summer

Growing Chinese Medicinal Herbs–References

Photo courtesy of AIMC


  • We are probably all here at the Lilium Initiative thanks to Peg Schafer’s stellar  The Chinese Medicinal Herb Farm: a Cultivator’s Guide to Small-Scale Organic Herb Production

     

  • Another incredible compendium of information on planting a wide variety comes from the late Steven Foster and his incredible teacher Yue Chongxue called: Herbal Emissaries: Bringing Chinese Herbs to the West: A Guide to Gardening, Herbal Wisdom, and Well-Being





  • The Jade Institute’s Herb Gallery features sections in each herb profile on Growing and Propagation and Harvesting and Preparation, especially in a garden situation. Too many entries to list here.



  • The “new kid on the block” is Dr. Thomas Garran’s newly-published translation, Chinese Herb Cultivation: Daodi Practices for Growing and Processing Chinese Herbs (See book review in this newsletter)



What references do you recommend?  Send us a note to info@liliuminitiative.org

Featured Farmer: Tyler McGrath of Methow Medicinal Herb Farm

Tyler McGrath of Methow Medicinal Herb Farm

Interviewed by Peregrine Whitehurst, LAc.

Photo courtesy of Tyler McGrath 07/2023

Tyler McGrath and his wife make their home, and farm medicinal herbs, on the Eastern slope of the North Cascades in the Methow Valley surrounded by wilderness and parkland. McGrath is a first generation farmer and started farming this land by chance. A family friend was selling an herb farm, and between his wife’s business as an acupuncturist and his blossoming passion for farming, they took the plunge, bought the farm, and have never looked back.

McGrath is inspired by some of the greats of natural farming such as Masanobu Fukuoka, Percival Alfred Yeomans, and Bill Mollison. He considers a farm to be an organism and takes measures to restore the soil health while he produces high-quality, potent herbs.

Tyler was drawn to work with The Lilium Initiative as he is a farmer and his wife is an acupuncturist and herbalist in Twisp, WA. Combining their interests by growing Asian medicinal herbs is a wonderful niche for them. Read on for more of McGrath’s inspirations and learnings.

Tyler and his family, photo courtesy of Tyler McGrath, 07/2023

What are some of the main differences from your perspective in growing herbs versus vegetables or fruits?

“Medicinal herbs, because they are not primarily used as food, don't need to have the same characteristics as vegetables or fruit. I think we generally like our vegetables and fruit to be supple, large, and lush, and fertilizers can help a lot with this. I've never fertilized my herbs, but instead have taken an approach of just trying to cultivate good healthy soil.”

 

What got you interested in growing Asian medicinal herbs? Have you found this to be different?
“My wife has her own acupuncture and nutritional therapy business here in Twisp. She uses and prescribes Asian medicinal herbs. When I heard about Lilium Initiative, we were excited, as it seemed to be a bridge between our two businesses--me as an herb farmer and her as an acupuncturist. I was very interested to hear how LI was confident that Asian herbs could be grown well right here in North America, because the industry as a whole currently seems intent on sourcing herbs from Asia. As a farmer, and already being familiar with some of the herbs LI was interested in sourcing, I had a hunch that we could produce very high quality products right here.

  I think this project is going to take off, I just don't know how long it will take. Even in these initial stages, I think LI and its member farmers have proven that we can produce these traditional Asian herbs to very high standards. The preparations of the herbs are different and interesting to me. I haven't tried producing anything yet that involves the more intensive processing techniques, but I've been producing Qing Hao and Yi Mu Cao for LI, and loved how a larger piece size was necessary. I like how the finished product still shows the herb so well. I think it really lets the customer see the quality.”

Photo courtesy of Tyler McGrath, 07/2023

What are some of the most incredible things about where you farm?

“The entire valley is surrounded by many thousands of acres of National forests, National parks, and wilderness. Our farm is located on land adjacent to a small tributary of the Methow river, and the farm is surrounded by rugged beauty. The way the evening summer sun shines on the hill across the creek never fails to amaze, and in the nine years we've spent rehabilitating the land into a thriving organic farm, the diversity of life in soil, land and sky has exploded. 

Every year, there seems to be a greater number and greater diversity of birds who feed and shelter on the farm. We encounter deer and coyotes regularly, and occasionally see moose, bear, bobcat and other interesting fauna. This quantity and quality of species diversity on the farm has been a real joy to experience and witness. Our summers are hot and dry, and we have cold snowy winters, so the contrast is stark, and there is beauty in the extremes.”

