From left to right- red campion, white campion and bladder campion. The Campions 'Come to the woods, for here is rest. There is no repose like that of the green deep woods.'
John Muir Common Name: Red Campion Latin : Silene diocia Family: Caryophllaceae History and/or use: A soap can be made from the roots. Wildlife Value: Nectar plant for bees, buterflies and hoverflies. A walk in the green woods in June reveals Silenus who is the Greek intoxicated God of woodlands that gives a home to the plant sucking nymph known as froghopper who encases herself in a protective foam. All of this of course is true for the sight I speak of is the gentle plant known as Silene (campion) the name of which is derived from Silenus the Greek God of the woods. The campions I write of have red and white flowers and also share the folk name of cuckoo flower with the plant called lady's smock ( Cardamine pratensis) which also houses the froghopper nymph, a common spring site on our British flora. Further folk names of the campion such as Robin Hood and adder's flower point to a plant which once was noticed and celebrated at a time when nature is brimming with the 'silent uprush of sap' to paraphrase the inspiring John Muir who continues to state that the sap rising and the storms of every sort 'are the orderly beauty-making love- beats of Nature's heart.' Campions can vary in colour from red to pink and white and once were used for snake venom as the above folk name indicates, their roots make soap and the juice of the plant was said to remove warts and corns. Please do not use this plant as used incorrectly it is incredibly toxic! The red campion is closely related to the white campion (S.latifolia) and when they grow together they readily hybridise unusually compared to other plant species, still remaining fertile thus disguising the original parents creating various shades of red, pink and white flowers. The other common species of campion is known as the bladder campion as it has an inflated calyx that resembles the bladder, its closest relative is the sea campion ( S.vulgaris) which also has the same distinctive calyx. You will find this species growing on cliffs and shingle distinguished by having larger scales on its petals than the bladder campion. The bladder campion exudes an evening scent but even for long-tongued invertebrates its nectar is hard to obtain which has led bumble bees to bite through the base of the flower to obtain the nectar. If you have enjoyed this article you may wish to sign up for our free newsletter which is packed with information on trees, plants and connecting with nature.
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Pictures from left to right- Dog rose Rosa canina, Field rose R. arvensis, Sweet briar R.rubiginosa Wild RosesThe rose is the ultimate symbol of the English garden. Its beauty and fragrance has captured the heart of the Nation despite its vicious thorns that could cause infection. Maybe it's due to its thorns that it has been used as a symbol of warring factions and such a charming flower speaks of the masked deceptions of politics and pleasantries?
Shakespeare used the symbology of the red and white rose in his play of Henry Sixth setting them against each other with the words: Let him—a true-born gentleman who values the honour of his birth—pluck a white rose with me from this bush here, if he thinks that I have spoken the truth. ... Let him that is no coward or flatterer, but who dares to tell the real truth, pluck a red rose with me, from this thorn. In later writings the phrase ‘War of the Roses’ is coined by Sir Walter Scott to describe the English Civil Wars between the Royal Households of Lancaster (red rose) and York (white rose). This symbology seems to ring true and perhaps speaks of older folklore. The rose as it represents love maybe is fraught with much deception as pain and love so intricately weave together as joy and woe do according to Blakes auguries of innocence: ‘Joy and woe are woven fine, A clothing for the soul divine, Under every grief and pine, Runs a joy with silken twine. It is right it should be so, We were made for joy and woe, And when this we rightly know, Through the world we safely go.’ William Blake seems to be alluding to opposites, polarities within us all that we cannot escape and ultimately need to be woven together. Much older lore seems to also speak of these opposites but using dragons instead of roses and yet still referring to warring factions and still using the clear colours of red and white. This time the red dragon represents the British and the white dragon is the invading Saxons. This image was depicted in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of Kings and is rooted in even older stories of warring dragons causing chaos across Britain until caught by Lludd and buried at Dinas Emrys. Let us come back then to the rose for in older lore it was also recognised such as in the story of Suibne Gelt, a man who seeks the solitude of nature after the conflict of War. In nature he connects with the animals, birds and plants and writes verses about them. Here is the verse he is said to have uttered about the wild rose: 'O briar, little arched one, thou grantest no fair terms, thou ceasest not to tear me, till thou hast thy fill of blood. ' Irish texts Society (translated by J.G. O’Keefe) This verse aptly moves us away from the Garden Rose admired in later times to the wild roses of Britain, who’s arching spiny and vicious thorns are decorated with the delicate petals of flowers that provide nectar for insects and hips (fruit) for the birds. There are three main common roses which are the Dog rose (Rosea canina), Field rose (R.arvensis) and the Sweet briar (R.rubiginosa) as well as the more specialist low growing species of coast and chalk downlands the Burnet rose (R.pimpinellifolia). If you have any medical conditions please check with a medical herbalist first before taking any plant and only harvest it if you are 100% sure what it is! Our wild roses are known throughout history as remedies for coughs and colds especially when their hips (fruit) are made into a syrup. The buds and petals are said to strengthen the stomach and make a pleasing tea which I like to have mixed with honey and elderflower. If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection please become a member and have exclusive access to our online course. Qualities of Lady's Smock
Soft curls of innocent love, Subtle blooms of a maiden’s heart. Pink and white flowers of gentle persuasion, Midst rough coarse grass and buttercup invasion. Crisp cold winds, flat wet meadows, Suffused with beauty, as she softly spreads, Fresh new excitement, Spring's quickening pulse, Tenacious young growth, love ever unfolding. J.Huet 2018 Common Name: Lady's smock Latin : Cardamine pratensis Family: Brassicaceae (Cruciferae) History and/or use: Good for coughs and digestion Widlife Value: Good food plants for the caterpillars of green veined white and orange tip butterflies. On the edge of an ancient woodland I used to visit in my teens was a brook and a wet meadow cheered by ragged robin, lady’s smock and a hedge of Blackthorn. It brought much joy to me and a reminder of the importance of our wetlands which we have drained in the pursuit of agriculture. Indeed a quarter of Britain once consisted of some type of wetland be it a bog, meadow, fen or marsh. Lady’s smock is a delicate looking yet hardy plant, a spring addition to wet areas. Its subtle white or mauve flowers and soft foliage warms the heart in April through to June. It may well be the time of year that it flowers that gives it the name of Cuckoo flower or the fact that it is home to the substance known as cuckoo-spit ( which is made from froghopper bug nymphs). Its spring blooms also give rise to associations with milkmaids, their smocks and to the Virgin Mary. Older spring traditions remind us to respect the lady of the land as picking the plant can lead to a snake bite and bringing it indoors can cause a lightning strike. Folk traditions are urging us to treat her bounty with respect as the snake is a sign of spring and the lightning a reminder of elemental power. Where the grass is damp and green, Where shallow streams are flowing, Where the cowslip buds are showing, I am seen. Dainty as a fairy’s frock, White or mauve, of elfin showing, ‘Tis the meadow-maiden growing- Lady’s-smock Cicely Mary Barker If you have any medical conditions please check with a medical herbalist first before taking any plant and only harvest it if you are 100% sure what it is! Lady's smock in medical literature, as in the writings of John Ray, is given a reputation for healing nervous afflictions as it was believed to ease hysteria due to its function as a powerful antispasmodic. Mistletoe is another plant said to have been used in this way. However we would expect more evidence of this use in folk traditions which tend to focus on its ability to help fevers such as in the Highlands and in Gloucestershire the plant was commonly used for headaches. The plant is rich in vitamin C which is probably why it has been used to ease scurvy and is a good tonic for coughs. Traditional uses also include breaking stones, restoring appetite, helping digestion and warming a cold and weak stomach. If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection please become a member and have exclusive access to our online course. Hairy bittercress ( Cardamine hirsuta) Common Name: Hairy bittercress Latin : Cardamine hirsuta Family: Brassicaceae (Cruciferae)
