Over 16,540,181 people are on fubar.
What are you waiting for?

Oak

The Oak tree (Quercus robur) was thought to have been a primary focus of worship long before the Druids of ancient times give prevalence and significance to other trees. It was believed that the oak was the first tree created by god and its fruit, the Acorn, the first food of mankind. The English or Common Oak was for many centuries the main forest tree of England and is intimately bound up in its history and culture. As an emblem of Britain a spray of oak was engraved on the sides of our coins, the old sixpence and shilling pieces bore it, then later it was replaced by the British lion. The Oak today is widely cultivated and distributed across Europe and the Northern Hemisphere, but while British forests are somewhat depleted, it is still regarded quintessentially English. Over the centuries the oak has been subjected to a good deal of variation and now there are over 400 hundred species. Oaks can now be found as far afield as Java, in the Mountains of Mexico and in South America. In Britain our parks and once proud forests are slowly being eroded and planted with a growing number of oaks from foreign origins. The two principal varieties native to England are the English or Common oak (Quercus pedunculata) and the Sessile or Durmast Oak (Quercus sessiliflora). The Common oak is distinguished by having acorns in ones and twos attached to its twigs by long stalks, the leaves having scarcely any stalk at all. The Sessile’ leaves are bigger and are borne on long stalks while its acorns are attached to the bough instead of on stalks. The Sessile variety of oak is generally found in the lower parts of Britain and North Wales, and doesn’t live as long as the Common Oak. Its wood has a straighter fibre and finer grain, and is generally thought to be less tough and less resisting than the Common oak. Of the many foreign oaks now grown in Britain, the longest established variety is the Evergreen or Holm Oak (Quercus ilex), which is common to the south of England and Europe. “Holm” is thought to be Anglo-Saxon for holly. Adding to this association the Holm is often found growing in close proximity to holly, as well as sporting holly shaped leaves. The Turkey oak (Quercus cerris) is the most prolific of the foreign oaks introduce into Britain. This is a beautiful tall tree, which when fully grown produces its acorns in very mossy cups. The oak in general is a slow growing tree of imposing stature and lives to an incredible age. On average the tree will reach heights of 110 feet (33 meters) with girths of some 30 – 40 feet (9 – 12 meters) but there have been some notable exceptions down through the centuries. The most famous perhaps is the Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, once associated with Robin Hood. Still standing today though it requires support to prevent its collapse, it measures 64 feet (20 meters) around its girth. The Fairlop Oak in Hainault Forest measured 36 feet in girth, the spread of its branches extending above it reach out to some 300 feet in circumference. The trunk of the Newland Oak in Gloucestershire measured 46 feet 4 inches at 1 foot from the ground. The Courthorpe Oak in Yorkshire reportedly had the extraordinary girth of 70 feet, and tales from history tell us that King Arthur's Round Table was made from a single slice of oak, cut from an enormous bole. Of old, the strength and elasticity of the oak made it particularly valuable for house building and shipbuilding. The “Wooden Walls of England” is an old phrase of many connotations; one meaning refers to the stately homes of England which gave rise to another phrase “hearts of oak”, for the Englishman literally made his home from oak. Huge oaken beams were used in their construction and many of its rooms were paneled in fancy oak carvings, the buildings were secured by solid oak doors to keep out intruders and unwanted visitors. Oak was also used in the construction of churches and cathedrals. The roof beams of Westminster Abbey are of Sessile oak. The “Wooden Walls of England” also refers to the coastal defenses of England, “the forts and castles” constructed to protect us from invasion, and the “ships made of oak” used in defense against the Spanish Armada. The oaks of the Forest of Dean provided much of the material used and Philip of Spain is said to have declared, “that all the oaks of the forest must be destroyed if victory is to be achieved”. This he failed to do but some two centuries later, so many of its trees had been felled and dispatched to naval dockyards for use in building ships, that Nelson drew up a special petition to the Crown advising the need to replant the countries forests with oaks. After