Local, Accessible Natural Medicine
About the Clinic
Making compassionate, non-judgmental care an option.
The vision for this clinic was inspired by my mentors. The pay-what-you-want visit model is practiced by my former professor, Dr Chris Pickrell ND, at his naturopathic walk-in in Toronto. He taught me to make individualized teas and tinctures at the Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine. The herbs I dispense at Georgina Naturopathic are grown by his herb farm.
The pay-what-you-want model allows me to offer a luxury service to those who need it most, and be who I needed when I was younger. My first experience with a naturopathic doctor was with Dr Mallory Ryan ND in Nova Scotia. She was the first doctor who had not dismissed my chronic pain as just IBS. I needed someone who listened to me and investigated further. Now I want to provide medicine that listens. I want to empower my patients by sharing with them the lab tests available to us and engaging them fully in the investigation.
While studying indigenous medicine at McMaster University, my professor and medicine woman, Wendy Hill, shared with me that I should help people get back to what is important. I hope to provide a natural health experience for people who want to reconnect with the land and experience its abundance. Naturopathic doctors owe our knowledge of herbal medicine and many of our other modalities to indigenous knowledge and we are grateful to be able to learn and practice it.
My mission is to help people and the Earth. It is to hold inclusive, safe spaces for my patients, to pique their curiosity, and to inspire them with colourful meadows and whole herbs that they can see, smell, prepare, and experience as medicine.
The clinic is in my home, which was built with this space in mind, separating it from the living areas. It has a waiting room and the best view of the garden. I am excited to invite you into this nurturing space. Please stay and sit in the garden when you visit. It is a native plant garden, planted in the new perennialist movement style. I hope you like it.
I cannot wait to support you and celebrate our progress. See you soon!
The Georgina Butterflyway
1% of visit proceeds go towards native plants for the 14 Georgina Butterflyway gardens, maintained by Yulia, Katie, and Judi.
Learn more about the David Suzuki Butterflyway Project here:
Georgina Butterflyway gardens accessible to the public:
- Canoe Garden at The Link
- Georgina Naturopathic (follow the driveway to the back)
- Bethany Co-Op at 45 Atherton Crescent (front garden)
- Our Lady of Smolensk Church at 5 Birch Road
- Springwood Beach Association at the end of Brule Lakeway
- Perch Palace waterfront garden at 981 Lake Drive North (accessible to visitors staying at the bed and breakfast)
Thank you, guardians of the land
Georgina Naturopathic is situated on the land of the Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, Mississauga, and Huron-Wendat people.
I am committed to decolonization and reconciliation by creating a safe healing space, honouring indigenous culture and history, supporting indigenous businesses, and tending to the land by removing invasive species and growing native plants.
Sex-positive, body-positive health care
I dream of creating an amazing experience for people of diverse abilities, cultures, bodies, identities and relationship constellations, through ongoing education, multiple visit formats, biophilic design, adjustable equipment, BMI-free assessments and open, assumption-free discussions about sexuality.
Please tell me how to make it even better!