History and/or use: Tasty peppery addition for salads rich in vitamin C. Hairy bittercress ( Cardamine hirsuta) is a very common weed which looks like a mini watercress and has a succulent peppery taste that is fresh and clean to the palate. It is a wild mustard rich in vitamin C and mentioned in Saxon herb lore and yet when investigated the knowledge of this small plant seems to be very minimal. A plant with these qualities and listed as one of the nine key herbs in Saxon lore surely is worthy of much scrutiny. Qualities of Bittercress. Bittercress although it grows, flowers and seeds in a very short time, is very productive provided bare soil is available for it to set seed. It demonstrates the ability to endure by ever-changing and adapting to new habitats that present themselves. Its longevity borne out not in a long life but in its ability to survive as a species. As humans the whole act of destruction and sacrifice is hard to contemplate but plays a huge part in Nature's cycles to quote John Muir once again: 'But we quickly learn that destruction is creation. Nature is ever at work building and pulling down, creating and destroying....' However it must equally be noted without change this plant would not persevere for the soil must be disturbed for it to regenerate whereas long-lived species that require stability have a different survival niche. If you have any medical conditions please check with a medical herbalist first before taking any plant and only harvest it if you are 100% sure what it is! Bittercress in Saxon lore is said to drive out venom and remove pain and certainly this plant is nutritious and can provide many health benefits. It is all too easy to put the science first but time and time again it is the folklore informing the science and the science simply confirming what the plant was already known to do. Maybe our ancestors used the qualities of this plant in ways we are yet to re-discover! If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection please become a member and have exclusive access to our online course. Daisy Sow thistle Yarrow Introducing Urban Plant Friends. Delicate blooms of tenacious power, soft lush growth produced wherever it can flower.
Over rubble and concrete, plastic and glass, nature regenerates, cares not if you've asked. Green fresh growth encapsulates beauty, every tiny flower tells a story. Showing no fear it grows where it can, covering up the waste produced by man. ' J.Huet As I walk to the local shop I stop to admire the beauty of a dandelion peeping out from the pavement. The ray florets spreading out around a golden centre capturing the sun and inviting winged delights to pollinate them. Other native asters (members of the daisy family Asteraceae the largest plant family in the UK) also peeping out of cracks in the pavement included the common sow-thistle who's luxuriant growth dominated the grey landscape and although considered a garden nuisance the poet Patrick Kavanagh claims it took him to a place beyond desire. I discovered other asters like our common daisy spreading their petals and hugging the floor whilst groundsels drooped under the weight of yellow buds and the little white stars shone up from the green foliage of chickweed. Clambering over walls the deceptively delicate lilac and yellow flowers of the ivy leaved toadflax grew amongst the duller foliage of the plant called pellitory of the wall. Bittercresses and shepherds purse grew through the tinniest of spaces with hedge mustard and eastern rocket beside them. Germander speedwell finished the pavement design with sky blue flowers on the small patches of soil exposed to plant street trees. Luscious abundant foliage of the green alkanet, red valerian and jack by the hedge painted the pavement green and in the grass verges clovers, yarrows, nettle, and dock created a green oasis under blossoming early cherries and plums. On the way back a single yellow flower of sorrel delighted my keen eye, common mouse ear stood proud and the red dead nettle lifted my spirits. I marvelled at over twenty common species decorating my urban neighbourhood from dainty and spiky to upright and sprawling to tiny and majestic to dull and shiny. As John Muir has written 'my eyes never closed on the plant glory I had seen.' If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection you can sign for our free newsletter and also become a member with exclusive access to our online courses. Wishing you all well. Speedwell veronica speciesWB stage 12Heath speedwell ( Veronica officinalis) Field speedwell ( V.persica)
