herbs in green 5 300h

Lifetime Access

Content updated regularly
herbs in green 5 300h

Jargon Free

Identification tips, safety guidelines and instructions for using the plant as food and/or medicine
herbs in green 5 300h

Private Community

To ask Vivienne and other experts questions anytime
herbs in green 5 300h

Bring The Lessons With You

Download and view all videos on your mobile or tablet while you are out walking/foraging
herbs in green 5 300h

3 Live webinars

Join in to ask questions live
herbs in green 5 300h

Learn At Your Leisure

No homework or deadlines: just read & watch the lessons when it suits you

>>>> INCLUDES Q&A WEBINARS WITH VIVIENNE AND SPECIAL GUEST FORAGERS

VIDEO RECORDING AVAILABLE NOW

Special guest webinar about

Foraging in the City

With special guest forager John Rensten

Contrary to what you might expect, cities can be great places to forage for wild foods & medicinal herbs. John Rensten takes foraging walks in London and runs the websitehttp://www.foragelondon.co.uk/. He will share some of his tips with us about urban foraging. He is the author of The Edible City , a new book about the joys of finding wild food in the city.

VIDEO RECORDING AVAILABLE NOW

Special guest webinar about

Contemplating Plants

With special guest forager Robin Harford

Robin is a highly-regarded forager. His website eatweeds is considered to be one of the UK’s leading wild food foraging sites. He is a co-director of Plants & Healers International, a non-profit that connects people, plants and healers around the world, he travels extensively documenting and recording the traditional and local uses of wild food plants in indigenous cultures. Robin will introduce us to ‘contemplating plants’: a method that helps people to slow down and connect to plants on a deeper level.

Discover the fascinating world of edible and medicinal plants.
Learn at your leisure, wherever you live, whenever you want.

Learn with the seasons course inclusions

 

Contains all 3 courses:

1. EARLY SUMMER      2. HIGH SUMMER      3. AUTUMN

The Early Summer Course: This course features wild and cultivated medicinal herbs and edible plants that are usually available to pick and use in April, May & June (please note that seasonal variations in the weather will determine if and when the plants are available). It includes Nettle, Plantain, Cleavers, Hawthorn flowers and leaves, Silverweed, Daisy, Dandelion, Sorrel, Blackberry Leaves, Raspberry Leaves, Red Clover, Primrose and Elderflower.

The High Summer Course: This course features wild and cultivated medicinal herbs and edible plants that are usually available to pick and use in July & August (please note that seasonal variations in the weather will determine if and when the plants are available). It includes Calendula, St. John’s Wort, Self-Heal, Meadowsweet, Roses (wild & cultivated), Rosemary, Yarrow, Lemon Balm, Honeysuckle, Raspberries (wild & cultivated) and Cleavers seeds.

The Autumn Course: This course features wild and cultivated medicinal herbs and edible plants that are usually available to pick and use in September & October (please note that seasonal variations in the weather will determine if and when the plants are available). It includes sea buckthorn, elder berry, dandelion root, dock root, rose hips, hazel nuts, silver weed roots, blackberry, plantain leaves & seeds, nettle roots, the haws of hawthorn and guelder rose/cramp bark.

The courses include a mixture of recipes for making medicinal extracts and unusual culinary dishes. There is sometimes a bit of a cross-over between these recipes because many medicinal plants are also edible. ‘Let your food be your medicine and your medicine be your food!’

Each course is supported for set dates while the plants are usually in season (i.e. you can receive help and guidance from me via our Private Facebook group and live webinars).

Learn at you leisure! These courses do not require doing ‘homework’ or a time-commitment each week. I’ve designed these courses to fit in with busy lifestyles. You can engage with them at whichever level suits you best and you can return to them year after year, to study and use the plants when they are in season. If all that happens is that you start to recognise some of these plants growing around you then this is a very pleasurable life-enhancing interest to have; if you have more time then you can try making all of the recipes, post photos of plants to learn more about identification, have a go at herbal medicine-making and get advice about experimenting with some recipes of your own.

