
Using
Trees As Medicine
©
by Ellen Ever Hopman
Many
common North American trees can be used as medicine.
Their advantage over medicinal herbs is that tree medicines
can be used year round. In fact, trees make amoung the
most versatile medicine you will find.
In
early spring and summer the leaves of trees are useful
healing agents. In fall and winter, the bark and twigs
or of the roots may be used to treat common ailments.
Some simple rules must be learned, however, and followed
for tree medicines to work.
Preparing
Tree Medicines for Use
Here
are several rules to ensure you are mindful in gathering
tree medicines. First never cut the bark off of the
trunk of a living tree. Especially avoid girdling the
tree by removing the bark as this will kill the tree.
To gather bark use that found on a twig or a root of
felled tree. In these cases, it is a simple matter of
striping the bark off the twig or root with a sharpe
knife. Medicinal agents are found in the cambium-the
living green or greenish yellow layer just under the
outer bark.
Once
you have gathered the bark of a tree you can use it
immediately or dry it for later use. To dry the bark,
carefully lay it to dry in the shade, making sure that
the strips do not overlap. Leaves can be tied together
and hung in bunches from a string or rope in a dry,
shady area.
To
use the bark, simmer two teaspoons of bark per cup of
water for twenty minutes in a nonaluminum pot with a
tight lid. Strain and drink. The dose is one-quarter
cup, taken four times a day with meals. This assumes
a 150-pound adult. A child weighing 75-pounds should
take half as much, and a child weighing 40-pounds should
take half as much again. The tea may be stored in a
glass jar with a tight lid, in the refrigerator, for
up to week.
When
using the leaves they should be picked in the early
spring no later than Summer Solsitice. Steep two teaspoons
of fresh or dried leaves per cup of freshly boiled water
for about twenty minutes, in a nonaluminum pot with
a tight lid. The dose is the same as above. Add lemon
and honey to the medicines as desired.
If
you are making a tea to use as a wound wash or to add
to the bath it may be much stronger. Use more of the
tree parts and less water, and simmer or steep for longer
periods.
To
make a tree leaf poultice, use fresh leaves, or dry
ones that have been soaked in enough boiling water to
make them soft. Place the leaves in a blender with just
enough water to make a mush. Pour into a glass or ceramic
bowl and then add powdered slippery elm bark, a little
at a time, until a pie dough consistency is acheived.
Spread the poultice onto a cotton cloth and apply to
the affected area. Leave on for one hour, and then discard
the poultice material. Repeat daily.
A
fomentation may be made of the bark or leaf tea by soaking
clean cotton cloth in the tea and then applying it to
an affected area. Tree leaves, bark, and nuts may also
be used in healing salves. To make a salve simply place
the plant material in a large nonaluminum pot, and just
barely cover with cold-pressed virgin olive oil. Simmer
with a lid for about twenty minutes.
In
a seperate pot melt beeswax, and bring to a simmer.
After oil mixture has simmered for twenty minutes add
three tablespoons of melted beeswax for everycup of
olive oil used. Stir and then strain into very clean
glass jars. Allow to cool and harden before putting
on the lid.
Some
tree parts are used to make massage oils or oils for
other purposes. Take the fresh tree parts, and put them
in a shallow nonaluminum baking dish. Cover with a light
oil such as almond, cover, and bake in a slow oven at
110 degrees for several hours until the plant material
wilts.
To
tinture buds, barks, or roots, place the chopped plant
material in a clean glass jar. Cover with vodka or other
alcohol {80 proof or higher}, cover tightly, and allow
the tinture to sit for eight days. Shake occasionally.
Add 10% spring water and a teaspoon of vegetable glycerine.
Strain and bottle for later use. Store in cool, dark
place. For leaves and flowers; pack the plant material
into a clean glass jar, barely cover with alcohol, and
allow the tinture to extract until the plant material
begins to wilt. Add spring water and vegetable glycerine,
and strain and bottle as above. The dose is about 10
drops, three times a day, taken with water.
Green
Etiquette
It
is only polite to thank a tree when you have used its
parts for medicine. Make a habit of giving back to the
trees. A meal of fertilizer, a drink during a hot spell,
or offering of herbs such as sage or tabacco are always
correct. In ancinet European tradition, vervain, honey,
or apple cider were often given. Or a simple prayer
was spoken, that the tree and its relations always have
abundant sunshine, pure water to drink, healthy winds,
and the companionship of birds and other friendly spirits.
