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Herbal Studies: Private Wildcrafting Section

Wildcrafting is the practice of identifying, harvesting and using wild plants for food & wellness. This is an ongoing class designed to allow students who have completed my intro course to continue building their wildcrafting binders! 🌸
Heather Nerheim
Average rating:
4.8
Number of reviews:
(113)
Class

What's included

1 live meeting
45 mins in-class hours per week

Class Experience

US Grade 2 - 5
Hey Wildcrafters!  My name is Heather and I will be your guide on this learning journey!  Join me as we explore what’s blooming this week! 🌸  This is an ongoing class designed to allow students who have completed my introductory course to continue building their wildcrafting binders!  I strongly encourage the Introduction to Wildcrafting class be taken BEFORE joining the Wildcrafting Weekly lectures because then your student will have a strong foundation in plant morphology, plant identification, and safe and sustainable harvesting as well as a familiarity with the class format.

Do you want to know a secret?  I can talk to plants! That’s right, I can talk to all the plants and creatures of the forest, but the most important thing I do is to listen.  In order to unlock the magic of these healing plants, I listen and they teach me about their unique properties. I am an herbalist.

If you’ve taken my 4-week course β€œIntroduction to Wildcrafting” then you already have a solid foundation in wild plant identification, when and how to harvest wild plants ethically, and how to use them to help your friends, family, and yourself!  Wildcrafting Weekly allows you to dig deep into the details of one plant that is in season each week and continue to build your wildcrafting binders! 

**Most plants covered will be widespread in the United States, but I can’t guarantee that they will be available and/or at their peak harvest time in your region!

Each week we will learn a plant's:

🌿Common name
🌿Scientific name
🌿Family
🌿Parts of the plant that are used for food and/or traditional medicine
🌿Geographical distribution
🌿Botanical description 
🌿Key constituents
🌿Sustainability issues
🌿Uses & Preparations
🌿Safety
🌿Fun & unusual facts
Learning Goals
Each week we will learn a plant's:

🌿Common name
🌿Scientific name
🌿Family
🌿Parts of the plant that are used for food and/or traditional medicine
🌿Geographical distribution
🌿Botanical description 
🌿Key constituents
🌿Sustainability issues
🌿Uses & Preparations
🌿Safety
🌿Fun & unusual facts
learning goal

Other Details

Parental Guidance
**ATTENTION PARENTS! The information in this class is for educational purposes only. The instructor of this course disclaims any liability in connection with the use of this information. While all of the plants we are covering in this course are considered mild and safe for children, ingesting wild plants is inherently risky. Plants can easily be mistaken and every individual will vary in their physiological response to a plant that is touched or consumed. Please do not attempt self-treatment of a medical problem without consulting a qualified health practitioner.**
Supply List
A detailed monograph of the "plant of the week" will be provided with each class as well as a printable, blank Plant ID sheet for identifying the plant outside of class.  Some weeks there may be a recipe or coloring page for the plant of the week.
Β 2 files available upon enrollment
External Resources
Learners will not need to use any apps or websites beyond the standard Outschool tools.
Joined April, 2019
4.8
113reviews
Profile
Teacher expertise and credentials
Hi there!  My name is Heather and I live on a 20-acre farm nestled in a valley between two mountains in western Maryland. It's a magical place where the Shenandoah meets the Potomac and the Appalachian trail meanders through lush deciduous forests. On our farm we have dairy cows and goats, chickens, and rabbits.  We love making our own cheeses and ice cream and growing lots of veggies and herbs too! I homeschool my 4 children who are ages 10, 12, 16, and 18.  I love teaching children about the natural world, especially PLANTS! 🌼 🌿

In terms of formal education, I hold a bachelor's degree in Interdisciplinary Visual Art from the University of Washington.  My education in botany and herbalism has been a combination of many years of self-study, various classes with other incredible herbalists, and in 2021 I completed an advanced clinical program in herbalism. However, my greatest teachers of all have been the plants themselves!  There is no substitute for getting outside and spending time with the plants, tuning into each of their unique energies, and having real experiences using and working with them! 

In the past few years, I have had the joy of introducing over 1000 students to the wonders of wildcrafting!  I also have two groups of intermediate students who have been studying herbalism with me for 4 years now!

What is wildcrafting and why is it important?

Wildcrafting is the practice of identifying, ethically harvesting, and using wild plants for food and wellness.  This is what wildcrafting has done for my family and what I believe it will do for yours:

🌿 Reduces screen time & fosters connection:Β  It gets you outside!Β  I know we’re all a little stir crazy from spending more time indoors during the colder months and I’m willing to bet you’re tired of battling kids over screen time.Β  Wildcrafting inspires you to get outside as a family, get some fresh air, enjoy some quality time together, all while learning something awesome!

🌿 Encourages us to take responsibility for our own health:  Through learning about the plants we learn more about how our body systems work and how plants can work as our wellness allies. 

🌿 Fosters a sense of community: Allows children to learn about their local eco-systems.

🌿 Teaches a useful life skill: Most people don’t realize it, but there is wild food and medicine all around us!Β  Being able to identify wild edible plants is just plain cool! Β 

🌿 Might just save the world (no joke): In a world full of environmental challenges that are being met by more and more legislation and regulation we are forgetting a very important, the most important, part: education.Β  When children learn from a young age to respect and live in deep communion with the natural world they won’t need all the rules and regulations in the future to force them to make the right decisions about caring for the Earth.Β  As Socrates said, β€œAll wisdom begins in wonder.”  Teaching our children about the natural world is the single most important thing that we can do for the future of our beautiful planet and teaching it through the lens of healing might just be the most important thing weΒ do for the future of humanity.

You can also find me here: www.wildheart.farm

Reviews

Live Group Class
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$6

weekly
1x per week
45 min

Completed by 44 learners
Live video meetings
Ages: 7-11
3-8 learners per class

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