Germander speedwell (V.chamaedrys) Wood speedwell ( V.montana). Common Name: Germander Speedwell Latin : Veronica chamaedrys Family: Veronicaceae History and/or use:. Treatment for bronchitis, coughs and catarrh. Wildlife Value: Good nectar plant. Qualities of speedwell Clear blue are the skies; My petals are blue; As beautiful, too, As bluest of eyes. The heavens are high: By the field-path I grow Where wayfarers go, And “Good speed,” say I; “See, here is a prize Of wonderful worth: A weed of the earth, As blue as the skies!” This familiar plant of waysides and grass verges produces bright blue flowers from April to June. This wonderful plant is known as one of the wayfarer herbs guiding the lone traveller along country lanes cheering their journey and offering good luck. However this dainty bright weed has a tenacious habit and bears a warning of protection. Its flowers are watchful likened to eyes but what are they watching? 'Fresh beauty opens one's eyes wherever it is really seen, but the very abundance and completeness of the common beauty that besets our steps prevents its being absorbed and appreciated. It is a good thing, to creep like worms into dark holes and caverns underground, not only to learn something of what is going on in those out-of-the-way places, but to see better what the sun sees on our return to common everyday beauty.' John Muir In traditions all over the globe we are asked to respect nature and this plant is said to be protected by birds and offers good luck but if we sever our connection to nature and no longer see its beauty in the dark places as well as the light where creation begins we fall into forgetfulness of the earth and all its beauty. These traditional warnings therefore are reminders to honour nature at all times and to not fall out of sync with her sweet caress. Many poems and stories refer to the wonderful blue eye-like flowers of this plant. It is a weed of cultivation as well as an ancient herb and popular tea. As a tea it can help relief bronchitis, whooping cough and catarrh. Although the heath speedwell’s Latin name ‘officinalis’ denotes it as the official plant used by the apothecary, all of the above species named can be used. It is the germander speedwell which is most commonly referred to as bird’s eye mainly due to its distinctive white eye against its bright blue petals. Traditionally as already mentioned it is said that birds protect it, so pick with care! In Ireland sprays of speedwell were pinned to traveller’s clothing to protect them from accidents and the phrase ‘speed-you-well’ was used to bless their parting. This plant seems to invoke tenderness as its Latin name Veronica may be named after the saint who wiped Christ’s face as he carried the cross. It is a key nectar plant well known for as producing nectar for the solitary bees who like the lone traveller follow it along the wayfarer's paths. If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection please become a member and have exclusive access to our online course. Wild garlic Allium ursinumQualities of Wild Garlic Common Name:Ramsons/Wild Garlic Latin: Allium ursinum Family: Alliaceae Wildlife Value: Green veined Butterflies, long horn beetle and hoverflies amongst others. Wild Garlic or Ramsons lives underground for much of the year and then its aromatic leaves begin to grow up in March to eventually produce flowers in May. Carpets of green foliage and bunches of starry white flowers create magnificent displays in British woodlands preferring wetter and shadier parts of the wood than the bluebell which also puts on a display in May. These plants are typical shade-evaders making use of the Forest landscape before the leaves are produced to maximise the light levels. The wild garlic attracts many insects including hoverflies, beetles and butterflies. 'Nature is always lovely, invincible, glad, whatever is done and suffered by her creatures. All scars she heals, whether in rocks or water or sky or hearts.' John Muir The lore and uses of wild garlic is immense as both an ancient plant used in spells and folk traditions as well as in medical herbalism. Probably the most striking fact at the time of writing this is the faith people put in the plant in 1918 during an influenza pandemic, literally carrying a sprig of this plant for protection in their pockets. It is all too easy to put such acts in the realms of superstition when in fact the absorption of this plant can actually help cure infections. In World War Two garlic (usually cultivated) was applied to sphagnum moss and used as an antiseptic! If you have any medical conditions please check with a medical herbalist first before taking any plant and only harvest it if you are 100% sure what it is! In the realms of plants as discussed before it is also possible to connect with the qualities of a plant and ramsons is full of healing vital energy providing many nutrients with healing tendencies. In Ireland this plant has been used traditionally for tooth ache, inflamed fingers, mumps and swellings. 