the Oak has passed its first century, it increases by less than an inch a year. This slowness of its growth matures the wood in such a fashion that it becomes practically indestructible. As a timber the most valued qualities of the Oak are its hardness and toughness. While the Ebony tree may be harder, the Yew and Ash tree tougher, none of these trees possess both these qualities to such a degree as the English Oak. Although no longer used for the building of ships of war, it is still in great demand for other purposes, sharing with Ash in the making of railway carriages and other forms of transport. As well as its strength for building purposes, the oak is much prized for the beauty of its grain and texture, and the richness of its coloring after polishing. As such it has always been a favorite wood of carpenters and cabinetmakers for use in paneling, doors and furniture. Beautiful cupboards, chests, tables and chairs were made of oak, and due to the woods durability many of these have survived down through the centuries. Initially pale brown in color, oak wood darkens with age. Other uses of oak from olden times were the fighting clubs of ancient man, the hammers and long boats of the Vikings, and hafts for daggers and knives were made from its roots. Barrels and casks were also made from oak to store liqueur, wines and spirits, it being impervious to the effects of alcohol. Coffins were made of oak by using large sections of the trunk, these were split lengthwise and hollowed out to contain the body, but this was only done for state funerals or people of great stature and importance. The shrine of Edward the Confessor in Westminster Abbey is of Purbeck marble, but the tomb-chest or coffin (circa 1510) is of oak outlasting the changes of some 700 years. Folklore and Myths: Since time began the oak was revered by many cultures, the Greeks held it sacred, the Romans dedicated it to Jupiter, and the Druids venerated it. The Greek historian Herodotus (often called the “father of history” 484? - 425? BC.) reported that the sacred oak grove at Dodona had the greatest reputation for the gifts of prophecy. Situated at the foot of Mt. Tomarus, Dodona was the oldest and most hallowed sanctuary in Greece. An ancient legend tells of two black doves that flew from the Egyptian city of Thebes, one flew to the Libyan Ammon and the other flew to Dodona. Each alighted on an oak tree and so began the oracular oak cults dedicated to the Gods and Goddesses. The cult at Dodona was dedicated to the goddess Dione (Diana) but was later seized by Zeus who claimed it for his own, though he retained the services of her priestesses to read his oracles. This they did listening to the cooing of black doves, the rustle of the oaks leaves in the wind, or the clanging of vessels hung in the trees branches to produce sound. They claimed that within the sounds could be heard the voice of Zeus. The most famous of Zeus’ interpreters was an old priestess called Pelias, who prophesied Zeus’ messages from a sacred spring at the foot of a giant oak in the grove at Dodona. The voice of Zeus was also heard in the sounds of thunder, and it was believed that more thunderstorms raged over Dodona than anywhere else in the classical world. The oak tree due to its enormous size and low electrical resistance, attracts and is struck by lightening more so than any other tree species, and so the oak became associated with the gods of thunder. Zeus’ Roman counter part Jupiter, was also worshiped as a god of thunder and had control over rain, storms and lightening. It was said he revealed the future to mankind by the flight of birds. Birds were known as the “messengers of the gods” and the oak with it massive frame and huge limbs is the natural resting place and home to many types of birds, as such the oak became associated with Protection, Strength, Stability and Comfort. In ancient times great oak forests covered much of Britain and Western Europe and many sacred holy groves were formed in them for worship, dedicated to the gods by the many different cultures that inhabited them. Growing in close proximity to each other, the oaks of the forest were often struck by lightening and visibly hit by the “fires from heaven” as it cracked and flashed overhead. To the ancients this was a channel through which the power of the thunder gods reached down to mankind and so the oak became associated with the element of fire. The god most associated with the oak tree is Thor (also known as: Thorr, Thunor, Thonar, Donar, Donner, Thur, Thunar, or Thunaer), who in Norse mythology was the supreme god of thunder and the sky. Thor was the eldest son of Odin, and was second only to him in the hierarchy of the Norse pantheon. He was also one