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This loose herbal tea blend of nettle, oatstraw, red raspberry leaf, and alfalfa is a great, traditional nourishing drink for trying to conceive through the postpartum period.
A handcrafted herbal womb and abdominal oil for routine care and connection. These are is traditionally inspired herbs infused in nourishing oils to support ritual, massage, rest, cyclical tending, and healing.
Not intended for use during pregnancy.
Let these seeds nourish you as you nourish your baby. With a fragrant blend of fenugreek, fennel seeds, milk thistle, and cardamom, these herbs are traditionally known to support milk supply while breastfeeding.
A longtime companion to the womb. Red raspberry leaf has been trusted across generations to tone, strengthen, and prepare — from the weeks before birth through the tenderness of recovery. Simple, steady, and deeply nourishing. This is the herb you return to.
Perenium oil is such an important tool in childbirth preparation, as you support your body to stretch to create an entry for your bundle of joy to come earthside. Enjoy this lavendar-rose scented oil blend of sweet almond, olive, and vitamin e oils.
Sometimes our bodies ask us for slowness in pregnancy. This blend of traditionally soothing herbs, lavender, ginger, and peppermint, supports ease of morning (and motion) sickness when drank in the evening and shortly after waking.
The birth is not the end of the work — it's a threshold. This red tea was made for what comes after: the healing, the opening, the becoming. Red raspberry leaf, nettle, hibiscus, and roasted ginger, rooted in ancestral wisdom and steeped with intention for the body that just did something extraordinary.
Ceylon cinnamon, infused slowly and intentionally. A warming ally for the blood, it supports circulation and balance through all the remarkable work your body is doing during pregnancy and beyond.
Fenugreek, alfalfa, goat's rue, moringa. A simple brew for a sacred time. These four have stood beside nursing mothers for generations — not to do the work, but to remind the body it already knows how.