 

 

You receive:

  • Videos showing the featured plants that are currently in season and how to identify them.
  • Videos or photos demonstrating how to include foraged herbs in an easy, everyday meal.
  • Videos demonstrating how to make your own herbal remedy, tonic or balm safely and easily in your own kitchen using ordinary house-hold equipment.
  • Detailed documents about the herbs featured in each video so that you can read the key properties of each plant (e.g. nutritional content, medicinal uses etc.), try out recipes and have clear guidelines so that you can use them safely.
  • Suggested simple activities for you to try out to help you to begin to engage with the plants.
  • Photographs of the featured herbs to help you to safely identify them.

You also receive:

  • A chance to ask me your questions: The last week of each course features a bonus live webinar. This is your chance to put your questions to me so that you can feel confident about using your new skills (Please note: this is not a chance to have a medical consultation or to ask direct medical questions: I cannot treat people via phone, email, text message, Face Book or Skype but, I can educate you this way).
  • Access to a private Facebook group: Here you can let us know how you’re getting on with your new journey into the plant world, post pictures of the plants that you’ve found, the delicious dishes that you’ve created and/or the remedies that you’ve made. I will pop in and out of this group so this is also a good place to check things that you are unsure of and post questions for me. It’s also a great place to receive the support and encouragement of others who are learning and to see new recipe ideas.
  • Documents and recipe sheets for making herbal tonics and extracts e.g. tinctures, infusions, syrups, cordials, infused oils, ointments etc.
  • My basic, jargon-free, beginners’ guide to safely identifying plants (to help you to avoid any mishaps when foraging).
  • My guide to using herbs safely: for adults, children & in pregnancy; including when not to use them and when to seek professional advice instead.
  • A list of recommended herbal suppliers so that you can buy herbs that you want to use but can’t find growing near you.

Photo: Foraged Salad (sorrel leaves, hawthorn leaves, daisies, red clover & dandelion leaves)

Some of the Video Demonstrations included in the Early Summer E-Course

  • Hawthorn flower tea (a soothing, centering drink)
  • Hawthorn flower ice-cubes (very pretty indeed)
  • Nettle & plantain tea (can be a natural anti-histamine)
  • Nettle and spinach side dish (a tasty and simple accompaniment to meals)
  • Plantain first aid (poultice)
  • Daisy infused oil (can help to ease aches and pains)
  • Daisy ointment (our native alternative to arnica)
  • Dandelion omlette (an easy way to use dandelion leaves)
  • Sorrel sauce (a tasty, lemony sauce)
  • Silverweed gargle (to ease swollen gums and sore throats)
  • Silverweed compress (to ease varicose veins and piles)
  • Elderflower hand-bath
  • Elderflower eye compress
  • Elderflower tea
  • Elderflower steam inhalation
  • Elderflower fritters (delicious!)
  • Elderflower cordial (a sweet treat for the summer)
  • Cleavers deodorant
  • How to dry herbs
  • How to make herbal tinctures
  • Identification videos for each featured herb

Some of the photo lessons included in the  course

  • How to make hawthorn flower cordial
  • Primrose flower ice-cubes
  • Identification photos for every herb

Some of the Video Demonstrations included in the High Summer E-Course

  • St. John’s Wort Oil (to ease aches and pains)
  • How to make herbal tinctures (a concentrated, medicinal extract)
  • How to make herbal ointments (to soothe and heal the skin)
  • Poultices for first aid (medicine directly from the garden or hedgerow)
  • Raspberry oxymel (a delicious tonic drink to ease sore throats and colds)
  • Rosemary & nettle hair tonic (to revitalise thinning or dull hair)
  • Honeysuckle cough syrup (a heavenly-tasting medicine)
  • Cleavers seed coffee (a tasty, nourishing alternative to caffeine)
  • Calendula poultice for varicose veins (a little known use for a common garden plant)
  • Chickweed pesto (delicious, easy, quick and good for you!)
  • Chickweed poultice (to soothe inflammation and itching skin)
  • How to make fresh herbal tea (make your own blends from garden to cup)
  • How to dry herbs

