Sandra Hebner Herbalist and Natural Medicine

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Sandra Hebner Herbalist and  Natural Medicine Sandra teaches Herbal Medicine, is a natural health coach, hosts women’s spirituality groups and grows some of her family’s own food and medicine.

Sandra teaches classes on Herbal Medicine and does natural health consulting. She also hosts women’s spirituality groups and semi-successfully grows some of her family’s own food and medicine. She gives talks on the history of plant medicine, has a small but lively following and can be found in a tiny herbal medicine garden selling pewter figurines and providing herbal 1st aid to her zany constituents at the local Renaissance Faire on weekends in the late summer.

Just a small informational post for those that might be interested.It's a series of six 90-minute live online sessions, ...
09/05/2025

Just a small informational post for those that might be interested.
It's a series of six 90-minute live online sessions, each followed by a 30-minute breakout, designed to inspire, connect, and activate changemakers around the world.

Presencing Series: Sensing and actualizing the future that is in need of us. A series of six 90-minute online sessions designed to inspire, connect, and activate changemakers around the world. The future is reaching out to us—and together, we can respond with wisdom, courage, and collective intell...

I just wanted to make you all aware that 7Song, a much respected herbalist in our community and someone I studied with a...
15/04/2025

I just wanted to make you all aware that 7Song, a much respected herbalist in our community and someone I studied with at conferences over the years, has put up a free Herbal Database.
Please have a look and make use of it. Having put together handouts for my own students over the years I know exactly how labor intensive this was for him. And it is a gift from his heart to us, to you.

https://airtable.com/appGMlaqtjUqKFR3Z/shrD4A5ZyZeVJzJon/tbl2wdNWq6vJDJDKe/viwNSYOAZLXoBiN6P

While I borrowed this herb blurb from Ravensong Seeds and Herbals know that these are generally considered the top 5 spr...
27/03/2025

While I borrowed this herb blurb from Ravensong Seeds and Herbals know that these are generally considered the top 5 spring tonic herbs by most herbalists to give your body a good cleaning after a winter of rich and heavy food.

5 Spring herbs for cleansing & revitalization

1. Chickw**d

Chickw**d (Stellaria media) is a self-seeding annual that grows as a wild w**d in gardens and shady lawn edges across the continent and beyond. It is a small plant growing to only 6” or so high, then sprawling into mounds about 1ft wide. Many plants together will create a thick mat of w**ds. The small, pointy, egg-shaped leaves are opposite each other along the tender stems which display a line of tiny hairs running along the length of of one side.
This line of hairs running up the stems is a sure way to identify this species. Another key identifying feature of Chickw**d is the tiny white flowers. At first glance the flowers may appear to have many petals, but looking closely you will see that there are actually only five true petals with each divided almost in two, giving the appearance of ten.
The above ground parts of Chickw**d are tender and succulent and commonly used in the kitchen as a fresh salad green. The flavour is best described as ‘green’ with just a tiny hint of sweetness. The plant is packed with essential nutrients like Vitamin C, thiamine, riboflavin, beta-carotene, niacin, selenium, magnesium, zinc and copper. All in a form which is very bioavailable and easily utilized by the body.
In addition to being incredibly dense in nutrients which feed our cells and fuel so many activities needed for the maintenance of health and vitality; Chickw**d’s superpower is that it acts on the cellular level to increase metabolism. The herb increases the permeability of cells to the absorption of nutrients, and the removal of metabolic wastes.
This action can be very supportive for helping to eliminate any excess weight or accumulation of toxins in the tissues that can often occur over the winter months. Chickw**ds special cleansing action can help clear up allergies and skin issues; it can also support the body in dissolving masses, such as tumours and cysts. Chickw**d has shown a special affinity with reproductive health and when taken regularly may help with ovarian cysts.
Both the fresh plant tincture of Chickw**d, and the infused vinegar are wonderful ways to get the nutritive and medicinal properties of the herb. Chickw**d is an ingredient in our Divine Detox Tincture blend, as well as our Serene Skin Tincture. A salve may also be made which is incredibly soothing to skin irritations and can be helpful for rashes, eczema, and psoriasis.
If you are lucky enough to discover Chickw**d volunteering in your garden, it is a sign indicating that your soil is fertile and loamy. Preferring the cool temperatures and ample moisture of early spring, Chickw**d is often ready to harvest by early April in the PNW. If kept moist, the plants will keep producing up until the warmer weather of late may or early June arrives, at which time the plants will turn yellow and straw like, no longer useable for medicine, but full of ripened seeds which can be left to self-sow for next years crop.
Successive crops of Chickw**d may also be started from seed through out the spring and summer. As long as they are given nice loose, fertile soil, shade from the hot sun and plenty of water. These fast growing annuals are incredibly easy to grow from seed, and as long as you let them go to seed, they will return year after year. We have Chickw**d seeds available for growing in our shop here.

