The animal's body has its own atmosphere. Not metaphorically. The pet you live with carries a measurable energetic field around her, and through the warm months that field is doing more work than the rest of the year. It is taking in heat and humidity, every passing scent of grass and water and other animals, the mood of the household, the tension she feels in your shoulders when you walk her past a dog you do not trust.
By August she has been carrying all of it for months.
Most of what people use in the warm months addresses what touches the animal from the outside in: the shampoo, the rinse, the topical, the spray. Those are useful. They meet the surface. Flea Season Support is for the side of the formula that runs from the inside out. It meets the field the animal's body is already carrying, and the skin and coat that have to live inside that field across a long, demanding season.
What this bottle is
Flea Season Support is a layered bioessence: nineteen Hertz frequencies arranged across eight bands, plus Fleabane flower essence. There are no herbs in the bottle. No oils. No actives in the chemical sense. The bottle is energetic imprints in spring water, calibrated as a single layered formula. The frequencies meet the pet's body. Fleabane meets the pet's energetic field. They were built together for the dog, cat, or horse navigating a pest-active summer, and what they support runs on layers a topical never reaches.
You give it in the water bowl. You can put it in the bath, on the bedding, in a hose-end sprayer for the yard, in mop water for the floors. The pet does not have to flinch from it. There is no smell. There is nothing to scrub off.
What it is for, and what it is not
It supports settled skin during pest-active months, coat comfort through the warm stretch, and the pet's experience of resilience as the season turns. That is what the bottle does. It is not a topical pest treatment, not a swap for shampoos or rinses, and not a substitute for any non-toxic routine you have already built around your animal. If your pet's body is past the point where everyday seasonal support is the right shelf (open hot spots, secondary infection, anything your vet has flagged), that is a different shelf entirely, and the cross-reference block at the foot of this page will route you better.
The eight frequency bands and one flower essence
Here is the formula's structure. The stack is sequenced from the broadest foundational layers to the most subtle and specific.
Ultra-low entrainment band (9.18 Hz, 9.19 Hz, 9.39 Hz, 9.4 Hz)
This is the layer that meets the animal's nervous system first, before anything reaches skin or coat. Sensory load goes up as the weather warms (more outdoor time, more new smells, more weather variability), and that added load broadcasts as baseline tension before any of it becomes visible. The ultra-low band supports a settled, low-stress baseline so the rest of the formula meets a body that is not already tense.
Lower band (20 Hz, 120 Hz, 271 Hz, 289 Hz)
The skin and coat surface layer. Coats shed and resettle as the weather moves, and the skin underneath does constant adjustment work. The lower band supports follicle-level ease so the daily surface work happens quietly rather than as a recurring concern.
Mid band (415 Hz, 611 Hz, 660 Hz, 664 Hz, 690 Hz)
The skin's resilience layer. Resilience is what the skin draws on when the same animal is going in and out of grass, fields, and wet weather day after day for weeks. The mid band supports that ongoing structural demand.
Foundational seasonal-support band (707 Hz, 727.5 Hz, 770 Hz, 787 Hz, 802 Hz, 916 Hz)
Six frequencies, the largest single band in the bottle, and the structural backbone of the formula. Where the other bands address specific surfaces and specific timing windows, this band holds the formula's through-season continuity, the steady current the rest of the bands feather into. If the opening frame is the field the animal's body is already carrying, this is the band that holds that field steady from inside.
Tick-active-season resilience band (737 Hz, 738 Hz, 773 Hz)
Three frequencies held in the formula specifically for the months when ticks are part of the picture. Tick-active seasons place a different and additional demand on a pet's whole-body resilience compared to flea-active seasons alone, and this band supports that whole-system demand wherever the animal lives, whether that is pasture, hiking trail, or suburban yard.
Higher band (1550 Hz, 2127.5 Hz, 2180 Hz, 2374 Hz, 2720 Hz, 2750 Hz)
Six frequencies calibrated to ongoing comfort rather than acute resilience. The everyday outcome side of the formula. Coats that stay glossy, skin that stays settled, the pet who is simply comfortable across the warm months rather than weathering them.
Carrier sweep (5000 Hz, 10000 Hz)
Two broad-spectrum frequencies. The connective tissue of the formula. Lower frequencies do work that takes time, and a carrier sweep supports that work moving cleanly through the pet's system as the lower bands settle in.