In this time of global warming it is wise to plant trees
wherever possible and to nurture living ones. Trees
are cooling. They prevent evaporation of rainwater,
hold back water to prevent floods and erosion, purify
stagnant and polluted water, and maintain the balance
of oxygen and carbon in a world increasingly polluted
by greenhouse gases. Ancient tress especially should
be honored and protected.
Some
Tree Medicine
?Author
Unknown
Alder:
Is a small tree that thrives in damp areas such as wetlands
and river banks. It usually has several grayish trunks,
and its female catkins develop into what look like tiny
brown pine cones. Alder bark is simmered in water to
make a healing wash for deep wounds. It is astringent
and will help to pull the edges of a wound together.
The leaves and bark can be made into a tea that will
benefit tonsillitis and fever. The leaves are also used
in poultices to dry up breast milk. Alder bark tea can
be used as a douche or for hemorrhoids. Fresh alder
sap can be applied to any area to relieve itching.
Apple:
The bark of the root of apple trees is used for fevers.
Apples are rich in magnesium, iron, potassium, and Vitamins
C, B and B2. When peeled, they relieve diarrhea. Stewed
unpeeled apples are a laxative. Eating apples regularly
promotes restful sleep. Baked apples can be applied
warm as a poultice for sore throats and fevers. Apple
cider is important in this time of antibotics, which
destroy the intestinal flora. Raw, unpasteurized apple
cider will restore the correct bacteria to the bowels
after a course of antibotics. Apples reduce acidity
in the stomach and help to clean the liver. Add garlic
and horseradish to apple cider to clear the skin. Use
the mixture as a wash externally and take it internally
as a drink.
Ash:
Ash is a tall tree whose compound leaves are composed
of five to nine, or seven to eleven leaflets. Its bark
is very tightly and regularly furrowed, and its winged,
canoe-paddle-shaped seeds, called keys, hang in clusters
until they are brown and drop off in the fall. The tender
new spring growth of the twig tips and leaves can be
simmered to make a laxative tea that will benefit gout,
jaundice, and rheumatism.
Beech:
Beech trees have a distinctive, smooth gray bark that
resembles the skin of an elephant. The bark is used
as a tea for lung problems, including tuberculosis.
It is also cleansing to the blood, through pregnant
women should avoid it. Beech bark tea make a good wash
for poison ivy. Beech leaves are used in poultices for
burns and for frostbite.
Birch:
Birch trees have thin papery bark that peels easily
-- so easily that birds actually use it to build their
nests. It can range in color from chalky white and reddish
brown to golden gray and yellow. The sweet birch {black
birch} and yellow birch both have a nice wintergreen
flavor in their twigs and bark. Birch leaf or twig tea
is a laxative, and healing to mouth sores, kidney and
bladder sediments, and gout. The tea also help rheumatic
pains. Make a strong decoction of the twigs, bark and
leaves and add it to the bath for relief of eczema,
psoriasis, and other moist skin eruptions. Modern medicine
has recently confirmed that betulinic acid, formed in
birch sap, has anti-tumor properties that help fight
cancer.
Cedar:
The northern white cedar is an evergreen with a branched
trunk, conical shape, and flat scalelike leaves. It
has reddish brown bark that hangs in hairy shreds. Another
name for the tree is Arborvitae, or "tree of life,"
a name given to it by the French explorer Jacques Cartier
after it saved his crew from scurvy. A tea is made from
the leaves and twigs, and is very high in Vitamin C.
Among the Algonquin it is considered a sacred tree,
and they will not perform a ceremony without it. Its
branches are used on the floor of sweat lodges, and
it is dried and burned as an incense because it harmonizes
the emotions and put one in the proper state of mind
for prayer. The tea of the twigs and branches is simmered
until the water in the pot begins to turn brown. It
is then used for fevers, rheumatic complaints, chest
colds and flu.
