Blackthorn. Folklore, Mythology and Symbolism of the Blackthorn Tree (Straif | Thurisaz)

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Story Crow

Story Crow

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 111
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
To support my work as a folklorist and storyteller, please consider making a small donation on Patreon: www.patreon.com/TheStoryCrow
@charliemansonUK
@charliemansonUK 4 ай бұрын
Back in the 1980's i assisted a hedge layer in hus 80's purely for the exhange of knowledge, no money involved. The last job we did together was the layering of a blackthorn paddock behind a 16th century farmhouse that was being renovated after being empty since the 60's. I last went to see it about 10 years ago and it was as tall as when we layered it but now with a 4 foot high layered solid area at the base. I sat and talked to the hedge and remembered the man who taught me a dying skill for a while
@charliemansonUK
@charliemansonUK 4 ай бұрын
On the blackthorn spikes on day 2 of the job he presented me with cow hide arm protectors as well as what seemed very odd a piece that strapped over the shoulders and up the neck, if he hadn't been wearing it I would have thought it a joke. The neck part was essential as your layering your folding half cut trees over and the back of the neck is always getting hit by branches. Happy memories of one of the hardest working years of my life Any punctures he would rub a greasy/fatty salve into them, never got infected but they woukd hurt for days afterwards.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for this comment, that was really interesting and touching, but also for taking a fragment of the old knowledge and passing it forward. I hope you teach others how to hedge lay on occasion, so maybe the skill won’t die. Hedge layers are like storytellers in a way. Passing the old ways on. Thank you 🙏
@charliemansonUK
@charliemansonUK 2 ай бұрын
@TheStoryCrow I went to Newton Rigg Agricultural Collage in Cumbria for a while on the horticultural side and whilst there I layered a small isolated bit of untidy hedge and was approached by a forestry tutor who asked me to do a demonstration to his forestry students and I did the same for the hill farmers, by the time they where done there was barely an unlayered hedgerow for miles around! I knew then, the reason I spent the previous summer thru winter with that man. These lads like me will be around 60 now and I'm sure some of them layered a hedge or two and showed someone else how to do it.
@peterfrance702
@peterfrance702 6 ай бұрын
As a wee lad I made a great game of whacking stinging nettles, only the whacking sticks never lasted long. One day to my delight I found a blackthorn staff hidden in the hedgerow. It was stout and strong and it smashed and crushed those nettles mercilessly. A finer whacker I never did have. It broke eventually, but I'll never forget that legend of a stick. Eat your heart out Thor.
@GG-jw8pt
@GG-jw8pt Жыл бұрын
Every irish man of generations past now, had a trusty blackthorn stick for cattle, stray curs and English men! 😂 Sold as expensive souvenirs now and quite expensive.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Stray curs and Englishmen. Love that 😂 I’ve been meaning to make myself a nice Shillelagh to bop myself on the head on for a while now 😅 I know, the ones you see for sale are quite dear aren’t they?
@CrochetingPup
@CrochetingPup Жыл бұрын
You are truly a Bard in the tradition of ages past. Thank you for your vibrant and engaging story telling, sir! Sláinte and Happy Solstice/Christmas!
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Sláinte and thanks 🙏
@drowsyZot
@drowsyZot Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video, as always! Thank you! Also, I was absolutely furious to hear about the tree up at Hadrian's Wall. Just horrifying!
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
I know… but hey. It will grow back. Sycamores are fighters 🌳
@JosiahRobinson
@JosiahRobinson Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the shoutout Olly, & the reminder to harvest some slows from the blackthorn that protects our local rec.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
It’s gin all round for Christmas this year 😂
@IainMcGirr
@IainMcGirr Жыл бұрын
Top tip my friend from my Grandmother in Kerry when picking the "sloes " and you may get infected .. if you grab depending on season the Comfrey root and mash it up and then pierce the inflamed part ... you put a mashed poultice onto that and wrap with a cloth .. within two days the comfrey will draw all the poison and white blood cells from the wound.. and trust me .. I did this and often back in the day.... Ireland had no real health service at all really and many occasions .. I can confirm this works just sharing one celt Norse to my fellow Angle Saxon Celt .. :) all good try that next time before you hit the "mould " and yeah even back way when around our parts different colour of bread mould would be put on bad wounds.. I Sh**t you not... so .. take from this what you will love your stuff .. as ever .. Ma Gra... ceart go lor :)
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Ooooh. I love this Iain, thank you. Got Comfrey growing out of my ears (and other places) here. Heard about Comfrey poultices for broken and bruised bones, but never drawing out toxins - I will definitely be trying that when I next get spiked by Blackthorn 😅 You gotta love the grandmothers wisdom. Thanks for stopping by my friend. Gra.
