The Green Man
Medieval gardening
( or some strange version of it, at least)
About the most helpful gardening tip that I have ever found to come straight out of the medieval period is this: Soil fertilized with sheep or cow dung is better than that fertilized with horse manure. Great, but I think that there might be a bit more to it than that.
One need not have acres of land to have a medieval garden. One need not have any land, actually. Container gardens on patios, or balconies can give just as much joy and be just as rewarding. A kitchen herb garden, or window box gives one the same feeling of creation and helping something grow. I have discovered that to my mind there are a few things one needs to have a wise-woman garden---besides plants, of course.

Another wonderful little thing I have found is a butterfly feeder. We all know about hummingbird, or regular bird feeders, but a butterfly feeder which works on the same basic principal is just as much of a joy. And speaking of bugs; there are what I call good bugs that are fabulous to cultivate and nuture in your garden. They eat harmful pests and can be kinda cool to see wandering around too. Lady Bugs will eat mosquitos, and aphids and other litle flying bugs, so will praying mantises. There are these funky looking things called decollate snails which are shaped like a cone rather than like a regular brown snail. I call them the canibal snail because their primary diet is the brown snail, and other slugs. You can get all these helpful bugs at a good garden center. The decollate snails come out primarily at night, during the day they live underground, so you will not have to see them much, unlike the other two which you will see often. It offers a much more environmentally and karmically well-balanced way of controlling the pests that might be destroying your garden.

Another note about bugs. Bees. So many people are so frightened of them. I dont blame them, no one wants to get stung, and people who are allergic to bee stings have something extra to be cautious about. But I work in my garden alot, I mean A LOT. And in my garden all life is welcome and encouraged. I cannot begin to tell you the amount of times I have worked happily and joyfully next to a busy bee on the same rose bush! Bees are not malicious, really. They are just doing their thing, if you dont mess with their thing, they dont mess with your thing. I mean, bees are not kamikazes, they are not on a suicide mision to sting the first person they can and then die ( bees die after they lose their stingers). Obviously, if a bee is buzzing around a particular flower I dont cut that flower. I let him do his job, and when he has moved on, then maybe I will clip it. I work surrounded by various critters, butterflies, birds, squirrels, spiders even. There is a certain kind of joy you get when you know that you are working in total harmony with the creatures you share your tiny plot of earth with. A hummingbird sitting in your hand is a miracle. I know, I have held one.

Have you ever thought about a moon garden? No, silly, not a place where you plant the moon. A moon garden is one that is best appreciated at night. Most gardens, no matter how colorful in the day, pale and lose all colour at night. Why is this? Because it is dark out and you cant see them. But a moon garden is made up of all white or silvery plants and you can see them against the dark shadows of night. I have a small corner of my garden dedicated to a moon garden. It is so beautiful during the day, and equally lovely at night. And it is the perfect part of your garden to work in in the dark, which can be very calming, and fulfilling. Some plants to try: dusty miller, white allyssum, sage, white roses, Queen Anne's lace.

If you are lucky enough to have water in your garden I am jealous. No really, standing water especially, like a pond, or the pool around a fountain when the jets are turned off, even a swimming pool or hot tub is perfect for scrying. Scrying is a form of divination, or telling the future. The gypsy peering into the crystal ball? She is scrying. Water is a great way to scry, and for a wise-woman, outdoor scrying in a still body of water is the coolest! Gaze into the water, let your mind go blank and still and let images float into your consciousness. See what you see in the water's surface. Then use your intuiton (or a good book on scrying) to help you make sense of the images and what they mean for you

 

This Season's Garden Tip

Spring

Snails!!!
By far the most fun way to be rid of these pesky critters, is beer. Snails are attracted to the yeast in beer, so set out a pot filled about 1/2 inch from the top with beer in a hole in your garden where they like to hang out. Place the pot deep enough that only an inch remains out of the ground, so they can get in easily. Take a sip of beer before you pour it in the pot, and then finish whatever is left. By the time you have filled enoug pots to take care of a true infestation, you wont mind so much about the snails themselves. In the morning, gather the wee buggers up, put them in a bag and cart them to whatever local park you like that has a decent pond where ducks populate. The ducks will love you, as they consider snails a delicacy.
Other ways to be rid of snails is to actually get a duck yourself, or try one of these other tricks:Make a ring around snailed plants of bran, snails dont like it. but it needs to be reapplied after rain or sprinkling. Pay small chuildren a penny a snail to collect them. Children, especially boys and tomboys love doing this. A small band of copper stripping can also be used. Tack it around pots or tree trunks. There are also these things called decollate snails that eat brown snails and slugs. You can get them at most nurseries, but remember, when the brown snails are gone, the decollate snails will be hungry and will turn to your plants. You can make a trap fro snails, by turning a pot upside down, plugging the drain holes and poppuing the pot up about an inch so the snails can get inside. Check daily for snails and slugs and dispose of them again at your local pond. Whatever you do, I do not advocate dumping captured snails in a garbage bin, or otherwise attempting to brutally kill them, this is very karmically unbalanced and does nothing for the food chain. Happy hunting!!

Archived Gardening tips click here to read last months tip.

pentacle

History and Reference The Croft Medieval Housekeeping Wytche's Kitchen Medieval Gardening Care for Body Mind Soul Spells For the Season The Grimoire The Language of Animals Links Wytche's Award Webrings