2. Dandelion

Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) the much loved and loathed w**d of lawns and pastures a plenty, is most easily identified by its deeply-toothed basal leaves, sunny golden multi-petalled flowers, and hollow stems that ooze a white sap when broken.
The entire Dandelion plant has edible, and has many virtues. As a spring green it is one of the most sought after. In fact, it is commonly grown on farms for this purpose and sold in produce sections across the planet. Though many battle with Dandelion in their own yards, why fight to eradicate this incredible superfood that grows for free right under your nose?
Spring Dandelion leaves are one of the first fresh greens available in spring. They can be eaten fresh or cooked and are incredibly jam-packed with nutrients. I like to add them in with braising greens like kale and spinach as a side dish. A little goes a long way with these bitter greens incredibly rich in minerals like iron, potassium, calcium, magnesium, copper, folate, and manganese; and Vitamins C, A, E, K, and B6.
Spring harvested Dandelion greens are tender and only mildly bitter, and lightly cooking them nearly eliminates the bitterness. As the season progresses, the leaves concentrate more and more bitterness. Though the majority of us modern humans have become unaccustomed to the bitter taste; it can actually be really good for you if you have slow digestion. Eating bitter greens before a meal was commonly practiced in many traditional diets to stimulate and prime digestion before ingesting heavier foods.
Aside from its bitterness, I’d have to say its action on the kidneys is Dandelions most pronounced superpower. One of the strongest diuretics in the Western Materia Medica, Dandelion leaf aids to powerfully flush out toxins through increasing kidney activity and the production of urine; while at the same time replenishing minerals, especially potassium, that may be lost through this action.
I’ve written much more on this beloved herb, including how to use the entire plant in the kitchen, medicinal uses, growing tips (yes we do sell the seeds!) and more in my blog Dandelion | Rooted Resiliency. Please check it out to learn more.

3. Cleavers

Cleavers (Galium aparine) is both a native plant and a w**d, found both in forests and in gardens. It is a bristly plant with whorled leaves and slender sprawling stems that trail along the ground or up and over whatever will support them such as walls, fences, and other plants. Though not technically a vine, Cleaves attaches itself to whatever it comes in contact with the small barbed hairs that grow all over its stems and leaves.
The plants are best for fresh eating while they are young and before they become too bristly. They can be harvested for medicine up until late spring when they open many tiny white star-like flowers. The flowers slowly mature and ripen into small green nut-like seeds which stick to pant legs and the fur of animals passing by.
Young Cleavers shoots have a lovely flavour and can be added to salads, smoothies, or added to dishes as a cooked green. Cleavers is wonderfully cleansing and nutritive, full of useful minerals and vitamins such as silica, Vitamin C and many flavonoids.
Like Chickw**d, Cleavers has a detoxifying action that can be useful for dissolving masses such as cysts and tumours in the body; more specifically it is known to aid in dissolving kidney stones. It is also a diuretic and makes a great bladder tonic.
Though this herb is just a fantastic all around alterative and blood cleanser, I like to think of Cleavers superpower as its ability to cleanse the lymph. I like to think of its bristly brush-like form as I imagine its constituents sweeping through the lymph system and helping brush it clean, helping to restore healthy lymph flow. Indicated for moist hot conditions with swollen glands, Cleavers can be a great aid to support the body after infection, improve immune health, clear up skin conditions, and reduce allergies.
Cleavers is an annual herb that is easy to grow in the garden and will self-seed and return year after year. We have fresh-plant tincture of Cleavers available in our online store, plus Cleavers is an ingredient in our Devine Detox Tincture blend. Seeds can be found here (we will have more in stock this fall).

