Calling all Wild Women

Do you want to learn to create your own personalized green beauty products so you can turn your mundane daily routines into sacred self care rituals?

Yes?

Why waste time reinventing the wheel when you can glean what I learned over 6 years of building Verdant Wild?

From Roots to Fruit

with my signature method, you will:

  • Discover your ancestral relationship with plants, reconnect with nature, and create a system for classifying herbs.

  • Learn the tools of the trade, source and store high quality, ethical ingredients, and utilize them successfully in formulas.

  • Gain access to many of my base formulas for facial and body care, and learn how to customize them for your needs.

  • Work with the cycles of the earth reflected in your body to manifest self love and whole beauty.

Register now

and get started today

Green Beauty Craft

beta group testimonial

“When I first peddled into County Cork, Ireland on my rented bike, I felt HOME. Generations flowing from my paternal grandmother felt present to me. And today, learning about the Celtic Wheel of the Year and listening to your beautiful reading from "Braiding Sweetgrass", I feel home, as well. It is a new/old home... present in my bones, but new in my head. Oh, how I would have benefited from an understanding of these cycles earlier in my life. But they were there, and I'm grateful to be uncovering them more fully, even now. Thank you for offering so much more than a skin care program, but these unfolding nuggets of truth to nurture my whole being.”

Laurel Lyle

Learn the Craft of Green Beauty

at your own pace

Join now

and become part of the Green Beauty Circle!

Instructor

Verdant Wild

Elizabeth Hodges

Founder & Forager

Verdant Wild founder Elizabeth (Liz) Hodges pursues a lifelong study of herbalism; her favorite thing to do in her free time is to wander about hillsides, learning and identifying plants and fungi. She spent her early childhood years on a 40-acre homestead in Washington State, and moved to the Santa Cruz area in 2006, where she worked seasonally on her aunt's farm for 10 years.