of the most popular of the gods due to his relationship with mankind. Thor is often depicted as a tall, muscular and vigorous man with a red beard. He had an enormous appetite and his ability to eat and drink great quantities is featured in several of his legends. Thor was the principal champion of the gods and the chief protector of humans against giants, trolls, demons and other evil beings. His booming voice and flashing eyes could incite terror in his enemies. He was thought to be good-natured, courageous, benevolent, valiant and always ready to fight to help mankind, but he was also easily irritated and when roused to anger was apt to smash his adversaries to death with a single blow from “Mjolnir” his magical hammer. Thor was widely worshiped by Norse warriors but was also revered by farmers and peasants because of his capacity to create rain for the crops. Mjolnir the magical hammer was reputedly made by dwarves from the wood of a sacred oak tree, and not only represented the destructive power of the storms Thor created (the fires from heaven), but its image was used as a fertility symbol in marriages (in its connection with rain and crops) and in funerals (as a symbol of death and rebirth), and for accepting newborn children into the community (as a symbol of strength and protection). Such was he revered that the fifth day of the week 'Thursday' (Thor’s day) was named after him. When traveling Thor rode in a chariot made from oak drawn by two goats, Tanngnjostr (Tooth-gnasher) and Tanngrisnir (Tooth-grinder), and when moving across the heavens dispensing weather, it produced the rumblings of thunder and sparks of lightening from its wheels. Thor and his followers undertook many expeditions to Jotunheim (Iceland) the land of the frost giants, and there erected high-seated pillars of oak. These they used to hallow new ground enabling the gods to protect their people in new lands. Thor fought many legendary battles against the frost giants defending and protecting mankind as well as the gods. His greatest adversary was the World Serpent called “Jormungand” whose many coils encircled the world. After many battles between them which neither won, they were destined to meet and fight for a final time at “Ragnarok” (the mythical end of the world). At that fatal meeting Thor, the best fighter amongst the gods, succeeded in killing the serpent. However being busy with his own fight, he was too late to aid his father Odin who died fighting the fierce wolf Fenrir. After killing the serpent Thor stepped back and died himself from the poison the serpent had spat at him. Oak through the ages was revered by many cultures particularly for its protective qualities, and in Britain it still stands proud as the “King of the Forest”. In early Celtic times certain oaks were marked with a protective symbol, a circle divided into four equal parts (symbolic of the four elements - Earth, Air, Fire and Water), this was probably a forerunner of the magic pentacle (an up-right five pointed star in-side a circle, symbolic of the four elements plus “spirit”). Most likely this was an old druidic custom for the druids revered the oak above all other trees, believing it hosted the energy, power and strength of their gods. Due to its size and longevity the oak was known as the “Garden in the Forest”, for it attracts the growth of various forms of plant life. Normally the trunk of the oak is covered in fungus, particularly stinkhorn and lichen, which grow alongside tendrils of ivy, but just occasionally mistletoe will also grow on it. When this happened the oak became especially sacred for the white berries of the mistletoe were thought to represent the sperm of the gods, and so the oak became associated with the males pro creative qualities and fertility. Other myths and legends involving the oak include “Merlin”, the mystical wizard, magician and seer who helped King Arthur. It was believed that Merlin was born in Carmarthen in Wales, and there worked his magick in a grove of oaks supposedly using the topmost branch of an oak tree as his wand. An old oak that used to stand in Priory Street was credited to him called “Merlin’s Oak”, but this has since been removed. Robin Hood the outlaw, another legend, together with his followers reportedly roamed the green depths of Sherwood Forest near Nottingham. There they lived a carefree life passing away the time playing games of archery and hunting the king's deer. Any rich person passing through the forest was robed of their riches, the spoils of which they shared with the poor. The “Major Oak” a massive tree still standing today is said to have been the meeting place of his merry band of men. According to history, the oak tree was a place of worship