
WOODS
AND THEIR MAGICKAL USES
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 lightings' 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.
Occult
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.
Occult
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 Hazel stick 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.
Occult
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 symbolizes 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.
Occult 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 connected 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.
Occult
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.
Occult
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.
Occult
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.
Occult 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.
Occult
Aspects:
Strength, life and immortality, rejuvenation.
Willow
The
Willow was sacred to Hecate, Circe, Hera, and Persephone, 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.
Occult
Aspects:
Moon magic, psychic energy, healing, inspiration.
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.
Occult
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.
Occult
Aspects:
Purification, enforced chastity, male potency, 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 form making a dye from its berries
to being used as an aphrodisiac.
Occult
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 poplar 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.
Occult
Aspects:
Hope, rebirth, divinations.
Redwood
Coast
Redwoods are the tallest tree species and among the largest living organisms
ever to inhabit the Earth. Redwoods are named for the beautiful red
color of their bark and heartwood. Individual coast redwood trees can
live for hundreds of years. In some areas of their range, they can live
more than two thousand years. The oldest recorded coast redwood is 2,200
years old. Redwood trees are true "living fossils," having
existed largely unchanged for millions of years. Redwood fossils as
old as 160 million years have been found throughout the western United
States and Canada and along the coasts of Europe and Asia. Close ancestors
of the coast redwood have been living since dinosaurs first appeared.
Although redwoods can grow from seeds, they more commonly reproduce
from sprouts. New trees can sprout from the roots of parent trees, from
buds at the base of a tree, or from a fallen tree. If a tree is cut
or burned, a circle of trees may sprout from the stump, forming a "fairy
ring" of new trees.
Occult
Aspects:
Longevity, endurance, vision, perspective.
Almond
Almond
has a very sweet natural being. Aids in self-protection.
Occult
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.
Occult
Aspects:
Fertility.
Coconut
The
Coconut is feminine and very fertile. The shell represents the womb,
and the milk, fertility.
Occult
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.
Occult
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.
Occult
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.
Occult
Aspects:
Resurrection, and the cycle and matrix of life.
Peach
The
Peach is an emblem of marriage.
Occult
Aspects:
Abundance, fruitfulness, happiness.
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Source Unknown ~~

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