'nine diseases shiver before the garlic'- Irish proverb In the West of England they talk of eating leeks in March and ramsons in May so that all the year after the physicians may play! The plants properties are considered to also help purify the blood, cure boils and heal sore eyes as well as help many infections as well as sore throats and colds, the list seems endless. In the main the plant was administered by eaten it raw or boiling it in milk to produce a liquid which produced a burning sensation when applied, this made it popular as we seem to believe more in something if a reaction is induced! We now know that the most effective way to use this plant is to to crush, chew and digest the leaves as then it will release allicin that will act on micro-organisms. Wild garlic eaten by cows makes their milk undrinkable and maybe this is the origin of its name of ramsons as rams is an older word for 'rank.' The latin name of 'ursinum' comes from the latin word for bear which some may claim means it is only fit to eat by a bear or maybe it is referring to the shape of its leaves resembling the ears of a bear? However this plant is very popular as food flavouring dishes and sauces, it is best to use its leaves as the bulbs can make you feel ill and always be aware that you will kill large quantities of the plant if you trample all over it! If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection please become a member and have exclusive access to our online course. Goose Grass Gallium aparine Lady's Bedstraw Galium verum Cleavers (Gallium aparine)Qualities of Goose Grass
An abundant straggling plant clambering through the undergrowth and climbing through the hedgerows. Its seeds cling to animal fur to aid distribution. Its luxuriant keen growth in spring brings a cleansing, moving refreshing energy of determination and direction. The family it belongs to are known as the bedstraws for their lush green foliage traditionally provided bedding ( see Lady's bedstraw). The bedstraws have four-angled stems and their leaves are arranged in whorls. Common Name: Cleavers Latin : Galium aparine Family: Rubiaceae History and/or use: Good spring tonic and nutritious vegetable boiled or eaten raw when very young. Wildlife Value: Food plant for insects. Goose Grass or Cleavers is a common plant that can be eaten as a green vegetable. Its seeds can be roasted to make a hot beverage. Medicinally the plant is an astringent and diuretic. It is used to help heal inward and outward wounds as well as being used to cleanse them. Internally it is used to treat psoriasis and eczema and support the lymphatic system. The plant is best used fresh as it loses its medicinal qualities in the drying process. Please note the plant can be a skin irritant. If you have any medical conditions please check with a medical herbalist first before taking any plant and only harvest it if you are 100% sure what it is! The plant clings or cleaves to fur/materials to aid its distribution, giving it the name of cleavers. Shepherds have used it to strain hair out of sheep’s milk, and it has been fed to goslings, giving rise to the name Goose Grass. There are many related species including hedge, heath and lady’s bedstraw which are all part of the bedstraw family ( Rubiaceae) so called as they are plants traditionally used for bedding. Medicinally many species of bedstraw are used for staunching wounds especially woodruff, hedge, heath and lady’s bedstraw. The last two species are known for being styptics and therefore are good for treating nosebleeds. Lady’s bedstraw (Galium verum) is so named because the Virgin Mary is said to have given birth to Jesus upon it as all the other fodder was eaten by the donkeys. This story may be rooted in the folk tradition that the plant is said to help women to have a safe and easy childbirth. Lady’s bedstraw is also known to treat urinary diseases, epilepsy and gout and to help tired feet when placed in the bath. Its yellow flowers were used to curdle milk given rise to the folk names of ‘cheese rennet’ and ‘cheese running’. Both the leaves and stem of this plant create a yellow dye and the roots create a red dye. Crosswort ( Cruciata laevipes) is another bedstraw especially reputed for healing wounds. It grows in open woodlands and has yellow-green hairy leaves and numerous tiny yellow flowers. I usually dry the whole plant, steep it in oil for at least two weeks on a sunny windowsill, drain and add beeswax to produce an ointment. If you would like to support our work and go even more deeply into Nature Connection please become a member and have exclusive access to our online course. Imbolc 1st February- 19th march Imbolc is that burst of light, that emergence of blossom, the first tentative steps into a still cold, harsh climate patched with moments of warm sun daring the hardiest of nature to come out and play.
