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Tarot Fellow

Herbal Medicine for Beginners by Swift & Midura — 35 Healing Herbs Guide

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    Short description:

    Herbal Medicine for Beginners by Swift & Midura — a practical guide to 35 foundational healing herbs with growing, harvesting, and remedy-making instructions. Accessible for home herbalists, kitchen witches, and wellness practitioners looking to build knowledge of plant medicine. Covers teas, tinctures, salves, and simple preparations that bridge folk herbalism with modern wellness.

    Description:

    Quick Specs


    • Authors: Katja Swift and Ryn Midura
    • Type: Paperback herbal medicine reference
    • Coverage: 35 herb profiles, 59 ailments, 104 remedies
    • Best for: Beginners learning plant-based wellness and home remedy preparation


    Herbal Medicine for Beginners: Plants as Medicine, Not Magick


    Katja Swift and Ryn Midura are co-founders of the CommonWealth Center for Holistic Herbalism in Boston, where they've trained herbalists, community health educators, and pharmacy students for years. Their book Herbal Medicine for Beginners reflects that practical clinical grounding: it's a guide to plants as medicine, covering preparations, dosing protocols, safety precautions, and remedy-making for common ailments. This is distinct from herbalism books oriented toward spellwork or magickal correspondences, and that distinction matters when you're building a real practice.


    The book covers 35 versatile medicinal herbs, chosen because each one can address multiple conditions, making a small home apothecary practical and effective. Among the herbs profiled are angelica, ashwagandha, betony, calendula, and catnip, whose traditional medicinal uses span European folk herbalism, Ayurveda, and Chinese medicine. Swift and Midura include energetic qualities for each plant, such as whether it is warming, cooling, drying, or moistening, which gives readers a richer understanding than a simple symptoms list would provide.


    Herbal Remedy Reference: Preparations, Safety, and Dosing


    The preparation section is where this herbal medicine reference earns its place on a practitioner's shelf. Swift and Midura walk through infusions, decoctions, steams, baths and soaks, poultices, tinctures, herb-infused vinegars and honeys, syrups, oxymels, elixirs, herb-infused oils, liniments, salves, lotions, and capsules, with clear instructions and safety notes for each. The dosing chapter is equally rigorous, covering how to track a remedy's effects and adjust safely. This level of practical detail is what separates a working reference from a general interest read. Browse my herbal and plant magic books to see where this title fits alongside other traditions.


    The second half of the book is organized by ailment: 59 common conditions from allergies and fevers to headaches and sleep issues, each with multiple herbal remedy options drawn from the herb profiles in part one. This cross-reference structure means you can approach the book from either direction. Green witches who already work with herbal magick will find this a natural complement, adding the wellness and safety dimensions that spellwork books don't address.


    How to Use Herbal Medicine for Beginners


    How to work through this herbal medicine reference for maximum practical benefit.

    1. Read the four-step framework first

      Swift and Midura open with four steps: sourcing herbs, understanding what you need, making remedies, and working safely with dosing. Read this before herb profiles. It frames everything that follows and prevents the most common beginner mistakes.

    2. Study one herb profile per week

      Rather than reading all 35 profiles at once, take one plant per week and learn it fully: its energetic qualities, conditions it addresses, preparations it suits, and safety notes. Paced study builds real knowledge rather than surface familiarity.

    3. Use the ailment index when you need a remedy

      When dealing with a specific condition, go to the ailment section and read all the remedy options listed. Each links back to a herb profile with preparation details. Starting from the ailment, not the herb, is the fastest route to practical use.


    The Tarot Fellow Standard


    I stock this title because Swift and Midura are working herbalists and educators, not hobbyists, and that shows in every chapter. The safety and dosing material alone is worth the cover price for anyone who plans to actually use these plants. Many of the green witches I work with practice both herbal magick and herbal medicine, and this book fills the gap that spellwork-oriented titles leave open. If you're also exploring herbs for ritual use, take a look at my herbs and accessories collection for the physical ingredients to work with.


    Frequently Asked Questions


    Is this book about herbal magick or herbal medicine?

    It's about herbal medicine, specifically making remedies and treating common ailments. It covers preparations, dosing, and safety rather than spellwork or magickal correspondences. It complements, not duplicates, herbal magick books.

    What kinds of preparations does Herbal Medicine for Beginners cover?

    The book covers infusions, decoctions, tinctures, salves, syrups, oxymels, herbal oils, liniments, capsules, poultices, baths, and more, with instructions and safety notes for each preparation method throughout.

    Is it safe to use this book for self-treatment?

    Swift and Midura include dosing protocols, safety precautions, and a chapter on tracking remedy effects. The book is designed to support informed self-care, not replace medical care. Always note contraindications listed for each herb.

    How does this differ from herbal magick books like Herbal Magick by Gerina Dunwich?

    Dunwich's book covers magickal correspondences and spellwork. Swift and Midura focus on medicinal preparations, dosing, and wellness. Both have value, but they address different dimensions of working with plants.

    Herbal Medicine for Beginners book cover by Swift and Midura — featuring botanical illustration and the title for a practical 35-herb guide for home herbalists.