where the people could be preached too, the trees used for this purpose became known as “Gospel Oaks”. Edward the Confessor is said to have preached from under a gospel oak in Hampstead in order to gain support for his kingdom. During his reign Edward was noted for his weakness as a ruler and his piety as a man, but his great legacy to England was Westminster Abbey the roof beams of which (and still are) made from oak. Also according to history Charles II hid in an oak tree after his defeat by Cromwell during the Battle of Worcester in 1651, thereafter the oak was given the name “Royal Oak”. On his return to the crown after ten years in exile, Charles made his birthday a public holiday and called it “Royal Oak Day”. The people celebrated, oak sprigs and leaves were gathered and used to decorated hats and clothing, boughs were tied to the doors of houses symbolically bring back luck, prosperity and fertility, and an Oak Man was dressed up oak leaves and danced around the streets before claiming his May Queen. Today many of these traditions have been absorbed into the Mayday celebrations, and are still enacted each May around the country. In Ireland, “St Bridget” (circa 453? - 523?) is one of the three patron saints. According to Celtic lore she founded Ireland's first nunnery for holy women at Kildare, called the “Cell of Oak”. It is thought that St Bridget evolved from the goddess Briget (also known as Brigid, Bridhe, Brigantia, Bridgadu), a solar goddess who prophesied and healed by virtue of the waters of inspiration. The nuns of Kildare were said to have burned acorns on perpetual fires for food and heat. Back in England, the spirit of “Herne the Hunter” is believed to inhabit an ancient oak tree. He was the oak-god of southern Britain (often depicted wearing antler-horns) who leads the legendary Wild Hunts. His spirit is said to haunt Windsor Forest. Bark: Oak bark is grey-brown in colour and distinctly gnarled and furrowed. It contains some 15 – 20 per cent of tannin, and is used universally for tanning leather as well as making dyes. The bark is collected from the tree normally during April and May it being easier to strip at this time before the leaf buds open and its sap begins to flow again. For dyeing purposes an infusion of the oak bark mixed with a small quantity of copperas yields a dye of a purplish color, and was used by Scottish Highlanders to dye woolens and yarn. Mixed with “alum” it produces a brown dye, with “salt of iron” a black dye, and with “salt of tin” a yellow dye. In North America the (Quercus tinctoria) species of oak produces (Quercitron Bark), which is used for dyeing yellow, and the bark from the (Quercus prinus) species produces a red dye that Native American Indians used to dye their skins red. Oak sawdust was once used for dyeing corduroys and velveteen’s, and also for tanning, but it was found to be inferior to bark for these purposes. After the oak bark has been used for tanning, gardeners then use it to make a decoction called “Tan”. Tan is used to cover new plantings encouraging them to grow due to the warmth it generates. However care needs to be taken for it sometimes favors the growth of fungi, harmful to certain plants. Tan is also used as a cover for racetracks and circus rings, and as an adulteration of chicory and coffee. In Brittany tan compressed into cakes was used as fuel. Leaves, Fruit and Flowers: The oak can takes some 60 years to mature and produce its first full crop of fruit. Depending on seasonal conditions, tufts of pale green leaves appear on short stalks (English or Common oak) during April or May, which by June turn dark green and thick with a strong central vein and deeply lobed edges. Should the young leaves be damaged by frost or destroyed by insects, the oak has a canny ability to re-leaf itself. In August at the height of the summer when most other trees are wilting from the heat, the oak produces a new leaf called “Lammas shoots” thus adding new color and freshness to the tree. These new leafy shoots are golden-pink when young, turning from pale to dark green as they harden. In autumn the oak tree is at its most majestic as its leaves change color again turning from dark green to various shades of yellow, orange, russet and a pale golden brown. The leaves sometime stay on the tree until the following spring or until the new buds forming for the next year push them off. In April together with the leaves, the flowers of the oak form in clusters of male and female catkins. By May the males have grown in size to 1 - 3 inches, becoming long and pendulous and filled with pollen. At this stage the female catkins open as upright flowers awaiting pollination from the males. Each has cup-shaped scaly involucres