UPCOMING EVENTS
May 4th ~ Freshly Foraged Herbal Pestos, Dips & Vinegars
As part of Bailey’s Food as Medicine Series, this class will focus on how to enhance the flavor and vitality of your meals by adding freshly foraged herbs in a variety of delicious & nutrient dense ways.
3 pm- 5 pm
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Herbal Beauty Workshop Series
Hey beauties! Let’s make some herbal beauty products for your face, body and hair.
4:00 -5:15 pm on the following Saturdays:
May 3rd: beetroot eyeshadow & a matcha face mask
May 10th: rose blush & a cinnamon lip-plumping scrub
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! And you’ll get to take something home that we make together.
6 Classes, Starting April 26th
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SAVE THE DATE
Tonic’s 9 Year Anniversary
May 18th
We’ll be offering 20% off all retail products + our friend Cree will be offering an AstroHerbalism workshop. Come for a complimentary cup of tea and learn about the astrological influences of herbs!
Register for the AstroHerbalism Class Here
Hope to see you there!
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MOTHER’S DAY TEA CEREMONY
with Silvy Franco
Join Silvy for a meditative ceremony to commune with Camelia sinensis. Ceremony begins at 10:00 am and goes for an hour. Pre-registration is required. Suggested Donation: $20
Passionflower
/in Herb of the Month /by Ashley DavisThis month we are featuring Passionflower, a beautiful and supportive nervine. Stop in and try some of our locally grown passionflower from Sacred Roots Herbal Sanctuary.
Latin Name: Passiflora incarnata
Part Used: Dried leaves & stems
Tastes/Energetics: bitter, sour, cooling
Actions: nervine, anxiolytic, sedative, hypnotic, antispasmodic, anodyne
Uses: Passionflower calms the nervous system, improves mood and relieves anxiety. Passionflower is one of our favorite herbs for supporting sleep. As a sedative and hypnotic, it helps with the transition into sleep. It also quiets a racing mind and helps to break circular and repetative thought patterns that may be keeping you up at night. Its ability to tone down mental chatter makes it an ally for those who are incessant thinkers and chronic worriers. As an antispasmodic, passionflower is useful in any condition of muscle or nervous contraction or over-stimulation. It has been used, for example, in Parkinson’s disease as well as menstrual cramps, seizures, hysteria and nervous twitching. It can also calm nerve pain, such as the pain that accompanies shingles.
Contraindications: do not use concurrently with pharmaceutical sedatives.
Folklore: Passionflower’s unique floral arrangement inspired early Christian missionaries to appropriate its distinctive morphology as a symbol of Christ’s crucifixion. The 3 pistils represent the holy trinity, while the 12 petals represent the disciples. Passionflower’s corona resembles purple and white striped threads, which emerge in a beautiful crimped pattern. This visual conjures the feeling of a frayed and excited nervous system and serves as a reminder of its ability to calm & center our scattered & frazzled nerves.
Don’t forget that winter is the season for rest, and we should all be cutting back on our projects and surrendering to sweet slumber. Think of passionflower to help you align with the calling of the season.