Inverted resonance band (proprietary phase-inverted signature)
The most subtle and most distinctive band in the bottle. A phase-inverted resonance signature that supports the pet's overall environmental tone through the season. This is the band that addresses the field directly, supporting an experience of seasonal ease that carries through where the animal lives, sleeps, and moves.
Plus three substance imprints
Flea Season Support also carries the vibrational imprints of three substances long present in folk traditions of seasonal pet care: garlic, vitamin B complex, and fish oil. These are not physical ingredients in the bottle. The bottle holds their vibrational imprints in spring water, calibrated alongside the frequency bands and the Fleabane flower essence.
Garlic in physical form is not safe for pets, and there is no garlic in this bottle. The imprint here carries only garlic's vibrational signature, a nod to a plant that has surfaced across centuries of folk pet-care tradition, layered into the formula's overall energetic profile.
The vitamin B complex imprint sits alongside the others as part of the formula's layered energetic profile through the warm-month stretch.
The fish oil imprint rounds out the trio, woven into the formula's energetic layering as the season turns.
Together, the three substance imprints sit alongside the frequency bands and Fleabane in the bioessence's layered profile, present in every dropper, season after season.
Fleabane (flower essence)
Fleabane is the energetic-field counterpart to the frequency bands and the deepest single component in the formula. Botanically, Fleabane (Erigeron annuus) is a pioneer species, one of the very first plants to colonize disturbed ground, arriving precisely when the land has been broken open and left bare. That is the plant's signature, and it carries directly into the essence's role for animals who are too porous to environmental stress.
The traditional medicinal action of the plant is astringent. It tightens and seals tissues, arrests leakage. In the energetic body, Fleabane does the same work, sealing the field against leakage, closing the gaps through which an animal's vital force drains away into the moods and demands of its environment. Fleabane buds droop before they open, a signature of introversion held inward, and the plant performs active winter photosynthesis, recalibrating its metabolism to harvest light other plants cannot use. That is the signature of finding light in darkness, of remaining quietly resilient when surrounding conditions are diminished.
For pets specifically, Fleabane is for the animal who soaks up everything around her. The dog who gets noticeably worse every time the household mood drops. The cat who mirrors her owner's stress. The horse who flattens during long stretches of grey weather. Fleabane is the energetic counterpart to the body-experience effects of the frequencies, and together they meet the pet at the field, the skin, and the season all at once.
How it pairs with what you already do
The non-toxic routines you have built are not replaced by this bottle. Apple cider vinegar rinses, neem, diatomaceous earth, the shampoo you trust. Keep all of it. Flea Season Support runs alongside what you are already doing, on the inside-out side of the work. It supports the animal who has to do the seasonal work either way.
When to start, and how to keep it going
Early through the season is steady through the season. Start when the first signs are coming in. The canonical use is four drops in the water bowl, several times a day, across the warm months.
In a multi-pet household, the bowl is the simplest carrier. Every animal who drinks from it gets the dose, and there is no problem with one cat sharing with another or a dog and cat sharing the same bowl. Horses can have it added to a stock tank or a smaller water bucket. For a horse who is the only one drinking from a particular trough, four drops per refill is the same idea on a different scale.
Beyond the bowl, the External Use methods in the FAQ below cover the bath, the spray bottle for bedding, household cleaners for floors, and a hose-end sprayer for yard application. Most owners settle into the bowl as the daily anchor and bring in the external uses on the rhythm that fits their household.
Cross-reference
If your pet's body is settled but the rest of the season brings other concerns, these are the FF blends that meet them: - General nervousness, vet visits → Stay Calm for Pets - Storms and fireworks → Rumble Ready - Rescue, adoption, uncertain past → Trust the Good - Reactive behavior → Socially Settled - Periods of separation, clinginess → Be Right Back - Multi-pet household tension → Harmony - Adjusting to new family or home → New Home - Training, focus → Focus For Pets - Confinement stress → Indoor Pet - Food and environmental sensitivities → Food & Field
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I give Flea Season Support to my pet?
4 drops in the water bowl or however your pet drinks is a good starting point. It does not matter if other animals drink out of it too.
Depending on your circumstances, you might find they are not drinking enough, getting water from alternate sources, or you have a critical time that they need to be dosed. Dogs will sometimes lick a few drops off a spoon. You can also try shooting it right into their mouth. Rinse your dropper before putting it back in the bottle if they get their mouth on it.
You can also rub it into their skin or gums. The inside tips of the ears (not down in) are usually accessible and not too hairy. Putting a few drops on their paws might mean they have to lick it off.
