I hope everyone is having a wonderful May so far! :) This Bealtaine season has been a mixed bag for myself.
Due to one reason or another some of our rituals were put on hold until last week, but I don't mind an extended season. Spreading out feasting and celebrations is always a good thing as you get older. ;)
Over the last year there has been a rowan tree that I have been "courting" with offerings in the hopes that I would be able to harvest some of its wood. As I mentioned previously, I will not take any live wood from a rowan outside of the "two days of Bealtaine" {which I believe to be between May 1st to May 5th}, so the window of opportunity is fairly slim. I was looking forward to getting some from this lovely tree, but it didn't quite work out that way.
The rowan is just a bit of a walk from my home, so I usually will bring a libation whenever I walked that way. I would also make sure to go to it once a month to make a proper offering, which I last did in mid-April. That was the last time I had went by to see the rowan before I went on May 3rd to make my small harvest. Unfortunately the tree had been badly damaged by another tree which had fallen onto it, which I presume the cause was a pretty nasty storm we had a few days prior.
I felt terrible. I certainly was not going to take a cutting after seeing that poor tree in that condition. A big branch had broken off the rowan, which was much more than I needed but I took it with the assumption that I was "supposed to". It was not what I had in mind though. A coincidence or a mistake on my part? {Feedback from other workers & worshippers would be appreciated!}
I will have to find another rowan to court for next year {I think one should harvest from a different tree each year, both for practical and superstitious reasons}, but that old tree will still be getting regular offerings and libations.
On a brighter note, a friend of mine who just purchased an old farmstead last Autumn allowed me to take the first cream of her spring-fed well and gave me the Bealtaine morning milk of her goat. In return I did a little blessing ritual for her critters and crops {Carmina Gadelica was again my source for this, which I took a few of the prayers/incantations from the "Labour" section and altered them for my needs}.
She has also welcomed me to wildcraft there whenever I like...the area around her is reputed to be bountiful in morels, chantrelles, fly agaric & oyster mushrooms!
Farm folk are awesome folk. :)
Speaking of harvests, I have had some going on in my own garden! I have been regularly picking dandelion flowers {almost time to make more dandelion vinegar} and leaves, rhubarb, fiddleheads, and sweet woodruff.
With the sweet woodruff I decided to have a try at making some maiwein, which went down quite nicely I must say. This is the concoction that I came up with:
A bottle of white wine {I used Pelee Island Blanc de Blanc and works well enough. Something with a Gewurztraminer grape would probably have been even better.}
9 sprigs of fresh Sweet Woodruff
9 fresh Rowan berries {I harvest them in late August/early September and keep them in the freezer}
Stick the Sweet Woodruff and Rowan berries in the bottle of wine, put cork back on and let it sit a room temperature for 3 hours. Drink chilled.
A little while back we did some planting too. These are the seeds we have planted so far:
- Sweetpeas Cupani, Bijou & "Devon" {a variety from our friends over at Plant Trees, It's Self Defense, which I have dubbed "Devon Sweetpeas" ;)}
- Borage {again from our friends in Devon}
- Teasel {from Devon}
- Mullein
- Herb Robert
- Forget-Me-Nots
- Double Pink Columbine {from seed exchange}
- Peas for Peace & Mangetout Peas {from Devon}
- Dinosaur Kale {from the seed exchange} & Red Russian Kale {another pretty from our Devon friends}
- Giant Red Mustard {from Devon}
- "Happy Salad" Greens Mix {from the seed exchange}
- Arugula
- Hobo & Egg Turnips
- Red Oak Leaf Lettuce
- Bloomsdale Longstanding Spinach
- Learn to Dance with Lettuce
- Ginger Nickels & Kissing Booth Beets
- Cosmic Purple Carrots
- Crop Circle Radish
- Fordhook Giant Swiss Chard
{Red Russian kale}
In general I would say that things are coming along pretty good in the garden and on the rest of the property. We have plenty of volunteers such as...
The sweet woodruff is going ape shit in the shade bed....
Sláinte!
Laurel
I would like a scratch and sniff card for the lilacs and sweet woodruff, please. :)
ReplyDeleteI will work right on that! Patchouli too, when it gets here? ;)
ReplyDeletelovely gem here! Thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely patchouli too. :) And if you like, I can give you some scratch and sniff cards of my night scented stocks and mignonette if you like, maybe a scented cornflower or two as well. :)
ReplyDeleteThat would be quite the technology, if a scent replicator could be made. They're still not very good at synthesizing most scents yet.
Thanks Darroch! :)
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fair trad, SN! :D
Aw, sorry to hear about your rowan :(
ReplyDeleteIt always amazes me how much you grow and make with what you harvest - always such unusual stuff! The seedlings are looking splendid!
Ooh, and having a 'penny drops' moment with patchouli, the plant. I love its smell!