Fieldsong Tea
A soft, floral herbal blend to lift the heaviness winter leaves behind.
Fieldsong Tea brings together lemon balm, nettle, calendula, red clover, and rose, plants long loved for supporting digestion, gentle detoxification, and emotional balance as the body transitions into spring.
Light, nourishing, and quietly uplifting, this is a tea for slow mornings, open windows, and remembering what it feels like to feel good in your body again.
Sip during journaling, morning rituals, or anytime you need a moment of softness and renewal.
There comes a moment at the end of winter when something begins to shift.
The air feels softer. The sun lingers a little longer. Your body starts asking for something lighter.
Fieldsong Tea was created for that moment. A gentle herbal blend designed to help the body release the heaviness of winter and step into the quiet renewal of spring.
At the heart of this blend is nettle, one of the most nourishing herbs in traditional herbalism. Rich in minerals, nettle helps replenish the body after the long winter months while supporting energy, circulation, and overall vitality.
Lemon balm brings a bright, uplifting note to the tea, long cherished for its ability to support digestion and calm the nervous system. It softens stress and helps lift the fog that can linger after the darker months.
Calendula offers gentle support for the lymphatic system and digestive health while bringing a golden warmth to the blend, a reminder of the returning sun.
Red clover has long been used in springtime herbal traditions to support the body’s natural cleansing processes and nourish the blood, helping the body transition into a new season. And finally, rose. Soft, floral, and deeply comforting.
Rose is known for supporting the heart, both physically and emotionally, adding a quiet sweetness that makes every cup feel like a small act of care.
Together these plants create a tea that is both grounding and uplifting. Fieldsong Tea is meant to be sipped slowly. In the morning light. While journaling. While sitting by an open window listening to the first birds return.
A reminder that your body knows how to renew itself.
Sometimes it just needs the plants to help guide the way.