containing the seed vessels which produce as fruit an acorn 1/2 to 1 inch long. The acorn ripens in the autumn changing color from green to pale yellow to dark olive brown. Once ripe the oak drops its fruit providing food in abundance for many of the forests animals. Left uneaten, the acorn will sprout tiny shoots and root in any fertile earth, thus producing a new sapling tree and the cycle of life and growth begins again. In time of old the acorn was a valued source of food for livestock, and particularly for feeding swine. There was also much famine in England during those times and the starving peasantry was thankful for a share, even making bread from it. This naturally depleted the crops resources and as land was measured and valued for its swine feeding capabilities, by the end of the seventh century special laws were enacted called pawnage or pannage, relating to the feeding of swine. This was later recorded in the Domesday Book, (the record of a survey ordered by William the Conqueror (1086) to determine economic conditions in England). Acorns contain a substantial proportion of carbohydrate and fat, and in many country districts are still collected in sacks and given to pigs, but they must also be mixed with other vegetable food to counteract their binding properties. Medicinal uses: Most parts of the tree are used medicinally and its healing effects are many and varied. The distilled water of the oak leaf bud can be taken internally or used externally to relieve minor inflammations. Bruised oak leaves applied externally to wounds and hemorrhoids will also help reduce and ease inflammation. The bark of the tree is the part most used in medicine being tonic, astringent and antiseptic. As with other astringents it is recommended for use in agues and hemorrhages. The medicinal qualities of the bark can be extracted both by water and by spirit. As a decoction it has a strong astringent and bitter taste with a slightly aromatic odor. To make it, collect some bark (best in the spring April or May) from some young trees and dry it in the sun before chopping it. Use 1 oz. of bark in a quart of water and boil it down to a pint. It can then be taken in a wineglass measure or dose, and used as a gargle mouthwash for chronic sore throats, or applied locally to bleeding gums and piles. Also used in hot baths for chilblains and frostbite or as a hot compress for inflamed glands, hernias and hemorrhoids. A stronger decoction taken by the spoonful is useful in chronic diarrhea and dysentery. Oak bark when finely ground and powdered makes a remedial snuff that can be inhaled to arrest nosebleeds. It has also proved beneficial in the early stages of consumption. Sprinkled onto bed sheets it will help to alleviate bedsores. A pinch of powered oak bark mixed with honey and taken in the mornings will help and aid ladies with menstrual problems. Ground and powdered acorns taken with water was considered a useful tonic for diarrhea, and a decoction of acorns and oak bark made with milk, was used as an antidote to poisonous herbs and medicines. In old times, the thin skin of the acorn was used to cover open cuts or wounds, and ground and powdered acorns taken in wine was considered a good diuretic. Magical Uses: Due to the oaks many associations and characteristics, it is used symbolically on many ritual occasions, for instance in February during the festival of Imbolc, the spirits of the oak tree can be invoked to aid and lend strength to the goddess as she sleeps having given birth to the new god. It can also be asked to aid and acknowledge the new God as he grows in strength to become the new light of the year. In March at the festival of Ostara (the Spring Equinox) when the Goddess returns from the Underworld, the oak tree can be invoked to aid her as she blankets the earth with fertility bringing new life to the lands and pastures, also to lend strength to the new god as he stretches and grows to maturity inducing all living creatures out of hibernation to mate and reproduce. The Beltane festival in May marks the courtship of the Goddess and God and the renewal of the ancient marriage of polarity. The oak tree is invoked for its associations with weddings and fertility. In June, Litha the Summer Solstice festival embraces the beginning of summer when earth is awash with the fertility of the Goddess and God. The oak is again invoked for its associations with the gods of thunder and rain to aid the growth of crops. At the Lammas festival in August it’s the time of the first harvest and the time when the plants of spring begin to shrivel and die. At this time the oak is called for its regenerative powers, for as the other plants begin to wither and die the oak produces its Lammas