4. NETTLE

Stinging Nettle (Uritica dioica) can be found growing throughout our mixed Alder and Poplar forests here on the West Coast. Look for deep green shoots, with finely-toothed heart-shaped leaves that appear opposite each other, and alternating up the stalk. The stem and undersides of the leaves are covered in fine stinging hairs which can be seen to the naked eye.
The new green shoots of Nettle can be harvested as soon as they are 4-6” high up until they begin to flower. The tender new shoots are ideal for culinary use, as the texture is most succulent at this time and the flavour is most sweet and earthy.
The new shoots also contain the highest percentage of bio-available minerals. Nettles are a true superfood, high in protein ~ 25% of their dried weight! ~ and chock full of minerals and vitamins, specifically iron, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, and vitamins A, C and K, as well as several B vitamins.
Adaptogen, diuretic, and anti-inflammatory, Nettle fortifies us, gives us endurance, and clears the excess dampness and stagnation from the body that often accumulates during the winter months. There is nothing I look forward to more than eating the first spring Nettles, and I would say the energy and feeling of vitality they bestow to the body and spirit is this herbs greatest superpower.
Also a great aid for seasonal allergies, Nettle is one of the main herbs in our Allergy Easer Tincture blend and honey. We also have a fresh batch of Nettle Tincture available in the shop here. And are stocked up with Nettle seeds for growing in your home garden.
Read more about this abundant spring superfood in my blog post Ringing (…or Stinging) in the Spring with Nettle.

5. Horsetail

Horsetail (Equisiteum spp) is an ancient plant native throughout planet earth. Long before the flowering plants and multitude of animal diversity, Horsetail forests dominated and towered over prehistoric life. Today there are a few common, and much smaller, species that can be found in the garden or along creek beds, wetlands, or throughout moist forests of the PNW.
Horsetail shoots are just coming up now, with the harvest season normally though late April and May. They are best harvested while the leaves are still upright against the stem and not open more than 45 degrees. Preparations made from mature plants may be irritating to the kidneys due to the formation mineral crystals.
For me, Horestail’s superpower is its ability to support joint health. Young Horsetail shoots contain the mineral silica in a form that is readily absorbable by our bodies. Silica is needed by the body to build collagen, which strengthens connective tissues such as fascia, cartilage and bones; as well as teeth, skin, and hair. Horsetail is one of the highest silica-containing plants on earth with over 35% of the plant made up of the mineral.
Horsetail also contains quercetin, a natural anti-inflammatory that can ease inflammation during allergic reactions. The herb is also wonderful for improving bladder health; it can reduce the frequency of bladder infections, and helps to flush uric acid from the body.
Horsetail is a main ingredient in our Bladder Benefit Tincture blend, our Heavenly Hair Rinse, and our Skin Sav-R Facial Toner.
I share more about the medicinal properties of Horsetail in my blog post Exquisite Equisteum | A Horsetail Tale. Check it out to learn more about harvesting and using this powerful healing herb.

24/03/2025
I wanted to start with sharing this lovely Spring message about adaptogenic herbs from Deb Soule, an incredible herbalis...
20/03/2025

I wanted to start with sharing this lovely Spring message about adaptogenic herbs from Deb Soule, an incredible herbalist I had the pleasure of learning from some 30 years ago. Adaptogens are plant based compounds that help your body stay balanced by offsetting imbalances caused by stressors. They bring a restored balance without the worry of causing the body to head to the opposite extreme.
* non-toxic when taken in normal doses.
* helps your body cope with stress.
* allows your body to return to homeostasis.

Adaptogenic herbs such as Eleuthero root, Ashwagandha root, and Schisandra berry have a normalizing effect on the body; helping the body better adapt to various kinds of stressors. Herbal adaptogens support normal metabolic processes and encourage overall balance to the mind, body, and emotions alongside nourishing food, time in Nature, exercise, meaningful connections with family and friends, and some form of daily gratitude practice. A daily practice I enjoy is greeting the sunrise, or even a cloudy dawn, with gratitude. Gratitude is a remedy for the various ways many people today feel discouraged, confused, and unsettled by all that is happening in the world.

For people whose digestion feels occasionally stressed, I encourage you to drink calming teas like our Peaceful Heart Tea and good quality organic Chamomile tea (which is readily available in most health food stores and some grocery stores — like Traditional Medicinals tea) for a few weeks before taking adaptogenic herbs as a way to relax the digestive system. Our Digestive Bitters can also be taken before each meal for many months (along with an adaptogenic herb) to support overall good digestion. Eating at a similar time each day, and going to bed and rising at a similar time each evening and morning, are also simple practices to regulate the nervous system. Soaking your feet several evenings a week in a relaxing hot bath with a few drops of Lavender or Chamomile essential oil also settles the nervous system.

For over 25 years, I have taken our Eleuthero Tincture in fall and winter to better prepare me for the upcoming farming season — I take 10 drops twice a day over a period of 4-6 months. During the winter months, I like to make a warm cup of Ashwagandha with milk, honey, and Rose Petal Elixir as a delicious and calming way to receive Ashwagandha's adaptogenic support. Throughout the year, 4-5 times a week, I like placing a dropperful of our fresh Schisandra Tincture into my quart water bottle that I then sip throughout the day. Schisandra is my favorite herb for strengthening an inner capacity to feel emotionally and mentally resilient, less reactive to challenging situations, and more centered in my emotional heart.

