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FAERIE FLORA AND TREES



Foxglove
Name is derived from "Little Folks' Glove".  Florets are worn by faeries as 
hats 
and gloves.

Harebell

Primroses
Make the invisible visible.  Eating them lets you see faeries.  If one 
touches a 
faerie rock with the correct number of primroses in a posy, the way to 
faerieland and faerie gifts is made clear.  The wrong number means certain 
doom.

Ragwort
Used as makeshift horses by the faerie.

Wild Thyme
Part of a recipe for a brew to make one see the faeries.  The tops of the 
Wild              
Thyme must be gathered near the side of a faerie hill.

Cowslips
These are loved and protected by the faeries.  They help one to find hidden 
faerie gold.

Pansies
The flower that was used as a love potion by Oberon, a faerie king thought 
to 
have been invented by Shakespeare.

Bluebell
One who hears a bluebell ring will soon die.  A field of bluebells is 
especially 
dangerous, as it is intricately interwoven with faerie enchantments.

Clover
A four-leafed one may be used to break a faerie spell.

St. John's Wort
Protects against faerie spells and is also used as a healing herb.
Hazel
Celtic legend says it is the receptacle of knowledge;  the hazelnut is a 
symbol 
of fertility in England.

Whitethorn

Rowan
Protects against bad spirits.  Used in butter churns so that the butter 
would 
not be overlooked by faeries.  Bewitched horses may be controlled by a rowan 
whip.  Druids used rowan wood for fires with which they called up spirits 
whom 
could be forced to answer questions when rowanberries were spread over the 
flayed hides of bulls.

Blackthorn
Guarded by the Lunantishee.

Oak
Oakmen are created when a felled oak stump sends up shoots. One should never 
                
take food offered by them since it is poisonous.

Willow
At night they uproot themselves and stalk travelers, muttering at them.

Elder
Sometimes is a witch disguised as a tree.  Never lay a baby in an elderwood 
cradle or the faeries will pinch them so they bruise.  Burning elder wood is 
dangerous since it invites the Devil.

Birch
If the spirit of the birch tree (The One With the White Hand) touches a head 
it   
leaves a white mark and the person turns insane.  If it touches a heart, the 
person will die.

Alder
Protected by water spirits.

Apple
To ensure good harvests, leave the last apple of your crop for the 
Apple-Tree-
Man.

Ash
Druids wands were made of ash twigs.  It also has healing properties. Weak-
limbed children were passed through split ash trees which were then bound 
up. If 
the tree grew straight, the child would as well.  Also may be used as a 
substitute for Rowan.

Toadstools
Some have poisonous hallucinogenic properties.  The Vikings ate it and gain 
their reputations as berkerkers.  In Celtic lore, they are among the food of 
the 
gods, as with many red plants.  Some toadstools associated with the faerie 
are 
Fly Agaric, Yellow Fairy Club, Slender Elf Cap, Dune Pixie-Hood, and Dryad's 
Saddle.

 
 

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