shoots in conformation that the cycle of life will continue. September (Mabon) is the Autumn Equinox and completes the harvest begun at Lammas. Nature declines and draws back its bounty in readiness for the winter and it’s time of rest. At this time the oak is revered for now it drops it own harvest of acorns, these then feed and nourish the forest animals as they stock their larders ready for hibernation and the bleak cold months of the coming winter. The God now dies as a willing sacrifice and descends into the earth to the Underworld, there to await his renewal and rebirth by the Goddess. The oak trees spirits can be invoked and all the trees attributes called upon to ease the gods decent with strength, courage and comfort while aiding the goddess with its male pro creative qualities and powers of fertility. The protective qualities of the oak were well known and used in magick, and many of the old customs are still practiced in country villages. Carrying a small piece of oak on your person will bring about a sense of security and well-being as well as protection from harm. Two twigs of oak tied together with red thread to form an equal armed cross is an age old talisman that can be worn or hung up in the home for protection, strength and security against evil. Acorns placed on window-ledges will guard against lightening strikes. As the oak tree is so firmly planted and deep-rooted it symbolizes permanency, and as our feet are constantly in touch with the ground this symbolism can be used magically to aid our feet. Before going on a long journey, be it in your own country or abroad, soak your feet in a footbath infusion of oak bark and leaves. This will not only relieve weary feet, but also guide you on your journey and ensure you’re save return. To catch a falling oak leaf will bring you luck and prosperity, and you shall suffer no colds throughout the winter. If someone is sick or poorly in the home, place an oak log on the fire to warm the house; it will help to “draw-off” the illness. Carrying an acorn is thought to guard against illness and pain, it is also thought to aid longevity and preserve youthfulness. The acorn with its symbolic representation of the glans penis was much used in love magick and fertility rites, for which use phallic shaped wands were made and tipped with an acorn. In olden days young women would place two acorns in a bowl of water to find out if she had found true love, if they moved together “yes” if they moved apart “no”. The ancients and druids of old used the oak tree for divination purposes when planning the next seasons farming work. By carefully studying the leafing sequences of different trees, they could determine when to plant the next seasons crops. An old proverb relating to this has been passed down through the centuries and is still used to predict the weather in many country districts: “If the Oak's before the Ash, Then you'll only get a splash; If the Ash before the Oak, Then you might expect a soak.” Another more precise method of divination is the use of “oak galls” or “oak apples” as they are commonly known. I can do no better here than to quote a paragraph from one of the many books I have used to compile this writing, a brilliant book called “Tree Wisdom” in which “Jacqueline Memory Paterson” quotes from “Gerard” who states: “Galls were broken into at specific times of the year (probably spring and autumn) and what was found in them foretold the sequence of the coming seasons. If an ant was found inside the gall it foretold plenty of grain to come, if a spider, there would be “a pestilence among men”, if a white worm or maggot, there would be a “murrain” of beasts or cattle. If the worm flew away (presumably found at its metamorphic stage of becoming a gall-wasp or flying insect), it signified war, if the worm crept, it foretold scarceness of harvest, and if it turned about, it foreshadowed the plague. Such a record also gives us an indication of the harsh concerns of earlier times.” Galls: The longevity of the oak and its statuesque nature makes it a veritable “garden in the forest”. Animals, birds, plant life, fungi and insects of all kinds find a home within its massive frame. Of all the insects that find sanctuary, the most persistent and harmful is the “gall wasp”. The gall wasp (Cynipidaie) is a tiny hymenopteran insect that attacks the tree and lays its eggs. The eggs develop into larva, which in turn produces the galls. The galls (commonly called oak apples) appear sometime on the leaves but mainly on the bare branches of the tree during winter. Looking like hard brown balls at the end of its twigs and feeding on the sap of the tree, they do much damage and mischief to the tree by checking and distorting