If your pet eats wet food, adding essences is another easy way to get it down them.
What if my pet won't drink from the water bowl, or fights the bath?
Plenty of pets do. The water bowl is the easiest carrier, not the only one. If your animal is drinking less than you would like, getting water from alternate sources like puddles, hose drips, or a stream you cannot control, the external methods become the main way the bottle does its work.
Rub a few drops onto the inside tips of the ears (not down in the canal), the gums, the soft skin under the front legs, or the paws. A few drops added to wet food works for pets who eat it. For the bath-resistant animal, mist a couple of pumps of the spray bottle on bedding daily and consider a kiddie pool with drops in it that the pet can step into on their own terms instead of being lifted into a tub. The bottle finds the animal wherever they are.
What is a bioessence, and how is it different from a pesticide or topical?
A bioessence is a bottle of imprinted frequencies in spring water. There are no herbs in it, no oils, no actives in the chemical sense. The work is done by the imprint. Flea Season Support carries nineteen Hertz frequencies arranged across eight bands plus the energetic signature of one flower essence, Fleabane.
A pesticide or topical meets what touches the pet from the outside in. It is a chemical act on a surface. A bioessence supports the pet from the inside out, on layers a chemical never reaches: the nervous-system baseline, the skin's structural resilience, the field the animal is already carrying through the season. The two do different work, and Flea Season Support is built to support that inside-out work directly.
What are the external use methods for Flea Season Support?
In the Bath: Add 4 drops to a bath. You can use your favorite non-toxic shampoo or simply let your pet soak in the water. If bathing is very stressful for your pet, you can skip this step. If you have a water dog, a kiddie pool with drops in it may help them self-administer.
In a Spray Bottle: Add 4 drops to water in a spray bottle to mist your pet's bedding and furniture.
Household Cleaners: Add 4 drops to mop water or other cleaners to clean floors and surfaces.
Yard Treatment: Add 4 drops to a hose-end sprayer filled with water and spray the ground and vegetation.
Whatever method you choose, in most cases, they will need the essences several times a day.
Will it work in a multi-pet household? Can the cat and the dog share a bowl?
Yes. The bowl is the simplest carrier in a multi-pet household. Every animal who drinks from it gets the dose. There is no problem with one cat sharing with another or a dog and cat sharing the same bowl. Add 4 drops per refill.
For households with horses, the bottle can go into a stock tank, a smaller water bucket, or a hose-end spray for the paddock or pasture. For mixed households (a barn cat, a hiking dog, an indoor-outdoor cat), the bowl-plus-spray rhythm covers most of the ground.
My horse grazes outside all day. Can I use this for him too?
Yes. Flea Season Support is built for dogs, cats, and horses. The bottle is built to meet all three the same way. For horses, four drops added to a stock tank or a smaller water bucket on the same idea is a clean daily anchor. The hose-end sprayer works for paddock, pasture, or stall surroundings on the same rhythm as a yard application for a dog or cat household. Outdoor pets in general (barn cats, working dogs, livestock guardians) do well with the bowl-plus-spray pattern.
How long until I notice a difference?
Different pets settle into the formula on different timelines. Some owners notice settled skin and easier nights inside the first week, especially when starting at the beginning of the season. Others see the formula's work most clearly across the long span of the warm months: the kind of summer where a pet "just had a good summer" without the owner being able to point to one specific change.
Earlier through the season is steadier through the season. Several times a day in the water bowl across the warm months is the rhythm most owners settle into.
Does it pair with what I am already doing, like apple cider vinegar, neem, or the non-toxic shampoo?
Yes. Flea Season Support is not a swap for the routines you have already built. It works on a side of the same season those routines do not reach. Keep your apple cider vinegar in the rinse water. Keep your non-toxic shampoo. Keep the diatomaceous earth. The bioessence runs alongside, on the inside-out side, supporting the body that has to do the seasonal work no matter what.
Where's the science behind this?
The full mechanism explanation, the research base for the bioessences, and the way the frequencies and flower essences are designed to work together lives on our Science Hub page. That page covers what bioessences are, how they differ from herbal supplements, the role of vibrational imprints in spring water, and what the underlying research looks like. If you want the deeper dive before or after trying this bottle, that is the page to read.
These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Information on this site is for educational purposes only and is not intended as veterinary advice. Consult a qualified veterinarian for any animal health concern.