What This Asks Of You

 

Not much. Mostly, it asks for a different relationship with the materials.

Use what you receive. These oils and formulas are not intended to be collected indefinitely. They are meant to be worked with.

Notice when something is complete. Most materials have a natural place in a routine, a season, or a particular phase of life. Not everything needs to remain in continuous use.

Allow the pauses. The intervals between cabinets are not gaps in the model. They are part of it.

Speak early about what you may need next. Your input informs cultivation, reservation, and formulation planning. The earlier we understand a genuine need, the more responsibly we can plan for it.

Essential oils are purposeful materials. Some belong in daily practice. Others are used for a period, then set aside when that phase has passed.

The aim is not constant consumption. It is considered use.

When your needs are different—continuous access, professional quantities, or a particular material required for practice—that becomes a separate conversation and should be raised early.

Your Voice Shapes the Future

Once you have had time to work with the cabinet, your feedback becomes genuinely important.

We now plan cultivation and reserve materials before the finished products exist. What is planted, distilled, held, or restored next depends partly on early signals from the people who actually use these materials.

Not trend projections. Not manufactured urgency. Real use.

At certain points in the year, we will send a focused question or short poll through the newsletter. This is not conventional market research. It is part of agricultural and production planning.

Growers make decisions within real seasonal windows. Once planting, harvesting, or distillation schedules are set, they cannot always be changed later.

Participation is optional, and we will not send repeated reminders. But when a material, formula, size, or area of support matters to you, that is the moment to say so.

You may also contact us directly by email at any time.

Future cabinets will be shaped by three things:

  • what the land and growers can responsibly provide

  • what the archive and current research can support

  • what customers and practitioners are actually asking to use

This is not about status or privileged access. It is about planning together rather than simply transacting.

 

For practitioners and professionals, early input carries particular weight. Volume, format, continuity, and reserve decisions all happen upstream. They need to be understood before the cultivation and production cycle is underway.

→  For Practioners & Professionals