This is a time not depicted by the slow steady ceaseless play of light and dark but by the less predictable play of the green world. The hedge-hog, snake and hazel catkins unfurl from a winter lull and it is they who announce it is time to wake. Imagine our leaders looking to nature to begin a new political agenda, surrendering to the knowledge of trees and animals to decide our fate. This is not some ungrounded fantasy but recognition of being part of nature for it is nature who tells us it is Imbolc and that the time has arrived to sow early crops, help the birthing of lambs and prepare for the new growing season. Imbolc Fire Ritual Imbolc or Oimelc can be translated as butter-bag and the key component of the festival is the birthing of lambs. It makes sense therefore that the festival is dedicated to the Goddess and to the women who start to bring creation into birth. The archetypal young mother of Celtic belief is Brighid, so exalted and honoured she continued into Christian lore and was feared by the patriarchal sect of Christianity. In Christianity she took the form of the high abbess of Kildare and her sanctuary which no man could enter was tended by nineteen or nine nuns. At this time her importance was considered to be greater than the bishops which upset the Roman Catholic Church. A papal decree was passed in 1151 to close the hermitage which was later reopened, only to be challenged again in the reign of Henry V111 when the sanctuary was closed forever. However she still lives on in our culture as the archetypal mother of all and as the caretaker of Celtic society. She takes on many roles as a healer, foster-mother and midwife, demonstrating the strength and power of the Goddess. In Celtic lore the most important aspects are played out in threes, this was long before the idea of the holy trinity in Christian lore. Brighid is also seen as three, in the form of the three sisters, the daughters of the Dagdha. Each sister represents a key component of Celtic life which are poetry, healing and smith craft. In her form that represents poetry she is honoured as the patron of the bards and a source for their inspiration. In these times she is needed more than ever as a symbol of true womanhood, power and strength, a beloved Goddess. The Sacred Three My fortress be Encircling me, Come and be round My hearth, My home. Fend Thou my kin And every sleeping thing within From scathe, from sin. Thy care our peace Through mid of night To light's release. Traditional Celtic Prayer This invocation is very much about feeling the support of Brighid and the strength of her protection. We can feel the support and connection to others and allow the spirit of Brighid, the Goddess to endure. Let us now feel the qualities of the season through poetry, this time with the words of Coleridge. One month is past, another is begun, Since merry bells rang out the dying year, And buds of rarest green began to peer, As if impatient for a warmer sun; And though the distant hills are bleak and dun, The virgin Snowdrop like a lambent fire, Pierces the cold earth with it's green-streaked spire And in dark woods, the little wandering one May find a primrose. Hartley Coleridge Feb 1st 1842 Brighid's Bed ( Leaba Bride) The next part of the ritual involves bringing in a small Wicca basket to represent Brighid's bed. The basket can be decorated with seasonal flowers and hazel catkins on a bed of straw. A white wand of willow or poplar can also be put onto the basket to represent justice, peace and purity. The bed is honoured and passed around, we can use this time to focus on the women who have inspired us, and honour and bless the powerful presence of women in our lives. A moment of silence can be observed before invoking the protection of St Brighid's cross. ' May the protection of Brighid be given through Bogha Bride, St Brighid's cross' - the cross can be passed around and a silent prayer can be made to the Goddess. The wand on the bed can now be offered to the fire as we chant: Now we banish winter, Now we welcome Spring. We can also gather all evergreens left over from Yule and burn them on the fire at this point in the ritual. Wishing you all a blessed Imbolc. You may wish to join us for our Woodland Bard Event on this Sunday to explore the healing powers of Spring further: Samhain 1st November- 19th December'These early November hours that crimson the creeper's leaf across.