Elder:
Elder trees are quite small. They have clusters of white
flowers in spring and black or deep purple berries in
fall. They thrive in damp, moist areas. Elderberries
are used to make preserves, pies, and wine. Taken as
a tea, either fresh or dried, the berries benefit the
lungs and nourish the blook. The young leaves of elder
are used in salves and poultices for skin healing. A
root bark tea clears conjestion, eases headaches, and
is used in poultices for mastitis. A tinture of the
flowers lowers fever by promoting perspiration. Elderflowers
water is a traditional remedy for skin blemishes and
sunburn. Cold elderflower tea is placed on the eyes
as a soothing compress for inflammation. Elderflower
oil makes a soothing balm for sore nipples of nursing
mothers.
Elm:
Slippery elm is a medium-sized tree with grayish bark,
usually found near streams. Unlike the American elm
its crown does not droop. It leaves are also larger
than the American elm's with coarsely toothed margins.
The inner bark of the slippery elm, which is sticky
and fragrant when fresh, is used medicinally. Slippery
Elm bark is available in dried and powdered forms from
herbalists. It is made into paste with water and then
applied as a poultice to injuries of flesh and bone,
on gunshot wounds, ulcers, tumors, swellings, chilblains,
and on the adomen to draw fever out. Slippery elm is
very high in calcium, and a pudding or tea of the bark
can be ingested to help speed bone healing. The powdered
bark in water makes a jelly that soothes bowel and urinary
problems, sore throats, and diarrhea. It makes a perfect
substitute milk for babies who are allergic to cow's
milk. Try adding a little lemon and honey for flavor.
Hawthorn:
Hawthorne is a small, broad, round, and dense tree with
thorns and edible red fruits. The fall berries and spring
new leaves and flowers make a cardiac tonic that benefits
virtually all heart conditions. Be aware, however: Prolonged
used does cause the blood pressure to drop. Use it for
a few weeks and then take a week off to prevent a precipitious
decrease in blood pressure. Use caution when combining
this herb with other heart medications to prevent a
sudden drop in blood pressure. For maxiumum benefit
eat fresh raw garlic as you undergo a hawthorn regime.
{Garlic provides extra cleansing of plaque in the blood
vessels}.
Hazel:
Is a small tree with small rounded nuts that grow tow
to four in a cluster. Hazel twigs are traditionally
used by dowers to find hidden sources of water. Hazel
nuts are said to benefit the kidneys. Huron herbalists
used the bark in poultices for tumors and ulcers. The
Iroquois mixed the nut oil with bear's grease to make
mosquito repellent. The Chippewa used a decoction of
hazel root, white oak root, chokecherry bark, and the
heartwood of ironwood for bleeding from the lungs.
Holly:
Mountain Holly is a small tree with ovarte, fine saw-toothed
leaves and large orange berrie. The buds were twigs
that were used by Native Amercian herbalists in decoctions
and as an external wash for ulcers, herpetic eruptions,
jaundice, fever and diarrhea. The leaves alone were
used as beverage tea. English holly of European holly
is a familiar evergreen usually seen as decoration at
Yuletide. It has spiny, elliptical leaves and shiny
red berries. The leaves can be used as a tea substitute
and in infusions for coughs, colds and flu. Be aware:
The berries of all holly varieties are strongly purgative.
Linden
and Basswood:
Linden is a large tree found in moist, rich soils near
other hardwoods. It has a heart-shaped leaves with toothed
margins. The bark is dark gray, and its fruit is nutlike,
downy, and peasized. It has clusters of yellowish-white
fragrant flowers in the spring. Basswood, or American
linden, is a close relative. Linden flower tea is a
popular beverage in Europe for nervous headaches and
upset digestion, hysteria, nervous vomiting, and heart
pappitations. Linden flower tea can also be added to
baths to calm the nerves. Linden flower honey is prized
for medicinal use. Native Amercian herbalists used the
roots and bark of basswood for burns and the flower
tea for epilepsy, headache, spasm, spasmodic cough,
and general pain. The buds were eaten as famine food,
and the bark was pounded and added to soups.
Maple:
Maples are large trees with deeply lobed, toothed leaves.
The bark of the younger tress is gray and smooth, on
older trees it breaks into ridges and fissures. Maples
have winged seeds that hang in cluster of two. The Ojibwa
and the Cherokee made a decoration of the inner bark
or red maple to use as a wash for sore eyes. The leaves
of striped maple, or moosehead, were used to poultice
sour breasts. A decoration of inner bark of sugar maple
was used for diarrhea. The Penobscot used striped maple
bark in poultices for swollen limbs, and as a tea for
kidney infections, coughs, colds, and bronchitis. Young
maple leaves can be made into massage oil that will
be soothing to sore muscles.