@Flutterby-W
@Flutterby-W Жыл бұрын
Thanks for that information, have been looking for a cure for ages, sadly big Internet pharma does not like shared natural info... 🍀👍✊
@juliewilliams489
@juliewilliams489 8 ай бұрын
Interesting information🤔 I've been getting information that comfy heals to fast and seals infection in🤷‍♀️ I'll have to try this. I've been using plantain for its drawing properties on goanna bites on my ataked chickens and its worked well. But that's not specifically the black thorn toxins I guess.
@Kim-J312
@Kim-J312 8 ай бұрын
My grandfather from Czechslovkia/Czechia use to make comfrey leaf 🍃 tea for circulation. He drank it daily . Us Slavs always used , roots, herbs 🌿 ect for health reasons and for warding off werewolves and vampires 🧛‍♀️ 😂😅
@davidaguilar8771
@davidaguilar8771 8 ай бұрын
I work with trees and hedges all the time and I can understand when you speak about the blackthorn and feeling the spirits between them. It's always important to look after pacha mama, otherwise where would we be? Love your stories. Keep it going. Much love!
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 7 ай бұрын
☝️
@netwitchtatjana4661
@netwitchtatjana4661 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Story Crow, I'm always looking forward to your tree tales 🌳💜 nettie🦉
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Glad you like them Nettie, more to come 🌳 😊
@NevisYsbryd
@NevisYsbryd Жыл бұрын
While much of this I already knew (blackthorn is a particular personal interest), the thorns being hollow and filled with bacteria was entirely new information. Yet more reason to be cautious of my set of blackthorn needles...
@NevisYsbryd
@NevisYsbryd Жыл бұрын
I had not made the connection to the moon in the name of the luantishee. The connection to the rune affiliated with Thurisaz is also remarkable. While it is obviously very questionable how much of this is deliberate (although the druids were allegedly fluent in Greek), that lines up in a fascinating way with Hellenistic astrology. Blackthorn symbolism has some obvious overlap with Samhain/Nos Galan Gaeaf, and as I understand it, archeological and historical evidence indicate that the date was likely a week or two later than the modern date, of which one of the primary suspected rationales is that it corresponds to the solar midpoint, halfway between the autumnal equinox and arboreal solstice. This happens to place the sun in the zodiacal sign of Scorpio, the feminine/nocturnal dominion of Mars, the red and violent classical planet... and the 'fall' of Luna, where the silver one is corrupted and brings out the worst in her. Luna is also debilitated or 'exiled' in Capricorn, the sign of the arboreal solstice (which ties in with Calleach Buer's rule of winter and 'blackthorn winters') and the soul's exit from this world, 'exalted' in Taurus (approximately May), which brings out the best in her, and herself rules Cancer, the sign of the estival solstice and birth and the mother. Jupiter pertains to Thor and, I have speculated for some time, Mjolnir to specifically Jupiter in Cancer (Jupiter's exaltation). While I have been personally looking at blackthorn as a Mars in Cancer (Mars's fall) thing, that is not necessarily off-base; Mars and Luna are each fallen in the other's domicile and both lend themselves well to blackthorn's themes. I wonder if any of that was whatsoever deliberate or integrated into the associated lore, such as either through deliberate synchronism on the part of the Celtic peoples, or through a common Proto-Indo-European lineage? Or perhaps it is an incidental overlap of perceptions and/or archetypes. It is fascinating that it lines up so well, though.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Not sure where I picked up that titbit, but my fingers have learned the hard way many times over 😅
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Really interesting you bring this up, and I think about this a lot. Whether there was an older sub culture which fed into various disparate later cultures such as Celtic and Hellenic, entirely plausible. Or maybe some ‘spooky action at a distance’ type phenomena relating to the collective unconscious? 🤔 thanks for this input anyway. Very interesting 🙏☺️
