UPCOMING EVENTS
Herbal Beauty Workshop Series
with Lakeja Baylor
Hey beauties! Let’s make some herbal beauty products for your face, body and hair.
4:00 -5:15 pm on the following Saturdays:
June 7th: rollerball lip oils & a turmeric face-brightening mask/spot treatment
June 14th: marshmallow root hair detangler & castor oil brow/lash serum
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Community Medicine Making Circles
with Jen Halima
Come create botanical medicine and explore the foundations of herbalism. Build a home apothecary from locally grown herbs. You will make herbal oils, syrups, tea blends, tonics, nourishing treats and more!
6 Classes, next one May 24th
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Intro to Plant Communication ~ Aug 8th
&
Flower Essences 101 ~ Aug 9th
with Teacher, Author, & creator of Brigid’s Way ~ Jen Frey
Intro to Plant Communication
(Aug 8th, 6:30-8:30pm)
When you attend this delightful class, you’ll learn:
~Plants are conscious beings who learn, have memory, and respond to their surroundings, including our emotions.
~Humans and Plants have a deep bond.
~Communicating with Plants is a tool for our individual and collective evolution and healing.
Flower Essences 101
(August 9th, 9 am- Noon)
During this interactive workshop we will:
~Explore the healing gifts of several Essences
~Make an Essence together which you will take home to continue your exploration of Flower Essences.
Beets
/in Herb of the Month /by Ashley DavisFebruary is Heart Month, and beets are beneficial to our heart health. The red color gives you a clue that they are nourishing to the blood.
Actually, the red-violet pigment that gives beets their rich color comes from a compound called Betaine, which has been show to improve vascular health, lower blood pressure, protect the liver from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and protect other organs from inflammation. (1)
Beets also contain nitrate, which the body converts to vasodilating nitric oxide, another mechanism of lowering blood pressure (2).
AND, beets are loaded with polyphenols (antioxidant), carotenoids (precursor to Vitamin A), vitamin C, folate (vitamin B12), iron, potassium and other minerals (2). These phytonutrients work together to nourish the blood, reduce oxidative stress, lower inflammation & blood pressure, protect the blood vessels, support the liver & improve eyesight (2, 3)
According to Ayurveda, the sweet-tasting and dense beet is provoking for kapha dosha, and raw beets are provoking to pitta, while cooked beets pacify pitta dosha (3). The cooling quality is what helps to pacify pitta. The antioxidant bioflavonoids also reduce disorders related to heat/fire such as allergies, inflammation and infection.
February is a great time of year to detoxify the liver, before the rising temperatures of spring bring a surge in blood flow and biochemical activity.
Beet Muhammara (raw beet & walnut dip)
This was a customer favorite back in the day when we were offering more foods in the kitchen. Now you can enjoy it at home.
Instructions:
1) Biotricity
2) NIH
3) Joyful Belly