Oak:
Oaks are large trees with lobed leaves and acorns topped
by bowl-shaped caps. The best oak for internal use is
white oak, though all oaks are valuable as external
washes. The tannins in oak bark and leaves are helpful
in pulling the edges of a wound together and is antiseptic
and antiviral. White oak bark tea is used for chronic
diarrhea, cronic mucus discharges, and piles. It makes
a nice gargle for sore throats and wash for skin problems
such as poison ivy, burn and wounds. The tea of the
leaf of the bark may be used by women as a douche for
vaginitis. Use caution: Prolonged ingestion of oak is
potentially harmful.
Pine:
All pines are evergreens, with needles that grow in
soft, flexable clusters. Pine trees are revered worldwide
as healing agents. Any pine, or other evergreen such
as spruce, larch, and ceder, will have antiseptic properties
useful as a wound wash. The most palatable pine for
internal use is the white pine. Its needles and twigs
are simmered into a tea that is rich in Vitamin C. The
tea is used for sore throats, coughs, and colds. Chinese
herbalists boil the knot of the wood because of the
concentrated resins found there. Pine baths aid kidney
ailments, improve circulation, and are relaxing to sore
muscles. The aroma of pine is soothing to the nerves
and lungs. Pine tea make a wonderful foot bath.
Poplar:
Poplars are distinguished by their drooping catkins
and rounded leaves with pointed tips. Balsam poplar
was used by Native American herbalists who scored the
bark and applied the resinous gum to toothaches and
swellings. The sticky spring buds were gathered in May
and used in salves for skin problems, sprains, sore
muscles, wounds, headaches, tumores, eczemia, bruises,
gout, and on the chest for lung ailments and coughs.
The buds were decorated and used internally for phlegm,
kidney and bladder ailments, coughs, scurvy, and rheumatic
pains. The root was combined with the root of white
poplar in a decoction to stop premature bleeding in
pregnancy. The warmed juice of white poplar was dropped
into sore ears. Poplar barks are high in salicin, making
them useful in treating deep wounds, gangrene, eczema,
cancer, burns, and strong body odor. The inner bark
of a young poplar tree is edible in the spring and can
be simmered into a tea for liver and kidney ailments.
Rowan,
or Mountain Ash:
The American mountain ash and the European mountain
ash have identical uses. The former has bunches of orange
berries that look like tiny apples, and the latter one
has red ones. Both are small, sturdy trees with compound
leaves of nine to seventeen leaflets. Their clusters
of white flowers, composed of five petals each, appear
in spring. Rowan berries are bitter, astringent, and
very high in Vitaman C. They should be picked just after
the first frost when their color has deepened . The
fresh juice of the berries is added to sore throut gargles,
and jelly is made from the berries will treat diarrhea
in adults and children. Rowan berries are added to ales
and cordials. In ancient Scotland, a syrup for coughs
and colds was made from rowan berries, apples, and honey.
Walnut:
Walnut trees are tall and have compound, alternative
leaflets. Their spring flowers are drooping green catkins
that mature into large, round nuts covered in green,
spongy husks that stain the hands brown when cut open
with a knife. Walnut husks are medicinally active. They
are antifungal and rich in manganese, a skin-healing
agent. Gather them when fresh, and rub directly onto
ringworm. The tea of the hull may be used as a douche
for vaginitis. For stubborn old ulcers apply the dried
, powdered leaf, and then poultice with fresh green
leaves. Do this for about twenty days, daily. The leaf
tea increases circulation, digestion, and energy. The
fresh bark may be applied to the temples for headache
or to teeth to relieve pain. The dried and powdered
bark, or pounded fresh bark, can be applied to wounds
to stop swelling and to hasten healing.
Willow:
There are more than forty varieties of willow growing
in the US. They are water-loving trees, a good indicator
species if your looking for a regular water source,
either above or below ground. Willows have slender flexable
twigs and long, narrow, simple leaves. In early spring,
willows bloom with golden catkins that mature into small
seed capsules in late summer. All willow barks have
salicylic acid, which is a natural form of aspirin.
Willow bark tea treats muscle pain and inflammation,
diarrhea, fever, arthritc pain, and headache. Used externally
it makes a wash for cuts, ulcers, and poison ivy. Willow
bark in teas and capsules is sedative and eases insomina.