@gaz8891
@gaz8891 10 ай бұрын
​@@TheStoryCrow I've been trying to understand these ancient British - European connections as well. This is where I've got to, sorry for the length! Check out the amazing book, "The Baltic Origins of Homer's Epic Tales" by Vinci, and also the research work of the fantastic historian Alan Wilson of Ancient Britain. It seems that there was a common Bronze Age North European culture that we now also call 'Hellenic' or 'Achaean' (from Greek legends) or the Beaker People (from archaeology). ie. These were the same as the 'Ancient Greeks', who pre-dated the Classical Greeks by a couple of thousand years (give or take). The Ancient Greek tales and the - possibly even more ancient - astrological knowledge come from northern Europe. Yes, that's right, when you're reading Homer's tales about Troy and the Odyssey, you are reading part of your own Bronze Age past culture, a more sophisticated society than we think. This culture was centred all around the Baltic regions (from Denmark to Finland). The Bronze Ages of c.5000-2000BC were a high point of north Europe culture because this was a period when the climate was warmer in northern Europe (the 'Climatic Optimum'). Some of these Beaker tribes were sailing and trading all across northern Europe, including bringing tin from Britain which seems to have been the main source of tin for north Europe bronze. They were a blond-haired, blue-eyed people, an early 'Viking' culture and presumably the same people as the germanic celtic and nordic people of today. From around 2000BC, the climate began changing and northern Europe started to become colder. This pushed many of these tribes to re-settle elsewhere. The people which earlier settled in southern Britain we now call the Wessex culture, an advanced Bronze Age culture (around 2000BC), slowly replacing the earlier dark-haired 'Cheddar man' people. The battle of Troy took place during these colder times, around 1800BC. After this war, which signified the end of this high Bronze Age era (why this war is important to this day, perhaps especially to the ruling classes), the various tribes that lived around the Baltic Sea migrated away. Some went south to the Mediterranean, taking their 'greek' legends with then, and they later became the Myceneans, and even later the Classical Greeks. They re-named many places around the Mediterranean after the places of their legends, but these were NOT the original locations of the legends. Others went towards India and were the ancient Aryans who brought the basis of the caste system and Hinduism with them. ie. these movements account for the ancient commonality of the Indo-European culture. One group, the Trojans (enemies of the Achaeans/ancient Greeks in the Trojan war), also travelled south and became the early Roman leaders. One of these Trojan tribes eventually sailed to Britain, and founded the Ancient British dynasties of Iron Age kings, which lasted from 1700BC to about 600 AD (in England), and to about 1300AD in Wales. King Arthur about 550AD. You can read this history from their own mouths, by reading the translated "Chronicles of Brut" on-line. They never forgot that they came from Troy, which is why their capital London was initially called New Troy, and why all classically educated students learn of Troy and why we are taught to respect the Romans. This history accounts for the two-tier culture of Britain and all gaelic/Gaul cultures, ie. a bedrock of northern celtic people and local culture & folklore, over-ruled by a mediterranean/Roman-influenced ruling & trading class. I think the Druids are a bit of a side story as they were much later arrivals during the Iron Ages, are clearly elitist and hierarchical, and are not part of the same early history of the end Bronze Age & early Iron Age settlers. Perhaps they came from the Mediterranean.
