For Pets
Mobility
For the companion who still wants to run — joint comfort and structural strength that keep an active animal moving with ease.
Mobility is built for the body in motion. It supports the parts of an animal that carry, bend, and spring — the joints, the connective tissue, the framework that lets a dog meet you at the door, a cat take the high shelf, a horse cover ground without hesitation. The aim is simple and honest: an animal that moves the way it wants to, and stays comfortable doing it.
Movement is a whole-body act. A loose, easy stride depends not just on the joint but on the strength of the structure around it, on calm tissue that isn't holding tension, and on the underlying vitality that keeps an animal willing to get up and go. Mobility works across all three at once — structural support for the frame, soothing support for the tissue, and a foundation of deep, restorative botanicals that keep the engine warm. It is nourishment for the moving body, not a quick fix laid over a tired one.
Companions feel age in their joints first. The leap that used to be nothing becomes a pause; the morning stretch takes a little longer. Mobility is for that stage of life and the years before it — daily food-grade support to help an active animal stay active, and to help a slowing one keep its dignity and its favorite habits. You give it because you want them to keep being themselves.
This is a structure-and-function blend, scaled to the animal in front of you. It supports the body's own framework and ease of movement. For any injury or diagnosed joint condition, your animal's care belongs in qualified hands. Mobility's place is the everyday: keeping a well animal limber, comfortable, and glad to move.
What it supports in the animal
The body systems the herbs in this formula are traditionally understood to nourish — resolved through our knowledge graph, where the classical record and modern biology are read together. Structure and function, never a claim of treatment.
For Pets
Small-batch. Dual-extracted where it matters. Made by hand.
How to take it
A small amount of the dilute hot-water extract or powder stirred into food, scaled to body weight. Start low and build gradually over days.
What you get
What this formula gives you
Supports joint comfort and an easy, fluid range of motion in active companions
Strengthens the structural frame — the connective tissue and skeletal support that movement depends on
Helps a warming, well-circulated body stay loose rather than stiff after exertion or rest
Builds underlying vitality so an animal stays willing and eager to move
Gentle daily food-grade support suited to the long arc of an aging or hard-working animal
Convergent across traditions — Chinese Du Zhong structural wisdom, Galenic and Ayurvedic warming roots, and the great vitality mushrooms in one blend
How it works
The science of Mobility
Not buzzwords — the actual biology of the plants in this formula: their compounds, the targets those compounds are measured to engage, and the systems they nourish.
The structural anchor of this formula is Eucommia bark — Du Zhong, reached for across more than a thousand years specifically for the skeletal frame, the lower back, and the strength of the limbs. It was the herb of choice when a body needed to stand firm and move without weakness. We can now name part of why: eucommia is rich in chlorogenic acid and quercetin, measured polyphenols that interact with the body's own connective-tissue and metabolic machinery. In the formula it plays the role tradition always gave it — support for the architecture that movement is built on.
Ginger carries the comfort side of the work. Its signature molecule, 6-gingerol, has been measured engaging the eicosanoid pathway — the same prostaglandin-and-COX system the body uses to govern the local tone of tissue after exertion. This is the molecular echo of ginger's warming, circulation-rousing character, shared across Galenic, Ayurvedic, and Chinese practice alike, that keeps a body loose and moving rather than stiff and held. Warmth and flow are not metaphors here; they are what ginger does to tissue.
The foundation underneath is a trio of deep vitality botanicals — Astragalus (Huang Qi), Reishi, and Turkey Tail. Astragalus contributes astragaloside IV, cycloastragenol, and the flavonoid kaempferol, compounds tied to its traditional role as a builder of underlying strength and connective resilience. Reishi and Turkey Tail, the two great immune-modulating mushrooms, bring ganoderic acids and a well-characterized polysaccharide and sterol profile that supports the body's steady, balanced baseline. Together they keep the whole animal robust enough to want to move — because mobility is never only the joint; it is the vitality of the body that owns it.
The molecules, measured
A formula is a community of compounds. Below are active molecules from the herbs in this blend and the proteins each is measured to engage — the precise points where the plants meet biology. So you see not just that it works, but how.
