How to prepare your home for winter (without the toxins)

By Kaya Kozanecka

How to prepare your home for winter (without the toxins) How to prepare your home for winter (without the toxins)

Just as animals prepare their dens and birds migrate with instinctual grace, we too are meant to transition with the seasons. As the days contract and darkness stretches, your nervous system craves warmth, your immune system seeks fortification, and your home becomes more than shelter, it’s your cocoon for restoration.

This is the season of candles, wool blankets, and simmering pots, but the details matter. A home filled with synthetic scents, stale air, and artificial heat might look cosy,  but it won’t support the deep, biological need for safety, slowness, and clean, nourishing space.

Here’s how to prepare your home for winter, the non toxic way.

1. Create a circadian sanctuary

The sun dips earlier, and the body begins to shift with it. Melatonin production rises with darkness, cortisol quietens, and we’re biologically wired to wind down sooner. But most homes fight against this natural rhythm. Overhead lighting mimics midday sun, and screens keep our minds buzzing well past when our bodies want to rest.

Instead, try...

  • Beeswax candles: A golden, gentle light that doesn’t spike cortisol. They also purify the air by releasing negative ions that bind to pollutants.

  • Red incandescent bulbs: a simple, affordable alternative to red light panels. These bulbs mimic the frequency of firelight and sunset, helping to preserve circadian rhythm without stimulating the brain. 

  • Salt lamps or amber bulbs: Offer a warmer glow that supports melatonin production.

  • Firelight or wood-burning stoves: If you’re lucky enough to have one, nothing is more ancestral than a crackling fire as your evening companion.

2. Swap synthetics for natural scents

What we call “cosy” in winter is often laced with hormone-disrupting chemicals, plug-in diffusers, synthetic candles, “winter spice” sprays heavy with phthalates. These fragrances hijack your endocrine system and agitate your breath.

Instead, scent your space with nature’s medicine.

  • Simmer pots: Fill a cast iron pot with water, orange peel, cinnamon sticks, cloves, and a sprig of rosemary. Let it gently steam throughout the day.
  • Essential oil diffusers: Opt for oils like cedarwood, fir needle, sweet orange, and frankincense, they’re calming to the nervous system, grounding to the lungs, and antimicrobial to the air.
  • You can also stud oranges with whole cloves to make traditional pomanders, they’re beautiful, functional, and will scent your home for weeks.

3.Surround your skin with ancestral fibres

In winter, the body becomes more attuned to its environment,  constantly scanning for warmth, familiarity, and cues of safety. Textiles play a quiet but powerful role here. Natural fibres like wool, cotton, and linen help regulate body temperature and humidity, offering warmth without overheating. When your environment supports thermoregulation, your nervous system stays calmer, your sleep is deeper, and your energy is better conserved.

  • Wool throws and sheepskins for the floor. Affordable options often appear second-hand so keep an eye on charity shops, vintage markets, or online platforms like eBay and Facebook Marketplace. 

  • Linen or cotton sheets instead of polyester blends. 

  • Flannel bedding for that cocooned, tucked-in warmth


4. Stock your ancestral pantry

Autumn is the pause between the growing and the resting. It’s the season of gathering and your kitchen becomes a sacred space to preserve what’s left of summer and prepare for the stillness ahead.

In the old ways, this was the time to cure, ferment, dry, and jar. Ancestral homes would hum with the scent of simmering fruits and bubbling krauts, filling pantries with shelf-stable nourishment that would carry them through the darker months.

A truly autumnal pantry might include:

  • Fig or blackberry jam, simmered slowly with raw honey and lemon zest, a way to bottle the last of the sun.

  • Sun-dried tomatoes or fermented garlic, preserved in olive oil for winter stews

  • Rosehip syrup, rich in vitamin C and immune support

  • Jars of fermented vegetables. Think red cabbage kraut, carrot sticks with dill, or kimchi for digestive fire

  • Dried summer herbs like thyme, oregano, and mint, hung in bunches

  • Root vegetables, onions, and squashes


6. Embrace rituals of stillness

Winter doesn’t carry the same momentum as summer, and it’s not supposed to. It’s a slower season, one that supports repair, reflection, and recalibration. Productivity shifts inward. The external stillness is mirrored in the body.

Run magnesium-rich salt baths by candlelight, letting your muscles melt back into your bones. Often overlooked, adding 1–2 tablespoons of baking soda to the bath can enhance tissue oxygenation, support cellular repair, and create an environment less prone to inflammation. These baths nourish the thyroid, boost circulation, and help restore the mineral balance often depleted in colder months. For anyone feeling the drag of the colder weather, low energy, cold hands, sluggish metabolism, this is a ritual worth returning to.

Pour herbal teas like nettle, raspberry leaf*, or cinnamon into thick mugs and hold them close.

*We know many in our community are pregnant and while raspberry leaf tea is incredible for winter, we recommend avoiding it during the first trimester. It can have a mild stimulating effect on the uterus, which is why it's typically reserved for later stages of pregnancy

After bathing, warmed oils or tallow can be massaged into the skin to nourish circulation and calm the body. For those prone to dry skin or seasonal eczema flare-ups, this becomes especially important. The colder months often bring lowered humidity and indoor heating, both of which can dehydrate the skin and aggravate inflammatory conditions. Tallow becomes a powerful ally here… its bioavailable nutrients and skin-identical structure help restore moisture, reduce inflammation, and support true healing, not just surface relief.

Want to make your own? Here's our Whipped Tallow Moisturiser recipe.

These small, tactile moments are how we signal safety. How we remind the body it’s being cared for, even as the temperature drops and the days draw in.



Once your home is softened and stocked, all that’s left is to nestle into it. And what better way to end the day than with a mug of Bone Broth Hot Chocolate with a couple of pillowy Gut Healing Marshmallows melting on top. 

Let winter come. You’re ready.

What's your favourite autumn ritual? ↓

Published on: September 20, 2025

Comments

1 comment

This article made me feel all cozy. Winter here we come!

Meika

Leave a comment

More than just a supplement

All-in-one, 100% grass-fed beef protein powder, enriched with collagen, colostrum and beef organs. Designed to replace multiple supplements using whole-food nutrition.

Inside organised

Beef Protein

Bovine Collagen 

Bovine Colostrum

Bovine Organ Complex

(Liver, Heart, Kidney, Spleen, Lung)

Celtic Sea Salt

Raw Honey

Maple Syrup

Organic Dates

Buy Now

Blue packaging for the 'Organised' whole food organ blend product, emphasizing nutrition and longevity benefits.

NO SUGAR ADDED

NO FLAVOURINGS

NOTHING ARTIFICAL

NO STEVIA OR ERYTHRITOL

NO PESTICIDES