Walk through any woodland in Britain and you’ll no doubt be able to pick out the forest celebrities. Think ash, oak, and pine. But a healthy forest is full of a diverse range of woodland trees, each with their own legends and folklore. They also have party tricks that see them give back to the […]
trees
Conifers and Christmas: The Folklore of Pine, Spruce and Fir Trees
Put ‘christmas trees’ into Google and it returns about 1,350,000,000 results. They’re an intrinsic part of the festivities, yet you actually have three main types of conifers to choose from: pine (Pinus), fir (Abies), and spruce (Picea). Oslo has sent a Norway spruce to London every Christmas since 1947, displayed in Trafalgar Square (Woolf 2020: […]
Hazel Trees in Folklore: Protection, Divination and Magic
Hazel trees, alongside oak, ash, and yew, are one of the ‘Big Four’ trees (Mac Coitir 2003). It’s considered both a protector and a marker for sacred places. While some debate that it’s a shrub, we’re going to consider it as a tree in this post. Nicholas Culpeper classified the hazel as a plant of […]
The Fantastic Magic and Folklore of Ash Trees
Ash trees form a common part of the British landscape. Bushy and beautiful in full leaf, they provide strong hardwood when coppiced. Use this handy guide from the Forestry Commission to identify ash trees. While thorn trees provide the most common tree-related place name in England, ash trees come second (Kendall 2021). People on the […]
What Willow Folklore Surrounds This Beautiful Tree?
The weeping willow is a common sign of mourning. Willow folklore often pokes tendrils into death superstitions and sayings. Margaret Baker relates the belief that “[i]n Louisiana, […] when a willow grew large enough to cast a grave-sized shadow, a family member would die” (2011: 159). In the UK, no builders in the Fens used sawn […]
Meet the Oak, the Favoured Tree of the Forest!
The oak tree is pretty synonymous with the British landscape. From the National Trust logo to the mighty Major Oak that allegedly sheltered Robin Hood, we’ve got a bit of a thing about them. These trees first appeared around 65 million years ago. To put that into perspective, the first homo sapiens only appeared around […]