Like a splash of blood, intense, abrupt, o'er a shield; else gold from rim to boss And lay it for show on the fairy-cupped elf-needled mat of moss.' Robert Browning ( 1812-1889) The time of Samhain is when the veil between this world and the next is at its thinnest. A time for deep meditation and thought. The harvest of this time is of the inner worlds, the stage of old age where we touch the depths of true knowledge and have the opportunity to embody the soul. Once at this time, the winter stores were topped up and the cattle slaughtered for winter food. Great fires for the burning of the livestock’s bones were made called Bonfires (Bone-fires) which may be the origin of Bonfire night. This was known as the Festival of Tongues where all could speak freely. Samhain simply means end of summer and is a time for inner reflection and the remembrance of our ancestors. The guardian of Samhain is the Apple tree whose fruit can transport us to the Bright Realms. Light a candle and immerse yourself in deep meditation: States of Deep meditation True meditation is a deep connection to the soul, the eternal self. Relief of stress, clarity of vision and mind and improved focus are but symptoms of meditation rather than its essence. Its essence is beyond the mind, body and material world, a state untouched by the fore-mentioned symptoms. Through spiritual practice and soul nourishment it can be made into a permanent state of being. When a seeker starts to meditate energy is awakened in the base of the spine or a fire in the belly which flows upwards releasing sublime nectar, an exquisite feeling of joy and love for all life. It is like the joy of love-making for the first time and a feeling of being complete, sated. This state can be experienced when the body is in a focused flow such as when you skydive, abseil, rock climb or drive at top speeds. In meditation this feeling is prolonged and if you learn to sustain it, it will rise up within you awakening the inner senses, literally enabling you to experience the most divine touch, sound, taste and sight, saving you from the need to search for them in the external world. Imagine the time, money and resources this could save us! The next awakening is in the heart, though this process need not be linear as each centre can awaken at different times. The secret of unlocking the mysteries of the heart may be implemented in the very human act of heartache, and if one can fully experience a broken heart this centre is pierced. A divine love beyond human suffering may only be possible through the feeling of this intense pain. Entering this heart ache can erupt into an intense joy, a painful yet blissful longing to be complete. I believe that your partner, if you can love them with a pure heart, can take you to this state as a teacher, master or Guru traditionally would have. Through spiritual practice or mastering of an art form such as poetry, this exquisite pain can reach up to the next energy centre between the eyes. The sensation felt in this centre can also be very intense as it opens, piercing the brow and allowing bliss to enter the head, lifting the spirits and awakening a sensuous flow throughout the entire body. This moving energy is what the poets call inspiration, the fire in the head. In Gaelic, inspiration is called 'Imbas' and its source flows from the sacred water ways, the river Boyne (which could be likened to the river Ganges in India). The seeker becomes the salmon flowing against the current of ordinary life to the source of the Boyne, the Well of Segais where they obtain knowledge by the eating of hazelnuts, and are reborn in the well of inspiration. The understanding and assimilation of pain brings great knowledge and/or mastery of the arts. It is this time of Samhain that takes us deep within. If you would like to learn more about the traditions of the land and join us for our Woodland Bard Evening please click on the button below. Many Blessings. |
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Poetry of flowersJoin me to explore the flora of the British Isles on this blog. My intention is to attempt to capture the unique quality and beauty of each species of flower, tree or shrub. For every species featured I will be growing many more wildflowers to celebrate the joy of their existence, their intrinsic conservation value and bewildering array of uses. For nearly 30 years I have noted, studied and explored wildflowers in the field much to the patience of the walker beside me. To share this passion is a heartfelt plea to respect, preserve and care for all British Wildflowers no matter how common they seem. Archives
February 2024
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