It reduces the risd of heart disease and may delay cataract
formation.


Author Unknown
Individual
trees of particular species have been revered, the kind
varying with the divine force represented.
The symbolism of the woods are very important in the
construction of any magical tool.
A complete description of the various woods and their
uses is impossible in a limited space but we will cover
as much as possible.
OAK
The
oak tree is the tree of Zeus, Jupiter, Hercules, The
Dagda (The Chief of the Elder Irish gods), Thor and
all other Thunder Gods. The royalty of the Oak needs
no enlarging upon. The Oak is the tree of endurance
and triumph, and like the Ash, is said to count the
lightning's' flash. The Oak is a male wood which is
ideal for the construction of any tool that needs the
male influence such as Athames, certain wands and staffs.
The
midsummer fire is always Oak and the need fire is always
kindled in an Oak log.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Endurance, triumph, strength, power, dominion,
prosperity, sacrifice, guardian, liberator.
BIRCH
With
the exception of the mysterious elder, the Birch is
the earliest of the forest trees. The Birch is used
extensively in cleansing rituals. Throughout Europe,
Birch twigs are used to expel evil spirits. Birch rods
are also used in rustic rituals to drive out the spirits
of the old year.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Controlled by the Lunar influences. Birth,
healing,
Lunar workings, and protection.
HAZEL
The
Hazel is a tree of wisdom. In England, all the knowledge
of the arts and sciences were bound to the eating of
Hazel nuts.
Until the seventeenth century, a forked Hazelstick was
used to divine the guilt of persons in cases of murder
and theft.
We have retained the practice of divining for water
and buried treasure.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Wisdom, intelligence, inspiration, wrath.
ALDER
The
Alder is the tree of fire. In the battle of the trees,
the Alder fought in the very front line. It is described
as the very "battle witch" of all woods, the
tree that is hottest in the fight. From the alder, you
can make three different dyes, red from its bark, green
from its flowers, and brown from its twigs; this ymbolizes
the elements of fire, water and earth.
The Alder wood is the wood of the witches.
Whistles may be made of this wood to summon and control
the four winds.
It
is also the ideal wood for making the magical pipes
and flutes. To prepare the wood for use, beat the bark
away with a willow stick while projecting your wishes
into it. The Alder is a token of resurrection.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Controlling the four winds, banishing and controlling
elementals, resurrection.
Making magical dyes.
IVY
/ VINE
The
Ivy was sacred to Osiris as well as to Dionysus.
Vine and Ivy come next to each other at the turn of
the year, and are jointly dedicated to resurrection.
Presumably, this is because they are the only two trees
that grow spirally.
The Vine also symbolizes resurrection because its strength
is preserved in the wine.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: (VINE) Faerie work, Joy, Exhilaration, Wrath,
Rebirth. (IVY) Fidelity, Constancy, Love, Intoxication.
YEW
The
Yew is known as the death tree in all european countries.
Sacred to Hecate in Greece and Italy. Yew wood makes
excellent bows, as the Romans learned from the Greeks.
This strengthened the belief that Yew was connected
with death. Its use in England is recalled in Macbeth
where Hecate's cauldron contained:"... Slips of
Yew, slivered in the moon eclipse."
The
Silver Fir of birth and the Yew of death are sisters.
They stand next to each other in the circle of the year
and their foliage is almost identical.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Destructive workings concerning death.
Not recommended for magical tools "...for I am
the tomb to every hope."
ROWAN
The
Rowan is seen as the tree of life. It is also known
as Mountain Ash, Quickbeam, The Witch or Witch Wand.
In the British Isles, Rowan is used as a protection
against lightning and magical charms of all sorts. In
ancient Ireland, the Druids of opposing forces would
kindle a fire of
rowan and say an incantation over it to summon spirits
to take part in the battle.
The
Rowan is also used for many healing purposes.
The "Quickbeam" is the tree of quickening.
Another use was in metal divining.
In Ireland, a Rowan stake was hammered through a corpse
to immobilize the spirit.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Divination, healing, astral work, protection.
ASH
The
Ash is sacred to Poseidon and Woden. The Ash is considered
to be the father of trees. The Ash is the tree of sea
power, or of the power resident in water. Special guardian
spirits reside in the Ash; This makes it excellent for
absorbing sickness. The spirally carved druidical wand
was made of Ash for this purpose.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Sea power, karmic laws, magical potency, healing,
protection from drowning.
