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Chickadees stealing from a wreathe... 🌲🌿🍒
print / links
Merry Christmas!
# winter/snowflake inspired ✮
the old ones were kinda ugly. free to use, credit if reposting and using for edits requests.
Baroque art piece by Felice Ficherelil (Italian, 1603-1660)
Like autumn leaves, our children change - each shade a chapter we are blessed to read first, from the bright greens of their earliest days to the deep golds and russets of growing older. Every colour tells a story, every turn in the season reveals a new page and in the quiet moments between, we learn to treasure the beauty of their becoming.
(Also I saw this door on a Sunday stroll and had to use it as an image for something)
Svatojánský věnec (Midsummer headwreathe)
This year I plan on going all out and making something magnificent with foraged herbs and flowers—so I’m beginning research now.
In the past I’ve used fleabane, tickseed, black-eyed susan, queen anne’s lace, sedge, honeysuckle, and prickly pear.
Czech midsummer věnce are most usually made with nine herbs, though the number can vary from region to region. I plan on using nine since that is the most common, plus the number nine shows up symbolically in other Czech traditions such as the nine strands in a vanočka (braided Christmas bread), and nine course Štědrovečerní večeře (Christmas eve) dinner.
“The nine St. John's herbs are suitable not only for a wreath, but also for your green pharmacy, from which you can draw all year round.”
“Girls were supposed to collect St. John's herbs in nine places, without looking back or speaking. The bouquet was placed under the pillow, but a věnec was also made from the flowers.”
“The nine St. John's herbs varied by region, but the most common among the meadow flowers were thyme, St. John's wort, comfrey, wormwood, daisy, cornflower, ergot, blín, stonecrop, and tears of the Virgin Mary, as the pretty pink carnation was called.”
“But all sorts of meadow flowers are suitable for věnce, traditionally they were also important medicinal plants—including, for example, yarrow, plantain, black elderberry, or linden.”
“The herbs are definitely not to be thrown away and will come in handy all year round. Herbal mixtures made from the nine flowers are used for digestion, relaxation, and even for colds.”
“Yarrow, common pennyroyal, and wormwood will promote good digestion, to which you can add nettle, common sage, and sage.”
“Elderberry, linden, thyme, plantain and yarrow help with colds, and thyme and chamomile can also be added.”
“To calm down and fall asleep, use St. John's wort and St. John's wort together with lemon balm, yarrow, or daisy.”
Solstice Eve walk 2022: tickseed, elderberry, mountain mint, trumpet vine, dewberry, fleabane, touch-me-not, lizard’s tail
I’ll be doing more research into the medicinal and magical properties of plants that I forage before deciding on a complete list of my nine. I know I’ll want to use sheep sorrel because of my personal connection to the plant, and I usually use honeysuckle vine as a base. If the sunflowers growing under the feeder are blooming I’m sure I’ll use them to represent the sun—same with the prickly pear. I may also work in hazel and birch leaves since those are the trees I’m working with this year.
Text Source:
iReceptář - Znáte kouzla svatojánské noci? Které bylinky vám pomohou najít lásku či věštit budoucnost, ale zaženete díky nim i nachlazení ne
Image Source:
Pořad věnovaný tradicím svatojánské noci, které přečkaly do dnešních dob. Patří mezi ně například pálení svatojánských ohňů. K těm zaniklým