Some of the photo lessons included in the High Summer E-course

  • How to make rose petal ice-cubes
  • How to make meadowsweet cordial
  • How to make rose petal infused oil
  • How to make a soothing tea blend

 

Some of the Video Demonstrations included in the Autumn E-Course

  • Sea Buckthorn (extracting the fresh juice)
  • Elderberry cordial (a delicious, immune-boosting tonic)
  • Blackberry oxymel (a great remedy for sore throats)
  • Plantain infused oil (a healing first aid treatment)
  • Plantain ointment (great to treat cuts, scrapes and grazes)
  • Cramp Bark decoction (a natural muscle relaxant)
  • Dandelion root coffee (a nutrient-rich, caffeine-free roast)
  • Hazelnut & Sorrel Pesto (delicious and local)
  • Cooked Silverweed roots (our native alternative to potatoes)
  • Dock root iron tonic (easy to make at home)
  • Using plantain seeds (rich in Omega oils)
  • How to make herbal tinctures (including decocted root tinctures)
  • Identification videos for each featured plant.

Some of the photo lessons included in the Autumn course

  • How to make hawthorn chutney (really tasty, great with cheese)
  • Rosehip syrup (boosts the immune system; rich in vitamin C)
  • Identification photos for every herb

 

 

Photo: Self-heal drying

E-Course Bonus Features

As well as the above features, you will also receive the following:

  • My list of recommended books so that you can learn more about wild food foraging and herbal medicine.
  • My list of recommended, reliable websites.
  • Further study: a list of courses where you can train to become a professional, qualified herbalist; information on informal apprenticeships where you can gets some hands-on experience with an working herbalist.
  • A list of suppliers of ingredients e.g. herbs, bottles, jars, oils, waxes etc.
  • Herbs in the City: an info sheet with tips on how to forage when you live in towns and cities.
  • A brief guide to organic versus conventional gardening: otherwise known as the alarming truth about weed-killers and why you should avoid them like the plague!
  • A guide to common poisonous plants (so that you can avoid them!).
  • Plants for bees: bees love herbs and herbs love bees! A list of herbs to plant to encourage bees into your garden.
  • Free updates: if I update any part of these courses or add new lsesons then you’ll receive these updates free of charge.

 

All students get life-time access to the resources (documents, videos, photos etc.) in this course. On-line support from Vivienne is currently provided seasonally but will not be available for life-time!

 

 Student Testimonials

“I am so delighted with your course. It’s consolidating stuff I knew and lots of new stuff that I didn’t. You’re a natural at it!                                                                                                                           Clodagh Kelly, Ireland.

” It’s so exciting what you are doing. It’s a unique course. I love it.”

Sinead Fine Homeopath . Health Educator BHSc, NDVEC, ITEC, Dip HFR

 

“I am just sending an e-mail to you to say thank you for the 1st series of your E-course. I found it very interesting, full of useful information, easy to follow and profound in knowledge. And you know what? It turned out that I did not have to go further than our own garden to find all of the herbs…I made Hawthorn syrup for the very first time in my life and it is delicious with ice cubes especially on a hot summer day. So thank you again and I am looking forward to the next series.”

Edit Varga (Early Summer edition of E-Course)

 

“You’ve given us SO MUCH useful info in such a good, clear form.  Your course is excellent! ”

Kathy Locke (Early Summer edition of E-Course)

“I’ve just finished watching the webinar and I wanted to let you know that I loved it all….I liked your mix of videos and text, recipes and medicines. I honestly can’t think of a suggestion to improve it!

Margaret O’Mahony

 

“I’ve been doing this herbalism course and think it’s rather fab! The amount of work that Vivienne’s put in is just amazing and the course is worth every penny! I honestly wish I’d had it when I was starting out. I especially love the fact that, unlike ‘normal’ distance learning type courses, you get to do it completely at your own pace. If all you’ve got is 15 minutes between putting the baby down for a nap and having to go get started on dinner, you can pick it up, learn something new, and have plenty of time to think it over while chopping your veg. It also gives you access to an associated support group where you can ask Vivienne all the questions you like and every so often, there are live webinars too!”