 

What are some of your biggest challenges?

Oh my goodness. I won't even try to give specific examples. I think one of the biggest challenges has been to learn to not only deal with the routine stress of owning and operating a small farm, but to fully accept that there will always be small and large stressors with the farm and the business. To recognize and accept the stressors and not get stressed has been key. 

Developing equanimity with the many ups and downs has been essential to maintaining a good quality of life, and this is a constant evolution and learning process. There is no end-goal here--it's just about getting better at embracing it all so I can continue to love what I do. If the stressors stress you out too often--it's over. You burn out and have to find a new career. Oh, and then there is the challenge of remaining comfortable and happy even though a to-do list can never be completed. It's just a constant re-shuffling of priorities. 

Except for two weeks in the early spring, I've given up on the to-do list. Now I just walk around, look and think, and see what needs the most immediate attention.”

Courtesy of Tyler McGrath 07/2023

Do you consider yourself to be a regenerative farmer or what are some of the growing philosophies that you use?


“I have not adopted any particular external philosophies or labels at this point. I consider organic certification to be a starting point, but really take a much keener interest in soil development than that certification requires. I love the idea of treating the whole farm as an organism, as well as creating a healthy farm through diversity. In many ways, plants are simple, and if you help provide them with their basic requirements, you can expect them to thrive.”

 

What are some of the most helpful practices that you do on your farm that support the plants and the land itself?


“I've found planting cover crops to be a very effective practice for soil health and fertility. Fortunately, we have enough land that I am able to have about two thirds of the farm in cover crop at all times. These fields host a rich diversity of plants and insects, and I think this greatly helps with the health of the whole farm. In addition, these fields allow the soil to rest--sometimes for a year or more continuously. 

I'm also a big fan of multi-species plantings. In certain cases I'm able to seed multiple plants simultaneously, from which I can first get a crop, and then in succession, a cover crop without further disturbance of the soil. I've also never sprayed any sort of killing agent. Even in organic farming practices, there is the possibility of using herbicides, insecticides, fungicides etc., but I've never felt it necessary to go that route, and I think the farm and the life that inhabits it has benefited from this practice.

 I think there are so many things we don't understand about the complex interrelationships among species in the web of life on the farm and in nature. Of all the concrete practices that can be done to better the farm, one of my favorite things to do is just try to be a keen observer in an effort to continue to learn and gain wisdom.”

Photo courtesy of Tyler McGrath 07/2023

Do you have interns or woofers on your farm?

“We have a 20-foot yurt on the property that we rent out in exchange for help on the farm. We offer this opportunity to a variety of folks, but of course it's an ideal situation if we can find someone who wants this opportunity because they have an interest in helping out on a working medicinal herb farm.”

What is your system for drying herbs to maintain quality?

“I dry all my herbs in a simple two-step process. Immediately after harvesting, I lay the herbs out in thin layers on my large trays made with stainless steel mesh. First I blow warm ambient air over the trays of herbs in a large, enclosed drying rack, and then I use adjustable, low-temperature dehydration cabinets to complete the drying process. This simple technique has given me good results with all herbs. Every herb has little intricacies in drying.”

 

What is one thing that you think people should know about herbs and growing them?

“Every herb has its own unique character, but as a whole, I've found the medicinal herbs to be strong and robust plants. It can be fun to attempt to grow many different plants that grow in many different places, but do a little research to find out which plants will likely grow well in your area. 

We have some different types of soil on different parts of the farm, so I did a little research to see if any of the Asian herbs I wanted to try growing prefer specific types of soil. For example when I was researching growing Ephedra, it sounded like it thrived in sandy, rocky poor soil. I had a sandy gravelly unused field, and I put the Ephedra there. 

When growing herbs that are well suited to your location, I believe with a bit of effort you can expect good and satisfying results.”

Yi Mu Cao family portrait, Photo Courtesy of Tyler McGrath

We are so grateful to Tyler McGrath and Methow Medicinal Herb Farm for producing such incredible medicine, while also taking such good care of the extraordinary land where they live and work. Please purchase some of his wonderful herbs from Spring Wind Herbs or reach out to him directly at: tyler@methowmedicinalherbfarm.com.

 

Book Review:

Chinese Herb Cultivation: Daodi Practices for Growing and Processing Chinese Herbs

Edited by Guo Lan-ping, Huang Lu-qi and Xie Xiao-liang Special Editor to the English Edition: Zhang Yan

Translated and Annotated by Thomas Avery Garran

Book Review by Pam Sherman

This stellar ecological growing, harvesting, and processing guide for 37 Chinese medicinal herbs was written in China by 19 recognized expert professors and researchers in the field of Chinese medicinal plant agriculture, assisted by 105 collaborators; Appendix I lists the institutions in China with which they are affiliated.