PINE
External
symbol of life and immortality.
It is one of the few trees that are androgynous.
It was also worshiped by the ancients as a symbol of
fire because of its resemblance to a spiral of flame.
It is regarded as a very soothing tree to be near.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Strength, life and immortality, rejuvenation
WILLOW
The
Willow was sacred to Hecate, Circe, Hera, and ersephone,
all death aspects of the Triple Moon Goddess, and was
often used by the Witches in Greece. The moon owns it.
Female symbol.
It
is the tree that loves water most and is sacred to the
Moon Goddess who is the giver of dew and moisture, generally.
The Willow is the tree of enchantment.
Can be made into a tool to make wishes come true.
MAGICKAL
PURPOSES: Moon magic, psychic energy, healing, inspiration,
and fertility
ELDER
A
waterside tree, the Elder has white flowers that bloom
to their peak in midsummer (as is also true for the
Rowan) thus making the Elder another aspect of the White
Goddess.
The Elder is also said to be the crucifixion tree. The
inner bark and the flowers have long been famous for
their therapeutic qualities.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Witchcraft, banishment, magical art, waters
of life.
HAWTHORN
The
Whitethorn or Hawthorn or May Witch takes its name from
the May. It is a generally unlucky tree and its name,
translated from the Irish Brehon Laws, had the meaning
"harm".
The
Goddess, under the name Cardea, cast spells with the
Hawthorn. In many cultures, the month of the Hawthorn
(May) is a month of bad luck for marriages. The Hawthorn
blossom, for many men, has the strong scent of female
sexuality and was used by the Turks as an erotic symbol.
The monks of Glastonbury perpetuated it and sanctified
it with an approving tale that the staff of Joseph and
the Crown of thorns were made of Hawthorn.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Purification, enforced chastity, male potency,
and cleansing.
HOLLY
Holly
means "holy". The identification of the pacific
Christ with the Holly is poetically inept as it is the
Oak king, not the Holly king that is crucified on a
T shaped cross.
The
Holly has many uses from making a dye from its berries
to being used as an aphrodisiac.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Holiness, consecration, material gain, physical
revenge, beauty
WHITE
POPLAR
The
tree of the Autumn Equinox and of old age, is the shifting
leaved White Poplar, or Aspen, The shield makers tree.
Heracles bound his head in triumph with popular after
killing the giant Cacus (the evil one).
The
Black poplar was a funeral tree sacred to the Mother
Earth. Plato makes a reference to the use of Black popular
and Silver Fir as an aid in divination. The Silver Fir
standing for hope assured and the Black Poplar for loss
of hope.
In
ancient Ireland, the coffin makers measuring rod was
made of Aspen, apparently to remind the dead that this
was not the end.
MAGICKAL
ASPECTS: Hope, rebirth, divinations.
This concludes trees referenced to be in use in Europe.
However, I thought there may be interest in a few local
trees.
ALMOND
Almond
has a very sweet natural being. Aids in self protection.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Fruitfulness, virginity
APPLE
It
is an old English custom to drink to the health of the
Apple tree with a good glass of cider all in hopes of
encouraging the tree to produce a good crop next year.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Fertility
COCONUT
The
Coconut is feminine and very fertile.
The shell represents the womb, and the milk, fertility.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Protection from negative psychic forces.
FIG
The
Fig is androgynous.
The fruit representing the feminine and the triple lobed
leaves suggest the masculine force.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Balance
MISTLETOE
The
mistletoe was sacred to the Druids and to the Norse.
It was considered to be the great healer and has both
male and female
qualities.
It was so well regarded by the Norse (because it was
sacred to Freya) that they refused to fight in the vicinity
of Mistletoe.
The custom of hanging Mistletoe in the house to promote
peace comes from this.
Generally regarded today as a symbol of love and purity.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Love, fertility, sexual potency.
PALM
Is
regarded as particularly powerful because of its incredible
durability and because it is self renewing, never changing
its leaves.
Aids in rejuvenation.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Resurrection, and the cycle and matrix
of life
PEACH
The
Peach is an emblem of marriage.
MAGICKAL ASPECTS: Abundance, fruitfulness, happiness

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