Buddhist Monk Thich Nhat Hanh's books and YouTube teachings continue to give me and millions of people skills and practices for maintaining a caring heart.

One of his long time students, Kaira Jewel Lingo, wrote an excellent book titled "We Were Made for These Times". At the end of chapter nine, she offers some journaling exercises for generating happiness and well-being including "Reflecting on gratitude and Random acts of kindness."

My Elder friend, herbalist, and gardener from VT, the late Adele Dawson, wrote the following sentences that have long resonated with me as a gardener:

"A garden, small or large, like a nuclear or extended family, gives us a protected, friendly place to grow — not only to grow herbs in a way compatible with nature, but to grow in our own psychic awareness, to cultivate our potential for being sensitive and responsible citizens of the planet and grateful caretakers of our inherited treasures."

Blessings,
Deb

So let me fill you all in on what's been going on for the last year plus... this will be a long post so get a cup of tea...
20/03/2025

So let me fill you all in on what's been going on for the last year plus... this will be a long post so get a cup of tea.
As some of you know we moved. We had long ago outgrown our workshop space and the town had long ago outgrown us. We like sleepy and quiet as far as living space and needed a place where the occasional banging of molds and air compressor noises would not annoy close neighbors. We needed to find a place in NY pretty far from the lower southeast corner of the state where we'd been for over 25 years as it has become terribly crowded. Finding a place that suited both business and home proved to be pretty difficult and the two places we found initially fell through. When I say this has been a long process I mean it. We went to closing on the new house and old house back in March of 2024 but it was too close to the Renaissance Faire season to move the business so we rented back the old house and shop from the new owner for the last year. We moved non-essential items and my stuff gradually when we could. I moved up after the faire season was over and traveled back and forth to help the boys finish packing up both the house and shop. The boys moved in permanently, shop and home, three weeks ago. The shop has a temporary set up so we could make products for the Norman Medieval Festival which the boys leave for at the end of next week. When they get back we will focus on getting the shop set up the way they need to and getting the dozens of totes and boxes in the house unpacked and put away. I did as much purging as I could before we moved but I want to still give away more so there will be a charity pile started as we unpack.

Anyway, that is why I have been away from this page and teaching and posting herb blurbs. We started looking for a place over two years ago and every bit of free time was dedicated to scouring the state for the perfect place, purging of unnecessary or unwanted possessions, working on the old house to get it ready for sale (wayyyy more work than any of us expected), continuing making product for and working our faires and festivals, packing and moving.

Sadly something in my life had to give and doubly sadly it was herbs. And again, sadly, I need more time. This next year we need to settle in, make this place our home (both living and working) and getting the lay of the land so to speak. We are living in dystopian times and now more than ever we need to be able to depend on our wits and skills to get us through. So while I will not be teaching this year I will be posting when I can to keep everyone engaged and, hopefully, practicing herbalism.

Winter is hanging on desperately up here in the Butternut Valley. We have beautiful 50 and 60 degree days and snow at night. The waterways are running hard with melted snows and occasional downpours and the green is springing forth from out Mother only to cower each night under frost and snow. No gardening yet for me. I love the craziness of March - in like a lion and out like a lamb. But I crave the warm Spring days and the greenness of my new home.

I will schedule a weekly post for now and hope to add a bit more here and there. I am hoping to make this a space for questions and sharing our knowledge, sharing the beauty around us and celebrating the natural world.

I have included a photo of our new place (please note the amazing potting shed that used to be a mail shack for the railroad that ran through here when it was a mill town, I am so excited to restore it!). Some maps call us the Southern Tier, some say we are Central New York. We are also known as the Leatherstocking Region. But it is beautiful here.

I will not be doing any herbal work or herbal teaching for 2024 and into the beginning of 2025. Everything is fine we ar...
21/01/2024

I will not be doing any herbal work or herbal teaching for 2024 and into the beginning of 2025. Everything is fine we are all healthy and good, we just have a lot going on this year so if this changes I will post it here.

I will keep you posted when I have more information.
Green blessings,
Sandra

Hi all, just popping on to post a link to Mountain Rose Herb's blog about choosing reputable seed companies and nurserie...
20/04/2023

Hi all, just popping on to post a link to Mountain Rose Herb's blog about choosing reputable seed companies and nurseries. It's full of information.

Not all nurseries and seed companies are created equally. Here are some guidelines and best practices to help you support the health and vitality of our planet through your garden purchasing choices.

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