StoneBlood: The Fountain of Youth

For as long as people have climbed mountains, they have come back down with stories. Stories of a dark resin that seeps from cracks in high stone when the summer sun warms it — gathered by hand, prized above gold, and carried home as something close to sacred. Different cultures gave it different names. In the Himalaya it became known as shilajit, “conqueror of mountains.” We call ours StoneBlood, because that is what it looks like when it weeps from the rock: the blood of the mountain itself.

The old texts are full of reverence for this substance. It was folded into the daily rituals of kings and ascetics alike, spoken of as a rejuvenator — something that helped the body hold onto its vigor as the years pressed in. People have always chased that idea. The fountain of youth is one of humanity’s oldest dreams, and every generation looks for it somewhere. Ours tends to look in a laboratory. The ancients looked to the mountain.

What they found was not magic. It was minerals — an astonishing concentration of them. Over countless centuries, mountain plants and microbial life are pressed and transformed within the rock into a humic-rich resin dense with fulvic acid, trace minerals, and organic compounds. Fulvic acid is the part that fascinates modern researchers: a small, mobile molecule that helps carry minerals where the body can use them. The mountain, in other words, had been quietly making a mineral concentrate the whole time. People simply learned to find it.

StoneBlood is our attempt to honor that lineage without pretending to have improved on it. We don’t manufacture it; we gather it — wildcrafted by hand in the mountains of Utah, then refined in distilled Rocky Mountain spring water using methods that respect the traditional craft. No factories, no fillers, no shortcuts. Just the resin, in its purest form, exactly as the mountain offered it.

We can’t promise you eternal youth — no one honestly can. But we can offer you the same thing those mountain travelers carried home: a pure, mineral-rich resin, and a daily ritual with fourteen centuries of tradition behind it. Sometimes the oldest ideas are the ones worth returning to.

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.