A slow breath inward to remember yourself Shaped by longing, listening, and becoming The roots beneath everything you’ll find here
About

The Story Behind the Flame
The name Hearth & Horizon came as a quiet knowing — a call to honour both where we are and where we’re going.
The Hearth is the warmth of home, the flame we tend within.
The Horizon is the call to growth, expansion, and becoming.
Together, they hold the space between remembering and rising. A twin trail of going inwards, rooting and outwards, rising, weaving the two together for our individual season.
This is the heart of Hearth & Horizon.

Our Values
Our Mission
Reverence — honouring the unseen and cyclical
Truth — speaking what is real
Embodiment — listening through body and breath
Belonging — showing up as you are
Simplicity — depth without complication
To tend spaces where women can return to themselves.
To offer rhythm, reflection, and remembering through circle, ritual, and soul practice.
To walk alongside those navigating change.
To root what has drifted. To rise what has been buried.

Meet Jessica
I am a women’s circle facilitator, Waldorf parent-and-child practitioner, and guide for those navigating seasons of transition.
My path has been shaped by motherhood, by the thresholds of identity, and by a deep calling to create spaces that feel sacred and real.
I have trained with Gemma Brady (Sister Stories) in the art of circle keeping, and draw from Waldorf Teacher Training, ritual practice, and ancestral remembering. These threads weave through my work, grounding it in both lineage and lived experience.
Before creating Hearth & Horizon, I founded The Old Stables Parent & Child Group, which continues to gather families each week as Little Hearth. My facilitation combines the practical with the profound: a steady structure that allows women to feel held, and a spaciousness that lets the soul speak.
I live with my partner and son in Richmond, where the Roundhouse is both our community’s gathering place and my own sacred classroom.
Hearth & Horizon is not my invention — it is a remembering. And it is my honour to walk this path alongside the women who find their way here.

