Flower Essences

How to Make a Flower Essence Treatment Bottle

A complete practical guide to creating, dosing, and storing your personalised flower essence blend โ€” from Pat Coffey's dispensary at The Honey Pot.

Making your own flower essence treatment bottle is one of the most practical and empowering skills in natural health โ€” and it is far simpler than many people expect. Once you understand the basic process, you can create personalised blends for yourself, your children, your partner, or your pets, tailored precisely to the emotional situation at hand. This guide covers everything you need to know, from equipment to dosage, from the choice of essences to storage and refresh cycles.

Pat Coffey at The Honey Pot in Clonmel, 14 Abbey Street, has been making flower essence treatment bottles for clients since she qualified as a naturopath from UCC in 2005. Everything in this guide reflects her approach โ€” refined over two decades of practice and informed by the Bach system, the Findhorn Flower Essences (produced on the Moray coast of Scotland by the Findhorn community, founded in 1962), and the wider landscape of essence therapy.

Understanding the Difference: Stock Bottles vs Treatment Bottles

Before making a treatment bottle, it is important to understand the distinction between stock bottles and treatment bottles โ€” a source of confusion for many people new to flower essences.

Stock bottles are the bottles you buy in the shop โ€” typically 10ml or 20ml amber glass dropper bottles containing the flower essence preserved in brandy. Each stock bottle holds a concentrated essence at "stock strength." The brandy concentration (typically 27%) is at this level purely as a preservative for the essence.

Treatment bottles are personal dosage bottles made by diluting drops from the stock bottle into spring water. The standard treatment bottle is 30ml. Adding 2โ€“4 drops of a stock essence to a 30ml bottle of spring water creates the dosage level at which the essence is taken โ€” this is "dosage strength." Crucially, diluting the stock essence into a treatment bottle does not reduce its effectiveness; flower essences are vibrational preparations, and their action does not diminish with dilution in the way that a pharmaceutical compound would.

What You Need

The Making Process: Step by Step

Step 1: Choose Your Essences

The foundation of a good treatment bottle is choosing the right essences for the current emotional situation. This requires honest self-reflection or, ideally, a consultation with an experienced practitioner. The Bach system offers 38 single remedies; the Findhorn range adds further options. The general principle: choose 2โ€“7 essences that resonate with the most prominent emotional states you are experiencing right now.

Pat's guidance: "Don't try to address everything at once. Work with the most pressing layer โ€” the most obvious and uncomfortable emotional pattern. As that shifts, the next layer will often become clearer." A blend addressing every possible issue dilutes the effect and makes it harder to assess what is working.

Step 2: Add the Preservative

Fill your 30ml dropper bottle approximately one-third to one-half with your chosen preservative (brandy or apple cider vinegar). This goes in first, before the water, to ensure good distribution.

Step 3: Add the Essence Drops

From each chosen stock bottle, add 2 drops to the treatment bottle. Two drops is the standard, and adding more does not increase the effect โ€” it is the energetic imprint that matters, not the concentration. The drops from different essences can be added in any order. Pat prefers to tap each stock bottle lightly on the palm of the hand 3โ€“5 times before adding drops โ€” this is a traditional activating gesture, though not strictly necessary.

Step 4: Top Up with Spring Water

Fill the bottle to approximately 5mm from the top with still spring water, leaving a small air gap so the dropper can create suction. Close the bottle and gently roll it between the palms of your hands to combine. Some practitioners like to hold the bottle and set an intention at this point โ€” whatever feels natural and meaningful to you.

Step 5: Label Your Bottle

Label with: date made, your name, and the essences included. This allows you to track which blend you are taking when you review your progress, and to remake an identical blend if it is working well.

Dosage: How and When to Take Your Blend

The standard dosage is four drops, four times daily. The four key moments Pat recommends:

  1. First thing in the morning โ€” before food or drink, while the mind is quiet and receptive
  2. Around lunchtime โ€” a mid-day reset
  3. Afternoon โ€” approximately 4pm works well for many people
  4. Last thing at night โ€” just before sleep, which is a particularly receptive time for the essences to work

The drops are placed directly on the tongue from the dropper. Try to hold them under the tongue for 30โ€“60 seconds before swallowing, as sublingual absorption is good. Avoid contact between the dropper and the tongue (which would contaminate the remaining contents of the bottle with bacteria from the mouth).

In acute situations โ€” a panic attack, an acute anxiety spike, a moment of overwhelm โ€” you can take four drops as often as every few minutes. There is no risk of over-dosing with flower essences.

How Long Does a Blend Last?

A 30ml treatment bottle used at standard dosage (four drops four times daily = 16 drops per day) will last approximately three weeks. With the brandy or ACV preservative, the bottle can last up to four weeks without refrigeration if kept in a cool, dark place. After four weeks, remake the blend even if there are drops remaining โ€” the vibrational quality may have degraded.

Without a preservative (for very young children), the treatment bottle should be kept in the fridge and used within one week.

How Long Should I Take a Blend?

The standard recommendation is to take one blend (one 30ml bottle) before reviewing and reassessing. This represents approximately three weeks of treatment โ€” enough time for a genuine assessment of what has shifted. Common patterns at review:

Storing Your Treatment Bottle

Keep your treatment bottle away from strong electromagnetic fields (not in a pocket with a mobile phone, not on top of a microwave or WiFi router). Keep it out of direct sunlight. Room temperature is fine; refrigeration is not necessary if you are using a brandy or ACV preservative. Do not store near strong-smelling substances such as perfumes, essential oils, or cleaning products.

Can I Combine Bach and Findhorn Essences in the Same Bottle?

Yes, absolutely. The Bach system and the Findhorn Flower Essences (and indeed any quality flower essence range) can be combined in the same treatment bottle without any issue. Many practitioners find that combining Bach essences for specific emotional states with Findhorn essences โ€” which tend to work at a slightly deeper, more archetypal level โ€” creates particularly effective blends. Ask Pat at The Honey Pot for guidance on which Findhorn essences might complement your Bach blend.

Making Treatment Bottles for Children and Pets

For children under 12, use apple cider vinegar as the preservative rather than brandy. For pets, use vegetable glycerin or simply spring water (and keep the bottle refrigerated, replacing weekly). The drops can be added to food or water rather than taken directly. See our guides on flower essences for children's anxiety and flower essences for pets in Ireland for more detail.

Pick up 30ml amber dropper bottles, spring water, and the full range of Bach and Findhorn essences at The Honey Pot, Clonmel.

Shop at The Honey Pot โ†’ ๐Ÿ“ž 052-612 1457
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