The volume was translated and annotated, with an introduction, by Dr. Thomas Avery Garran, who received his PhD from the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences: National Center for Materia Medica Resources and Daodi Herbs. He is also a farmer of Chinese herbs and an herbalist versed in both Western and Chinese pharmacopeias, a clinical practitioner and educator.  

Garran explains that the original was written (and published in 2016) for Chinese farmers as part of an enormous official national push in China to bring “all the major medicinal plants under productive cultivation by 2022.” Medicinal plant agriculture is now necessary in China–and worldwide–due to habitat loss and over-harvesting of wild populations of these medicinal plants, leading to their decimation and/or degradation.

Garran produced this translation for commercial farmers in North America and beyond; it is, as he notes, “the first book about daodi herb cultivation…in any Western language.” Backyard growers, however, will also find this useful, as all instructions are applicable to working by hand.  

What does “Daodi Practices for Growing Herbs” really mean? 

In everyday Chinese, the word “daodi” has the connotation of “genuine.” In China, “daodi herb” is generally considered to mean  “the highest quality medicinal herb from its historically traditional growing area, which grows it the best.”

 

The first of the two sinograms making up the word, “dao,” is familiar to Westerners as the first word in the classic Dao De Jing by Laozi. It can mean “path, way.”  

The second of the two sinograms, “di,” can mean “earth, ground, land, place, locality.” Thus: “the way herbs are grown in this particular place, on this particular land.” Or perhaps “the cradle of herbal civilization” for a given medicinal herb in China. 

In Preface to the Original, Garran tells us that daodi practices described in this book are based on hundreds or thousands of years of humans in a particular place, selecting, harvesting, processing, and using a particular regional genotype of a particular herb. Daodi practices evolved historically as a combination of herb genetics, environmental influences and human input. “Humans have had significant influence on the formation of daodi herbs,” he writes. These daodi practices are still the gold standard today.

The Chinese authors studied the ecology of each of these plants and the traditional historical practices associated with them. (A few of the plants, such as dang gui, have been cultivated for over 1,000 years). This traditional knowledge, which was passed down orally, along with some modern agricultural practices, forms the basis for the agricultural recommendations set forth in this book for modern Chinese medicinal plant farmers and now, Western growers.  

What’s in each Herb Entry?

Each herb profile is divided into the following categories, which discuss key daodi production requirements and methods for each plant in its traditional native location. Each section offers the kind of direct, specific advice that can only come from long experience, coupled with modern study. Some herbs have special categories added as needed. Garran has also included very helpful special bright yellow sections to some entries for us Westerners, entitled “Special Attention.”  


Distinguishing Features discuss plant botany, growth form, daodi province and county location in China, where else in the world it is native, traditional medicinal and cultural history in China and modern research.

Production Site Ecology includes elevation, temperature, photo period, rainfall, topography and soil requirements–texture, depth, pH, drainage, irrigation.


Production Area Environmental Requirements is divided into Site Selection and Soil Preparation, with specific recommendations for each.


The next section, variously titled, discusses early growth stage management activities specific to each plant, for instance direct seeding, raising seedlings, transplanting, and taking cuttings. 


Field Management includes early stage activities specific to each plant. This section  gives detailed directions for cultivating and weeding, irrigation and water management, temperature regulation, thinning, flower removal, hilling, fertilizing (including manure), top-dressing, and other production activities specific to the growth phase of each herb. Top dressing means fertilizing and includes compost (it rarely appears to include mulching.)  


Prevention and Treatment of Disease and Insect Pests discusses pathogens endemic to China but not found in North America and beyond, as well as those common in China and beyond. 


Harvesting gives specific instructions for season, year, best type of weather for harvest days, and best methods. 


On-Farm Processing gives specific instructions on drying methods and storage particular to each herb to preserve it. Most will undergo further pao zhi processing; this is traditional medicinal processing to bring out desired medicinal properties and further preserve the herb long term. These methods can include grading, cleaning, sun and shade drying, piling, softening, steam processing, curing with smoke, oven baking, sweating, kneading and others.  


Appendices II through VII at the end of the book makes searching across the plant list for key ecological factors easy and convenient. The list is organized first by Latin name, then pinyin name, then elevation, frost-free period, photo period and annual rainfall. 