Mina Said-Allsopp: professional forager, Leeds, UK. http://msitu.co.uk/

 

As recommended in the Irish Examiner (National Newspaper): Click this link to read the review.

Photo: Calendula & Borage

Why learn from me?

  • I am a qualified and experienced professional Medical Herbalist (I qualified in 2003) based in Ireland.
  • Over the yearsthousands of people have attended my lectures, talks, classes, guided walks, herbal clinic and/or have watched me on television.
  • I am a knowledgeable, entertaining and engaging teacher.
  • I have been teaching herbal medicine classes for 12 years. You can see my workhere.
  • I’ve been taking guided herb & wild food foraging walks for 8 years (Yes, since before it became trendy! )
  • I co-presented a major national television series in which I foraged for and made an herbal remedy, natural cosmetic or wild food. I presented this show alongside celebrity chef Richard Corrigan and organic gardener Kitty Scully. Click here to see details of this television series.
  • I’ve also contributed to two other television series since then. (One of them is currently in production; you can see details of the other series here).
  • I have a BSc degree (with first class honours) in Herbal Medicine from the University of Central Lancashire, UK.
  • I am a member of the National Institute for Medical Herbalists, the oldest organisation of professional herbalists in the world (151 years old this year!)
  • I have to ensure that I am up to date with herbal medicine by doing Continuous Professional Development (CPD) every year.
  • I constantly strive to learn more: about therapeutic and edible plants; about medical conditions and diseases; about scientific research and evidence.
  • I regularly feature in national newspapers and television and am often asked to comment on issues affecting herbal medicine e.g. changes in legislation etc.
  • I have spent several years researching local plants that were once popular remedies and food sources but which have fallen out of use or been forgotten.
  • And my classes are very enjoyable and people return to them over and over again.
  • The internet is full of information about herbs but little of it is reliable, lots of it is wrong and some of it is out-right dangerous! Learn from an experienced teacher that you can trust: learn from me!

Do you have questions about this course? Then ask me! You can email your questions to me at info@theherbalhub.com. Please put ‘E-Courses’ in the subject line.

the herbal hub as seen on irish examiner

 

 

What this course is not:

  • This is not a qualification: after buying this course you will not be qualified to work as a professional consulting herbalist.
  • It is not a medical consultation: We will look ways to improve general health with herbs and how to use safe and effective remedies for common ailments (e.g. colds, coughs etc.) but we will not learn how to treat specific, serious illnesses and diseases with herbs. We may mention these briefly and talk about them in general terms but, this is always an example of a case where I will recommend that someone consults a professional medical practitioner and/or qualified herbalist. I cannot treat people or give specific medical advice via phone, email, text message, Face Book or Skype.
  • This is not a science course: we will not cover chemistry, medical trials or evidence for the effectiveness of herbal medicines (but I am working on one that will….).
  • Foraging for mushrooms and fungi are not included. This type of foraging is highly specialised and extremely dangerous if you get it wrong. If you want to learn this, then I recommend mushroom expertBill O’Dea at www.mushroomstuff.com
  • This course is not suitable for every country in the world. This course is written about plants that are common in Ireland, UK and most of them will be available in countries with a similar climate e.g. many areas in mainland Europe and some parts of the USA and Canada (if you would like to check if the E-Courses will cover plants in your country then please check here COURSE ITEMISED VIDEO CONTENT
  • This is not a promise to identify every therapeutic and edible wild and cultivated plant.
  • The information that you learn in this course is not to take the place of a qualified medical practitioner. It is for educational purposes only. Qualified medical practitioners are highly skilled and helpful people. Please consult one! They are there to help you.

ENROL NOW

ONLY £215

Approx €250 | US$279

100% MONEY BACK GUARANTEE

Enrol and if you are not happy in the first 7 days we will refund your money no questions asked.