Eucommia ulmoides
Chlorogenic acid
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
A viral enzyme HIV uses to insert its genetic material into a host cell's DNA.
An enzyme that dials down insulin and growth signaling by removing phosphate tags.
An enzyme that converts glucose into sorbitol as part of cellular sugar handling.
Quercetin
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
A structural protein that stabilizes the internal scaffolding of nerve cells.
An enzyme that converts excess glucose into sorbitol, part of how cells handle sugar.
A liver-type enzyme that processes hormones and environmental compounds.
Zingiber officinale
6-Gingerol
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
A major liver enzyme that processes a wide range of compounds the body takes in.
A repair enzyme that resolves certain DNA damage so the strand can be restored.
A liver enzyme that helps break down and process many compounds and natural substances.
6-Shogaol
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
A major liver enzyme that processes a wide range of compounds the body takes in.
A liver enzyme that processes many compounds, including some the body forms naturally.
A nerve-ending sensor that responds to heat and to the pungency of chili pepper compounds.
Ganoderma lucidum
Ganoderic acid A
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
An enzyme that locally regenerates active cortisol, shaping how tissues respond to the body's stress hormone.
An enzyme that quiets cortisol inside kidney and salt-handling tissues, helping govern fluid and mineral balance.
An enzyme that converts glucose into sorbitol, part of how cells handle sugar.
Ganoderic acid B
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
The enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine, resetting nerve and muscle signals between pulses.
A blood enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine and helps clear certain compounds from circulation.
An enzyme that converts glucose into sorbitol, part of how cells handle sugar.
Trametes versicolor
Ergosterol
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
An enzyme that produces nitric oxide as part of the immune and inflammatory response.
A liver enzyme that attaches sugar groups to compounds so the body can clear them.
Ergosterol peroxide
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
An enzyme that converts glucose into sorbitol, part of how cells handle sugar.
An enzyme that produces nitric oxide as part of the immune and inflammatory response.
A receptor that senses bile acids and helps govern fat, cholesterol, and bile balance.
Astragalus membranaceus
Formononetin
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
A liver enzyme that breaks down many compounds the body takes in.
A protein that helps decide whether a cell continues living or undergoes natural turnover.
An enzyme that edits proteins to manage cellular cleanup and the cell internal scaffolding.
Calycosin
PubChem ↗Measured to act on
A protein that helps organize DNA and acts as an alarm signal during tissue stress.
Measured molecular activities drawn from public scientific databases (PubChem, ChEMBL), shown as the characterized chemistry of the plants in this formula — every edge traced to its source record. This describes the molecules, not the product. Structure and function only; these statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
In practice
Who it’s for, and how to use it
Who it’s for
For the active and the aging companion alike — the dog who lives to fetch, the cat who climbs, the working or older horse who still has ground to cover. It suits animals you want to keep limber and comfortable through ordinary life and the slow arc of getting older. It is everyday vitality support for a well animal; injury and diagnosed joint conditions belong with your veterinarian. Scale to the species and size of the animal in front of you, and mind species safety as always.
How to use it
Give a small amount of the dilute hot-water extract or the powder stirred into food, scaled to the animal's body weight. Start low and build gradually over several days, letting the body meet the herbs at its own pace. Consistency matters more than dose — daily support over weeks is how structural and vitality botanicals do their work. Always scale to the species in front of you and observe how your companion responds.
Measure · A small amount of the dilute hot-water extract or powder stirred into food, scaled to body weight. Start low and build gradually over days.
What’s inside
Inside: Eucommia bark (Du Zhong), Ginger root, Astragalus root (Huang Qi), Reishi, and Turkey Tail — five botanicals chosen because they converge on one outcome from different directions. Eucommia and astragalus hold the structure, ginger keeps it warm and flowing, and the two mushrooms anchor the deep vitality underneath. A grounded, food-grade blend of the plants that earned their place.
Structure-and-function support for animal nutrition and vitality. Introduce gradually and watch how your companion responds. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. If your animal is pregnant, nursing, or on medication, consult your veterinarian first.