There is medicine all around you. If you listen, it will guide you.

If you’ve felt the pull toward plant medicine, this is your call.

Guided Plant Walks

Why go on a plant walk?

Maybe you’re craving connection.

To the land. To the plants. To other women. Maybe even back to yourself.

A guided plant walk is more than education (though you’ll definitely learn a lot). It’s a way to slow down, breathe deeply, and remember that you’re part of something ancient and alive. You’ll meet the plants that grow around you—right here, in your own landscape—and learn how to identify and work with them. But you’ll also spend time in good company, sip warm tea, and be held by nature in a seasonally aligned way.

Sometimes all we need is a nudge to get outside and reconnect.

This is your nudge. Come walk with me.

Upcoming Plant Walks

  • Witchy Weeds

    September 12, 2025

    10:30AM - 12:00PM

    $50 /pp

    Kids are free

    Location TBD

  • Radical Roots

    October 4th, 2025

    10:30AM - 12:00PM

    $50 /pp

    Kids are free

    Location TBD

  • Tree Medicine

    January 10th 2026

    10:30AM - 12:00PM

    $50 /pp

    Kids are free

    Location TBD

What You’ll Learn

Each walk is a blend of hands-on learning, seasonal connection, and spacious time in nature. You’ll leave with a deeper relationship to the land around you—and practical tools to carry that connection into your daily life.

On every walk, we’ll cover:

  • How to confidently identify local medicinal plants

  • What they offer for body, spirit, and seasonal support

  • Which parts to gather (and when) for ethical foraging

  • Simple ways to work with the plants at home (tea, ritual, steam, etc.)

  • A seasonal recipe or practice to take with you

Whether you’re brand new to herbalism or deepening your roots, these walks are meant to meet you where you are.

Dive Deeper…

Witchy Weeds

Spooky Season is a portal. A time to see beyond the veil—into the parts of ourselves, and the world, that most people rush past or try to ignore.

This walk is an invitation to explore the weeds that thrive in the cracks, the rocky soils, the overlooked spaces—plants like mugwort, yarrow, goldenrod, and others that grow strong where it’s hard to grow. These are the outcasts of the plant world, and they mirror our own shadow journeys: the parts of us shaped by hardship, wildness, and transformation.

Together, we’ll work with these deeply magical, deeply medicinal plants—learning how they support not just the body and our bleed, but also the spirit. This is about reclaiming what’s been cast aside. It’s about seeing what’s always been there.

You’ll learn:

  • How to identify and connect with powerful wild “weed” herbs

  • What they offer for menstrual health, energetic protection, and ritual work

  • What parts to gather and how to work with them in your own practice

  • A simple tea or ritual to carry the wisdom of these plants into the dark season

Radical Roots

Even though the leaves have fallen and the flowers are gone, there’s still medicine waiting—deep below the surface. This walk is all about the roots: burdock, yellow dock, echinacea (if we’re lucky), and other local herbs that are still harvestable before the ground freezes.

Root medicine reminds us that real healing doesn’t come from band-aids. It comes from depth, nourishment, and long-term care. Together, we’ll dig into what these roots offer for digestion, immunity, and whole-body vitality.

You’ll learn:

  • How to identify root herbs in the field (even when they look half-dead)

  • When and how to ethically harvest roots in the fall

  • What these roots are used for in traditional herbal practice

  • A slow-simmered root decoction recipe to support your system this season

Tree Medicine

This isn’t just a walk to learn about winter plants—it’s a walk with them.

In this quiet season, the forest offers something many of us don’t get enough of: stillness, support, and space to just be. As we walk slowly through a local forest trail, we’ll meet some of our region’s most generous winter healers—cedar, pine, spruce, and possibly hemlock—and learn how to recognize them, how to work with them, and what they offer for body, spirit, and home apothecary.

But the walk itself is part of the medicine. Forest spaces can hold whatever we bring. You don’t need to be cheerful or clear or grounded. Just come as you are. We’ll move at a gentle pace, practicing presence and observation, allowing the land to hold what we don’t need to carry.

You’ll learn:

  • How to confidently identify local conifer species

  • What each tree offers medicinally and energetically

  • The best practices for harvesting tree medicine without causing harm

  • A recipe for a conifer steam or tea to open the lungs and clear the mind

Check the Calendar