Questions, Challenges, Opportunities

How does the medicinal quality and properties of a given herb grown agriculturally in its daodi location–and outside it–compare with those of the formerly wild-grown herb?

Will there be good medicine in the herb we grow? Will it match the medicine the plant is known for? How will we be able to retain genetic diversity in plants grown to meet industrial production requirements which require uniformity?  

 Garran comments: 

“...a growing body of research is showing that the ability to grow a plant in a particular area does not necessarily correlate with good quality medicinal herb material. In fact, plants can appear to be quite vibrant while growing and yet have vastly different chemical make-up when tested in the lab.” 

Is this comparing apples to peanuts? Is a lab test, rooted in the Western medical paradigm, appropriate as a standard for sophisticated medicine developed without reference to this paradigm?    

Garran says: “…while laboratory tests should not be the only means of testing the quality of medicinal plants, when there are consistently different results, it is worth pausing and evaluating the situation.” 

Would North American soils under regenerative management produce better-quality medicinals than worn-out soils to which chemical fertilizers are applied, as in China (or equally, in North America)?

Garran writes that soils in China are indeed “tired” after millennia of being worked; those in North America are still relatively more fertile. So, he says, “many of the deficiencies and diseases Chinese farmers struggle with may be of less consequence [here].” 

He tells us that, true, organic and regenerative agriculture is not as developed in China as here; some Chinese pesticides are not even available in North America. Writing mostly for regenerative organic farmers in the West, Garran has not translated the pesticide recommendations found in the original Chinese text of this book.  

He cautions, however, “it would be improper to think that just because your soil has a higher level of organic matter … that you can grow a higher quality Chinese medicinal. The reason(s) for this are difficult to be certain of, but could be due to specific environmental requirements, skill level of farmers, soil biota only present in its daodi location, or execution of processing techniques, among other potential issues.

Therefore, it is prudent to carefully study this text and do one’s best to approximate ALL the requirements in an attempt to bring the best and most representative crop to market. Remember, these techniques are often hundreds of years old or have been built on the experience of generations of farming these specific plants.” 

The author, Thomas Avery Garran


As Chinese herbal medicine proceeds in its historic transition to domestication, mechanization, and global cultivation, we will all be grappling more and more with how to do this within the context of a changing climate, providing its additional challenges to agriculture. Hopefully, we will share discussions widely and intensively within and across our respective cultures as the best way to succeed.  

Upcoming Educational Webinars

Please join us for these exciting upcoming webinars with experts in their field. Lilium Initiative members are always welcome to register for free.

“Cultivation: What can Chinese Medicine Farmers and Practitioners Learn from Each Other?"

with Sabine Wilms, Ph.D.

  • Friday, September 8, 2023

  • 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM

PLEASE JOIN US IN WELCOMING SABINE WILMS, PhD ON september 8TH, 2023 AT 10AM PT/11AM MT/12pm CT/1pm ET

For this event, we at the Lilium Initiative are invited to join together with her students, most of whom are practitioners, as part of The Imperial Tutor learning series called Tea Time. First, Dr. Wilms will present on the traditional Chinese medicine concept of cultivation as it relates to practitioners as well as farmers. The rest of the time will be open to discussion with everyone. Some questions relative to this discussion:

  • What does it look like, in concrete and abstract terms, to promote sustainability, restoration, transformation, and cultivation for practitioners as well as farmers?

  • The word "cultivation" with respect to land has, in China as well as in the West, meant "to till.” It is also a metaphor in both East and West for self-cultivation as a human being.

  • How do we define "cultivation" in modern times if we are regenerative farmers and don't till or till minimally?

  • Can we learn something from each other about "cultivation" from our new definitions? How does this influence "self-cultivation?”

  • How does "self-cultivation" influence how we cultivate farms and gardens?

  • How do self cultivation and cultivation of land, using our own definitions of "cultivation," influence how we are as practitioners/doctors?

  • Ultimately, how do each of our daily and yearly, personal and professional, practices serve to “harmonize heaven and earth” in the uniquely human role in the middle? Do we even want to be there?

Sabine Wilms, PhD is a former farmer currently living in Washington state, a translator of Classical Chinese medicine texts, and an independent teacher of Classical Chinese Medicine translation. Her online program, Imperial Tutor, has several different options to help practitioners and farmers go to the root of Chinese medicine cultivation. Learn more at her website Happy Goat Productions.

THIS EVENT IS FREE FOR ALL LILIUM INITIATIVE MEMBERS. BECOME A MEMBER AND ATTEND MANY OF OUR EVENTS FREE OF CHARGE HERE.

