Daphne Singingtree is retiring from the "business" of Eagletree Herbs. She will still be making medicines and a few products will always be made, like Mosquidaddle and Green Relief. There is quite a bit of stock left of many products, it is just the website will not be updated, so we may have things marked sold out that we actually have, and be sold out of things the website says is in. Please email and send your phone number and Daphne will get back to you in a day or two for phone order or you can try to place an online order and we can make a refund or adjustment if needed. You may want to stock up on your favorites, as somethings will never be made again.
Eagletree Herbs as a business was always a labor of love, never was profitable, and was only able to stay in business due to the many interns over the years that help grow, harvest, bottle and label all the products. It is incredibly time consuming to make herbal products from growing, harvesting and processing the plants, to bottling. A business depending on free labor is not sustainable, especially one run by someone who would rather give or trade herbal medicine away than sell it. The experiences shared with all the interns over the years, selling at fairs and festivals, learning about what herbs worked for people, has been a lifetime of joy.
Daphne working on finishing her book Eagletree Guide to Herbal Medicine Making, due out in the next year. SHe It will include the recipes for the over 100 unique products she has made since 1972. She is also going to work on the nonprofit work at zaniyan.org, update her midwifery book, and learn more about holistic death and dying. So Daphne is not retiring, just changing focus, and will always be teaching and learning.
Eagletree Herbs as a business was always a labor of love, never was profitable, and was only able to stay in business due to the many interns over the years that help grow, harvest, bottle and label all the products. It is incredibly time consuming to make herbal products from growing, harvesting and processing the plants, to bottling. A business depending on free labor is not sustainable, especially one run by someone who would rather give or trade herbal medicine away than sell it. The experiences shared with all the interns over the years, selling at fairs and festivals, learning about what herbs worked for people, has been a lifetime of joy.
Daphne working on finishing her book Eagletree Guide to Herbal Medicine Making, due out in the next year. SHe It will include the recipes for the over 100 unique products she has made since 1972. She is also going to work on the nonprofit work at zaniyan.org, update her midwifery book, and learn more about holistic death and dying. So Daphne is not retiring, just changing focus, and will always be teaching and learning.