Did you know there’s a feminine way of plant medicine –– a way of working with the Earth and more deeply connecting with its healing plants?

It can even help recharge you to better navigate life’s many stressors –– from the workplace to family life to the challenges of aging.

On Thursday, February 7, herbalist, gardener, and author Deb Soule will share some of the medicinal plants and tonic herbs most valued for healing qualities specific to women’s health –– remedies to help women heal and thrive during different cycles of our lives — in a FREE virtual event, Discovering the Feminine Way of Plant Medicine: Healing Through the Wisdom of Natural Remedies, Rhythms & Relationships.

Find out more and reserve your place for this insightful virtual event here: Discovering the Feminine Way of Plant Medicine

Deb has over 30 years experience with growing, preparing, and using medicinal herbs, and her approach to herbalism is intimately tied to her view of the Earth as a living being.

During this virtual event, you’ll discover:

  • How dandelion can help to balance women’s hormonal shifts, particularly through menopause
  • Why biodynamic farming tracks the lunar rhythms particularly closely, leading to the best times to plant and harvest for greater vitality
  • How 3 different tonic herbs work in the different seasons of a woman’s life
  • Why it’s valuable to use different tonics in summer, fall, winter, and spring (which is especially important when you have distinct local seasons)
  • How you can connect with the spirit of a plant, which can lead to a deeper level of mind-body-spirit healing and realignment that goes beyond the physical level

Throughout the ages, women have called upon medicinal plants to nurture their relationship with the Earth, the cosmos, their spirituality, and their bodies.

If you, too, feel called to create greater harmony and healing of your body, mind, and spirit –– and that of the Earth –– do join Deb for this enriching hour-long event: Discovering the Feminine Way of Plant Medicine

Harold

P.S. If you’d like to open to the feminine way of relating to plant medicine by incorporating reciprocity, lunar and solar rhythms, and plant “spirits” into your approach to herbalism, register now for: Discovering the Feminine Way of Plant Medicine: Healing Through the Wisdom of Natural Remedies, Rhythms & Relationships.

RSVP for free, here: Discovering the Feminine Way of Plant Medicine

A downloadable recording will be provided later to all who register, whether or not you listen to the scheduled event.

About Deb Soule

Deb Soule is an herbalist, gardener, teacher, and author of The Woman’s Handbook of Healing Herbs and How to Move Like a Gardener. Raised in a small town in western Maine, Deb began organic gardening and studying the medicinal uses of herbs at age 16 alongside the internationally known medical herbalist Mary Bove. Deb’s faith in the healing qualities of plants includes a desire to make organic herbs easily accessible to women and families living in rural areas.

As Deb’s knowledge and faith in the efficacy of medicinal herbs grew, so did her desire to be of service to her community. In a small 8-by-10-foot room in her house, Deb began preparing various herbal remedies. In the fall of 1985, with her first mail order catalog and a small selection of herbal extracts and teas, Deb launched Avena Botanicals at the Common Ground Fair in Windsor, Maine. Five years earlier, while enrolled as a student at College of the Atlantic, Deb lived in Nepal close to three Tibetan monasteries. She was deeply influenced by the Tibetan people’s commitment to ease physical symptoms and mental and emotional upsets through plants, prayer, and other spiritual practices.

Deb’s passion for plants, gardens, and healing, and her commitment to sharing herbal knowledge with others is central to her work. She is frequently a guest lecturer at various conferences as well as an instructor for botany and horticulture students, garden clubs, and medical students. In 2005, People, Places & Plants magazine named Deb as one of the 50 most influential gardeners in the Northeast.

Deb’s life closely follows the yearly agricultural rhythm. From April through October, Deb spends most days with her hands in the earth tending three acres of medicinal plants using organic and biodynamic practices. During the spring and summer months, Deb teaches a variety of herb classes and offers bimonthly herb walks in Avena Botanicals’ herb gardens. Throughout the year, Deb writes herb articles, develops herbal remedies, and consults with clients and health care providers.