Trees That Heal: A Two-Part Live Online Workshop

Trees That Heal: A Two-Part Live Online Workshop

Brand: Eatweeds Press
42.00 USD In stock Buy at Merchant

From bark to berry - how to harvest, preserve, and use what the trees give you. The live event takes place on Monday, 22nd and Monday 29th June 2026. Trees have been used as medicine for thousands of years. Most of us know a little - willow for pain, elderberry for colds - but the full picture is much wider than that. The problem is that most of what's available on medicinal plants is either too vague to be useful, or too clinical to be approachable. You end up with a list of Latin names and no real sense of what to do with them, or how to do it safely. This two-part workshop changes that. Session one covers the science and safety of medicinal trees. Session two covers the practical craft of turning a harvest into remedies you can store and use all year round. What's covered Session 1: Understanding medicinal trees (Monday 22nd June) Which native trees have solid research behind them, and what conditions they're used for How hawthorn and willow work, and why that affects whether they can be used alongside prescription medication Which introduced species - including ginkgo and hibiscus - extend the range of tree medicine beyond British hedgerows How to make a tree tea, including a step-by-step example designed to support digestion and weight management Key phytochemical constituents and what they tell us about safe use and appropriate doses How to get more from fruits, nuts, bark, leaves, buds, and flowers than most people realise Session 2: Harvest, preparation, and home remedies (Monday 29th June) How to harvest and dry tree material - leaves, bark, flowers, and fruits - and why drying technique matters more than most people think How to make infused oils, syrups, and liqueurs using ordinary kitchen equipment Skin care preparations for conditions like eczema, insect bites, and first aid use, including birch, rosemary, juniper, and pine A store cupboard elderberry syrup for winter respiratory complaints A digestive liqueur - a bitter bark, herb, and spice blend to support digestion and reduce bloating What can go wrong with poorly made remedies, and how to avoid it Dosage and safety guidance to ensure preparations are used appropriately What makes this different Most herbal medicine content either treats safety as an afterthought or gets so cautious it becomes useless. A lot of preparation guides tell you what to make but not why one method works better than another. This workshop does both. Session one gives you the foundation: understanding the chemistry helps explain the traditional uses, and the same understanding tells you when to be careful. Session two builds on that, covering the practical reasons behind each preparation method - so you understand what you're doing rather than just following steps. Anne brings traditional use, phytochemical evidence, and practical application together, rather than treating them as separate subjects. Her background spans clinical practice, academic research, and years of growing and harvesting medicinal trees herself at Holt Wood Herbs in Devon. That combination shows in the quality and depth of what she teaches. Who this is for This IS for you if: You want to use herbal tree remedies but aren't sure which ones are safe or well-supported You or someone you care for takes prescription medication and you need to understand potential interactions You have access to trees or hedgerows and want to do more with what you harvest You want reliable store cupboard remedies for skin complaints, digestion, and winter colds You want to understand the underlying plant chemistry, not just follow instructions This is NOT for you if: You're looking for a simple list of remedies with no science behind it You want a food foraging course rather than a medicinal focus What you'll get A place on both live Zoom sessions Full recordings of both sessions, to watch at your own pace (two year access) A tree tea demonstration with a step-by-step example you can make at home Practical recipes for an elderberry syrup and a digestive liqueur Safety and dosage guidelines for home preparation and use The details Session 1: Monday 22nd June 2026, 18:30–19:30 (UK/London time) Session 2: Monday 29th June 2026, 18:30–19:30 (UK/London time) Location: Online via Zoom Places: Limited availability Can't make it live? Recordings of both sessions will be available afterwards. About Anne Stobart Anne Stobart is a medical herbalist, author, herb grower, and historical researcher. She directed the clinical herbal practitioner programme at Middlesex University and has published three books on medicinal plants, including Trees and Shrubs That Heal (Permanent Publications, 2023). She co-founded the Holt Wood Herbs medicinal forest garden project in Devon. Anne presents this workshop in collaboration with Robin Harford of Eatweeds. Book your place Two sessions covering medicinal trees properly - the science behind safe use, and the practical craft of making remedies that last. £30

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