Soundwave Herbalism
Herbal medicine has always meant slow infusions and long steeping. RedFern adds one modern tool — sound — to release more of each plant's medicine in hours instead of weeks.

What ultrasonic cavitation actually does
No. 01 — The principleThrough ultrasonic cavitation, sound waves break open the cell walls of an herb, spice, root, or seed. That lets the medicinal compounds release more powerfully — and with far less degradation to the delicate, volatile constituents that slow heat would cook away.
No. 02 — Why it mattersTraditional extraction asks for patience: weeks of steeping, careful temperature management, and a real loss of the most fragile aromatic oils. Cavitation keeps those volatile oils intact while drawing out more of the plant, into whatever menstruum you choose — oil, alcohol, glycerin, or honey.
No. 03 — The resultWhat once took weeks can now happen in hours. RedFern's Gut Intention and Solar Saffron are both soundwave-created — Solar Saffron concentrated enough to deliver 1,200 servings from a single bottle, where most saffron extracts manage thirty to sixty.
No. 04 — Used with respectThis style of extraction is new to herbalism and very powerful when used with understanding. RedFern formulates each batch small, by hand, listening to the plant — modern technique in service of very old wisdom, never the other way around.

More medicine, less waste
- Opens the cell walls. Soundwaves cavitate the plant material so the compounds release fully.
- Protects volatile oils. No long heat exposure means the fragile aromatics survive.
- Hours, not weeks. A faster, more efficient process from herb to finished extract.
The Amped Herbalist Guide to Soundwave Herbalism
First of its kind — a complete guide to ultrasonic cavitation for herbalists and for anyone curious about venturing into plant medicine at home.
The heart of the book is simple: bring alternative, holistic medicine home to the average family, affordably, for generations to come. It teaches how easy it is to fold modern extraction into a home practice.