its growth. The larva that hatches from the eggs secrets a peculiar fluid, this stimulates the defensive mechanism of the tree to produce an abnormal growth resulting in the knotted knees and twisted elbows typical of the tree we see today. The larva now enclosed in a knotty spherical mass produced by the trees defenses, begins to feed off the trees natural resources such as starch and other nutritive material. The growth of the gall continues so long as the egg or larva lives, or reaches maturity and passes into a chrysalis from which the fully developed gall wasp emerges and escapes into the air through a hole bored with its mandibles in the side of the gall. Galls are used commercially in the preparation of gallic acid and tannic acid, and are extensively used in tanning and dyeing as well as for the manufacture of ink. The best galls come from Asiatic Turkey and are Aleppo galls from the (Quercus infectoria). They are also known as Mecca Galls or Sodom Apples, “the fruit that never comes to ripeness - the fruit so pleasant to the eye and so bitter to the taste”. In commerce they are simply known as blue or green galls. The main constituents of Aleppo galls are 50 to 70 per cent of gallotannic acid, 2 to 4 per cent of gallic acid, mucilage, sugar, resin and an insoluble matter called lignin. Other commercial galls are imported from Persia and to a lesser extent from Greece. If collected before the insects escape, those of good quality are hard and heavy and without perforations. They are dark bluish-green or olive green in color and nearly spherical in shape, measuring 12 to 18 mm. in diameter. These are the blue and green galls known in commerce. If collected after the insects have escaped they have a pale yellowish-brown hue, are spongy and lighter in weight and are perforated near the center with a small hole. These are known in commerce as white galls. White galls contain less gallotannic acid than the blue or green galls. The English oak galls or oak apples are smooth, globular and brown. They are usually perforated and much less astringent than Aleppo galls containing only 15 to 20 per cent of gallotannic acid. As such they have no real commercial value. Medicinally galls are the most powerful of all vegetable astringents. It is used as a tincture internally in cases of dysentery, diarrhea and cholera, and as an injection in gonorrhea and leucorrhea. Preparations of gall are usually applied as a local astringent externally, mainly as a gall ointment (1 oz. of powdered galls and 4 oz. of benzoated lard) and applied to painful hemorrhoids. It can also be used to arrest hemorrhages from the nose and gums. An infusion may be used as a gargle for inflamed tonsils etc. The oak is known by many folk names such as: Father of the Woods, King of the Forests, Royal Oak, Tree of Britain, White Oak, Duir, Jove’s Nuts, Gospel Oak and Juglan. Its deity associations are with: Hecate, Dione, Diana, Rhea, Cybele, Circe, Athene, Demeter, Bridgid, Bridhe, St Briget, Blodeuwedd and Cerridwen. Zeus, Hercules, Pan, Jehovah, Esus, Odin, Thor, Dagda, Herne and Janus. Its planet ruler is Jupiter, with close associations to the Sun. Its associated element is Fire. It is used to attract the powers needed for: Protection, Health and Healing, Fertility, Luck, Money, Joviality and Potency. Astrologically oak people (i.e. those who are born during the month of May) are robust, courageous, strong, unrelenting, independent and sensible. They do not like change, keep their feet on the ground, and are people of action. Even when faced with over riding stress, hurt or pain, oak people come out on top better and stronger and more grounded than before. Instead of bending under stress, hurt and pain, they adapt and grow until they overcome it.
Leave a comment!
html comments NOT enabled!
NOTE: If you post content that is offensive, adult, or NSFW (Not Safe For Work), your account will be deleted.[?]

giphy icon
last post
16 years ago
posts
15
views
3,249
can view
everyone
can comment
everyone
atom/rss

recent posts

16 years ago
Elder
16 years ago
Reed
16 years ago
Ivy
16 years ago
Vine
16 years ago
Hazel
16 years ago
Holly
16 years ago
Oak
16 years ago
Hawthorn
16 years ago
Willow
16 years ago
Alder

other blogs by this author

 11 years ago
Erotica (NSFW)
 12 years ago
Samhain
 12 years ago
A New Decade of Change
 14 years ago
Newest Creations
 14 years ago
Beltane
 14 years ago
Rants...
 14 years ago
Pantheism Philosophy
official fubar blogs
 8 years ago
fubar news by babyjesus  
 14 years ago
fubar.com ideas! by babyjesus  
 10 years ago
fubar'd Official Wishli... by SCRAPPER  
 11 years ago
Word of Esix by esixfiddy  

discover blogs on fubar

blog.php' rendered in 0.0673 seconds on machine '8'.