Our story started with a quiet pattern.
Each time I returned to Chitral for the holidays during my university years, I found myself carrying the same things back to the city: Shilajit, dry fruits, or honey. Friends would ask for them with a kind of reverence, as if these gifts from the mountains held something the city could not offer. When I handed them over, their faces would light up. It wasn’t just a simple gift from my hometown. To them, it felt like a treasure.
At first, I didn’t think much of it. But seeing such joy over such common products made me curious. I began to wonder: why did these everyday items hold so much meaning for them? These were not rare goods. You could find them almost everywhere, in both offline markets and online stores.
When I asked them repeatedly, their answers always came back to the same belief, passed down through generations. The elders in their families believed that the products from Chitral were organic, unfiltered, and untouched by commercial processing. They trusted these items because they came from a place untouched by the noise of the world. To them, these weren’t just gifts but an escape to purity and authenticity.
That felt wholesome. I wanted to understand more.
I began meeting the people behind these gifts: the harvesters, the farmers, the quiet hands who gather Shilajit from steep mountain rocks, sun-dry apricots under open skies, and collect honey with patience and care.
What I learned was deeply inspiring. This was not just business. It was tradition. It was a commitment to authenticity, sustainability, coexistence, and a deep respect for nature. It was a belief that nature provides everything we need to live well.
Yet, like many other industries, the system was unfair. The hands that carried the knowledge of generations and produced something rare and meaningful were being undervalued. Their work was overshadowed by commercialized products. Despite the rising demand for authenticity, these artisans were paid far less than the value they created. The products were exceptional. The system was not.
That’s when The Northern Farms took root. It did not begin as a business idea, but as a responsibility.
Today, The Northern Farms is built on a promise to do things differently.
We are a brand grounded in ethics, transparency, and respect for both people and the land.
We work directly with our harvesters, ensuring fair compensation, preserving traditional practices, and treating them with the respect they have always deserved. Our products are ethically sourced, organically handled, and lab-tested for safety and purity. We keep our processes simple and honest so the integrity of every product remains intact.
From our Shilajit resin and sun-cured dry fruits to wild mountain honey, everything we offer is a reflection of where we come from. It’s not just a place. It’s a way of life.
At The Northern Farms, we don’t just sell natural products.
We honor tradition, uplift communities, and help our customers reconnect with what’s real.