IF YOU ARE NOT A MEMBER, YOU ARE WELCOME TO JOIN THIS EVENT WITH A SLIDING SCALE DONATION TO SUPPORT OUR MISSION HERE.

"Making a Plan: Plotting and Organizing Your Medicinal Garden & Crops” with Denise Cusack

  • Thursday, September 21, 2023

  • 5:00 PM 7:00 PM

PLEASE JOIN US IN WELCOMING DENISE CUSACK ON September 21st, 2023 AT 5PM PT/6PM MT/7PM CT/8PM ET

Home to small scale herb growers, let’s talk about planning your garden and crops. Do you grow medicinal plants for your family, your practice, or your herbal business? This webinar will cover using tools to plan, organize, and manage your gardens. Get tips on how to organize and plan your space for growing medicinal herbs that are annuals, perennials, and multi-year root harvest medicinals. Denise will share  some of the tools she uses to layout the gardens, plan seed starting, organize seedlings and planting out, ongoing management and harvesting, and drying/storing and managing your inventory so you know what you have as well as saving seeds for next year.  While everyone has a different space and needs, we all can better use technology and tools to organize our processes, plan out what we need and can use in a year, and maximize the returns. Denise will also share a few downloadable sheets to help you plan your own gardens and crops.

Denise Cusack is a clinical herbalist, certified aromatherapist, and a certified permaculture designer with over 20 years of experience in the natural health and wellness community.

Denise loves speaking and sharing with others how to use permaculture principles and ethics to make our gardens, families, businesses, and communities better via regenerative practices, mutual aid, collaborative community models, and sustainable smart systems.

Denise is owner of Wholly Rooted Farm, a small family homestead and medicinal herb farm, where she grows over 250 varieties of medicinal herbs, and over 500 species including food, on a few acres. Denise is an avid seed saver and medicinal plant grower, and has volunteered as the Herbalists Without Borders Seed Grant Coordinator and US Donation Distribution Coordinator since 2018. Wholly Rooted Farm is a United Plant Savers Botanical Sanctuary, where we also grow at-risk and endangered medicinal and native plants. Wholly Rooted Farm is a medicinal herb farm, plant conservation space, and an online school educating folks on topics including permaculture and regenerative practices for herbalists, aromatherapists, and holistic practitioners. Find out more about Denise & Wholly Rooted at www.whollyrooted.com

THIS EVENT IS FREE FOR ALL LILIUM INITIATIVE MEMBERS. BECOME A MEMBER AND ATTEND MANY OF OUR EVENTS FREE OF CHARGE HERE.

IF YOU ARE NOT A MEMBER, YOU ARE WELCOME TO JOIN THIS EVENT WITH A SLIDING SCALE DONATION TO SUPPORT OUR MISSION HERE.

Herb in Profile: Paeonia lactiflora, Bai Shao, the "Empress Herb" with Julia Urcis, L.Ac.

  • Thursday, October 26, 2023

  • 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

PLEASE JOIN US IN WELCOMING Julia urcis, l.ac. ON october 26TH, 2023 AT 5PM PT/6PM MT/7PM CT/8PM ET

In this presentation we will take a look at the herb Paeonia lactiflora, Bai Shao, the “Empress Herb.” We will review its growing conditions, where it is historically cultivated in Asia, explore how Chinese medicine uses it in herbal formulas, discuss how people are using it in modern ways, and learn how it is prepared and processed for consumption.

Photo courtesy of Julia Urcis, LAc.

ter Julia is a licensed acupuncturist, interdisciplinary herbalist, gardener, and geographer who is humbled by the incredible lineage of Chinese medicine and the legacy of Asian herbal wisdom.  She/her/they/them has resided in Nevada County since 2013, with a break from 2017 to 2020 to attend acupuncture school in Santa Cruz, CA. Julia had the fortunate experience of cultivating many Chinese herbs we use in our pharmacopeia in Nevada County, as well as with the celebrated farmer Peg Schafer at her Chinese Medicinal Herb Farm. She completed a two-year academic program in GIS and geospatial mapping. She is currently practicing the medicine in Truckee and Nevada City, CA and loves it. Julia advocates the domestic cultivation of Chinese herbal medicine with the non-profit Lilium Initiative and hopes that other practitioners will support the movement.

THIS EVENT IS FREE FOR ALL LILIUM INITIATIVE MEMBERS. BECOME A MEMBER AND ATTEND MANY OF OUR EVENTS FREE OF CHARGE HERE.

