Frequently Asked Questions – School of Intuitive Herbalism
1. What is the School of Intuitive Herbalism?
The School of Intuitive Herbalism, based in the UK in Stroud, Gloucestershire, offers a 3–7 year training in Insight Herbalism. We weave an animist, experiential and deeply somatic approaches to plant medicine that blend science, tradition and deep listening in a pathway marked by personal plant initiations. This is as much an inner journey of deep enquiry as it is a training.
By combining extensive in-depth plant connection, community learning, and training in professional interpersonal skills we help students become skilled and confident herbalists. Our approach is highly somatic, ensuring it stays grounded in the reality of our bodies – with around a quarter of the course based around bodywork and somatic practices. All of this work is held within a strong framework of conscious consent and trauma awareness.
Founded by herbalist and author Nathaniel Hughes, the school began slowly as a small group exploring what emerges from inviting and allowing our deep plant connections. The school has since grown organically into a thriving learning community. Our training integrates sensory connection with plants, scientific understanding, traditional knowledge, alongside deep relational and somatic skills.
2. What is Insight Herbalism?
Insight Herbalism is a way of working with plants that centres direct, sensory relationship and personal initiation alongside traditional knowledge and modern research. We have a highly somatic, trauma-informed approach and much of the growth and learning happens in deep plant ritual. Our approach is very adaptable and with each new student we welcome new and innovative ways of sharing this work.
Rather than only learning about plants, students learn from plants — letting this relationship shape their herbal practice and personal growth.
This approach draws on animist traditions, therapeutic awareness, and modern herbalism, weaving them into a living practice. It encourages both self‑reflection and community responsibility. The average age for students training with the school is mid to late 30’s with a range from early 20’s to late 60’s.
3. Who is the training for?
Our courses are for people who feel the call to work with plants deeply and personally – many students experience working with the herbs in this way as a life vocation. Students come from many backgrounds, often already with professional skills: health professionals, community workers, gardeners, artists, and those seeking a new direction. For many, this is as much a spiritual life path as it is a professional training.
4. How is the training structured?
We offer a layered path:
Introductory courses – short immersive experiences.
Foundation and Hearth years – 2 years of plant connection and personal exploration.
Professional development as a herbalist – flexible pathways allowing some people to complete over 3 years, whilst others choose to take the full 7 years. The time it takes depends on many factors, including your own clarity of path, pre-existing skills and the amount of time you are able to put into sharing your offering (with supervision, in a case-study form) and into completing your portfolio.
The course structure is flexible, allowing the training to weave alongside other life commitments.
5. Where is the school based?
We are based in the UK, with teaching taking place mainly in Stroud, Gloucestershire. Ninety percent of the training happening in person, in small groups of around 12 people to honour the sensory and community nature of the work. The school attracts students from across the UK and beyond. Supervision and some of the school’s offerings happens online, alongside several strong (and focused) closed WhatsApp groups in which students share experiences and find peer support.
6. What makes the school different from other herbalism training?
We are animist and centre plant-relationship in all our work — teaching you to meet plants as living beings, not just sources of remedies. We weave together experiential plant connection, personal initiatory journeys, journeying, edge-walking, science, folklore, and therapeutic skills. Some people use the language of working with plant spirits, some prefer to describe it as working with plant consciousness – we’ve found there are several ways to language this and all are welcome. All of this is done within a context that actively invites dialogue around the complex politics of health, healing and relationship to the land, including systemic oppression, power dynamics and experiences of marginalisation.
Our non‑hierarchical ethos and commitment to nurturing a community that embodies life-long peer supervision mean that you can weave your own path as a herbalist and, once graduated, feel the strength of your peer grouping supporting and guiding you as you develop professionally.
All our classes are entirely experiential, supported by an extensive library of audio recordings and handouts that cover the more didactic aspects of learning. We actively encourage students to explore other herbalists’ styles of practice and training, as well as to nurture parallel skills that can be woven together with their herbal work. We see Insight Herbalism as one vital strand in the weave that forms your professional offering — an offering that will be unique to you and your gifts.
For feedback from students click here – hear first hand what it is like to study with us.
7. Can I practise as a professional herbalist after training?
Yes — our professional apprenticeship is designed to equip you with the skills, clinical experience, and ethical grounding to practise confidently. We train you in Insight Herbalism ®, which is insured and has its own professional peer network.
Here are some short bios of some our graduates and final year students.
The UK does not have statutory regulation for herbalists, we uphold professional standards in clinical work, ethics, and accountability. For those who would like to join other professional herbal organisations we support you in this through the individual accreditation pathways – which will be different for each organisation.
8. What is animism in herbalism?
In our context, animism means recognising plants, people, and landscapes as conscious, sentient, and interconnected. This worldview shapes how we listen, learn, and act as herbalists. Animism invites a shift from extraction to relationship, fostering reciprocity with the natural world. It is both an ancient understanding and a living, evolving practice.
Animism runs as a common thread through UK traditions such as Druidry, Wicca, and Paganism, and more broadly within shamanic practices and in religions such as Shinto, certain traditions within Hinduism, and some schools of Buddhism, where nature is revered and often perceived as imbued with spirit or consciousness.
9. How do you address ethics and accountability?
We maintain clear ethical guidelines (code of ethics and extensive policy/procedure documentation) to support a safe learning environment. Students have access to pastoral support and community peer oversight processes if they need extra support. Strong ethics protect the integrity of the learning space and the trust between all involved. Many herbalists practice as solo practitioners, so personal integrity and the ability to continuously grow, learn, and seek support from peers and other professionals are central to the school’s approach. From the start of all our courses, we invite an ongoing, active dialogue around personal sovereignty and power dynamics.
10. How do I apply or find out more?
We recommend starting with a short course or introduction before committing to a longer path – this gives us a chance to meet each other and talk through your path and how it might weave within the school. We take applications are open from 1st – 14th January each year – sometimes there can be long waiting list to be offered a place. If you have completed one of the Introductory level classes and would like to book on the full training, we organise a 45 minute informal zoom interview to talk this through in detail.
We also highly recommend reading one of Nathaniel’s books – the latest one ‘Wild Enchantments’ give an excellent sense of the depth and nature of the work we do in the school, as the book is written entirely from first hand experience of the school and 1:1 work.