IF YOU ARE NOT A MEMBER, YOU ARE WELCOME TO JOIN THIS EVENT WITH A SLIDING SCALE DONATION TO SUPPORT OUR MISSION HERE.

"Global Herbalism: Applying Chinese Herbal Theory to Effectively Use Herbs From Anywhere”

with JulieAnn Nugent-Head

  • Thursday, November 16, 2023

  • 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

PLEASE JOIN US IN WELCOMING Julieann nugent-head ON NOVEMBER 16TH, 2023 AT 5PM PT/6PM MT/7PM CT/8PM ET

Chinese medicine is not limited to the prescription of solely Chinese herbs. In actuality, the principles of Chinese herbology can be applied to any herb one encounters around the globe.  In this lecture JulieAnn Nugent-Head will discuss the very simple and yet immensely brilliant principles of Chinese herbal theory, how to apply those principles to any herb, as well as share insights gained from her experience of both practitioner and farmer.  

JulieAnn Nugent-Head fell in love with Chinese medicine in 1997 when her infant son's pneumonia was successfully treated with herbs. This led to pursuing a master's degree in TCM, hospital internships in Beijing in 2003 & 2004, and relocation to live full time in China in 2006.

JulieAnn learned Chinese and became the dedicated student of the last generation of traditional practitioners born and educated prior to 1949. Fortunate enough to be welcomed into their clinic and homes, she spent 8 years observing these older doctors treat serious conditions, and benefitted from discussion on Chinese medicine and the classic books. This deep relationship with the old doctors changed how JulieAnn understood the medicine and the Chinese culture at its foundation.

With the increase in pollution in Beijing, JulieAnn and husband Andrew moved to Hangzhou, to live in the famous tea villages of the Westlake. For nearly 5 years they were Immersed in rural village life, consisting of farming, wildcrafting and tea cultivation, and became the village doctors and an integral part of the community. During this time, JulieAnn completed a doctorate level degree in medicine with an emphasis on the classical application of Chinese herbs.

In 2014, political changes and increased costs of living in China led the Nugent-Heads to return to the United States. They settled in Asheville, NC, finding the climate quite similar to the tea hills of Hangzhou. JulieAnn and Andrew terraced the hillsides to grow tea and herbs, which has greatly deepened their understanding of cultivation and herb processing. JulieAnn also teaches internationally and practices at the Alternative Clinic, a teaching clinic designed to share the classically based, tangible Chinese medicine she learned in China with others. Lectures from the Nugent-Heads and their teachers can be found at traditionalstudies.org.

THIS EVENT IS FREE FOR ALL LILIUM INITIATIVE MEMBERS. BECOME A MEMBER AND ATTEND MANY OF OUR EVENTS FREE OF CHARGE HERE.

IF YOU ARE NOT A MEMBER, YOU ARE WELCOME TO JOIN THIS EVENT WITH A SLIDING SCALE DONATION TO SUPPORT OUR MISSION HERE.

Transfer of Peg Schafer's East Asian Medicinal Collection

Honoring the Past, Starting Anew

By Jonathan Major, Still Moon Farm, LLC

Still Moon Farm LLC, photo courtesy of Jonathan Major

Peggy Schafer received a collection of over 150 species of East Asian medicinal plants from Robert Newman in 2003.  Many of these plants in the collection are rare to find in the United States, sometimes around the world, and a few of them are even CITES-listed.  Part of the responsibility related to the collection is conservation of these rare botanicals. Most of these plants were wild-collected many years ago and have been managed as closely as possible to wild and regional landraces cultivars. Care has been taken to avoid cross pollination, domestication and selection of specific traits. These plants are most similar to what is found in the wild compared to what might be found on the national or international market.

In 2022, Peg Schafer transitioned the collection from her farm, The Chinese Medicinal Herb Farm, to, Still Moon Farm, which is run by Jonathan Major.  She dedicated much of her life over the past 2 decades to stewarding this collection.  With her many skills, she was able to germinate, propagate and conserve this invaluable germplasm that was given to her by Robert Newman.  She spent tireless hours engaging other knowledgeable  experts to accurately identify and confirm many of the plants in this collection.  

As a student of Chinese  medicine, former apprentice of Peg Schafer, and an experienced farmer, Jonathan is honored to continue stewarding this collection of venerated East Asian Medicinal plants.

Please see the full list of seeds and bare root stock below and place an order using this: Order Form

Photo courtesy of Jonathan Major