@mumsow
@mumsow 4 ай бұрын
Im a relative newbie to your videos and wanted to say how much I'm enjoying them thanks so much 💚🙂 The Blackthorn is a strange thing... I heard of the power but it seems quite a bizarre link this. I ended up giving end of life care to my mother in 2008 so she came to live with me in my tiny upstairs flat. She had always been a tyrant and quite abusive but she didn't want to die in a hospital or hospice and it felt right for me to do it even though many difficulties and twisted nasty turns within my family history. Anyhow cutting a long story short we got moved to a bungalow in a place called Blackthorn Close. Very apt as she died three weeks later.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 4 ай бұрын
That is very apt… Hope you’ve managed to make peace with the shadows of the past Maybe you need to spend some time with birch next. New beginnings ☺️✨ All the best to you and thanks for watching 🙏
@mumsow
@mumsow 4 ай бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow indeed and bless you 💜☀️
@TarahMatson-zz2hj
@TarahMatson-zz2hj 3 ай бұрын
I am really enjoying this series. I am of English, Scottish, German descent and the Celtic lore resonates deeply with me. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experiences .
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 3 ай бұрын
Glad you like them, gotta keep the heritage alive, the stories are inside you. Or maybe you’re inside them 😉
@cristitanase6130
@cristitanase6130 2 ай бұрын
lots of them grow in Romania, I used to eat these since childhood, everyone here knows they're packed with vitamins and help sickly kids to face the winter better, especially if they get cold easily.
@khomol
@khomol Ай бұрын
Frigginhell. Mind is blown. I’ve been waiting patiently to learn about this stuff for a year. And then I happen across your channel. Thank you, sir.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Ай бұрын
Pleasure, glad you made it 🙏✨🐦‍⬛
@mistyhelena
@mistyhelena 20 күн бұрын
Wow I enjoyed this video so much! Thank you for continuing the oral tradition so well
@gavhappy5327
@gavhappy5327 2 ай бұрын
Thanks I love listening to you ❤
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 2 ай бұрын
Thanks! Much appreciated and thanks for listening 🙏
@GeriBee
@GeriBee Жыл бұрын
Just found your channel. Love your content! This is right up my alley. Subscribed 👌🏻
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@eggandchips4t
@eggandchips4t 4 ай бұрын
Same!❤
@Mythsinger
@Mythsinger 4 ай бұрын
Another brilliant telling. I love this series, even though i have watched "out of series". Great stuff. Has inspired me in my storytelling.
@irenerosique521
@irenerosique521 7 ай бұрын
I loved this video so much. In my land, hawthorn and blackthorn have similar legends, but the sentence for the perpetrator was to roam the moon with the pieces of the tree that he cut down.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 7 ай бұрын
Oooh, I love this. What part of the world may I ask?
@AndrewNichols-g9w
@AndrewNichols-g9w 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the delightful videos! I enjoyed your informative talk on the blackthorn, particularly since I am a descendant of the Scottish warlock you mentioned, Thomas Weir (he was my 10th generation maternal great-grandfather). Naturally, in his honor, I too carry a blackthorn walking stick. ;)
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 2 ай бұрын
Well that’s pretty cool!
@HootOwl513
@HootOwl513 8 ай бұрын
Your Dog was once a Crusader Knight of an order that wore black cloaks and black surcoats with a white cruifix emblazoned on their chests. [4:41]. Were the Arcane Brothers of St Guineforte a Templar subsect? They were much feared in both Christendom and Araby. On dark nights it is whispered that when the Avignon Papacy clamped down on the Order, some of the Brothers escaped immolation by transmuting into canine form.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 8 ай бұрын
I know not this tale, but I LIKE IT
@HootOwl513
@HootOwl513 8 ай бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow Just my own spinning of magic yarn. Bernard Cornwell's Grail Quest Trilogy is set in the 100 Years War. It's told from the POV of Thomas of Hookton, an English mercenary archer. He wears a relic of ''Saint Guineforth' a Dog/Martyr who was sainted by French peasants [clearly w/o the Church's approval]. It's a Dog's Claw or something. The legend of St Guineforth [-forte] is in Wikipedia, so it was real, if heretical. Roman Catholic Dogma has always held that animals have no immortal souls. The legend goes: A Knight had lost his beautiful young wife in childbirth. His most precious person was now his infant Son. His fief is plagued by ravenous wolves. Forever howling. He has a best friend, a massive Greyhound, Guineforte. As Handsome a Dog as he is Noble, and as Intelligent as he is Loyal, the Knight instructs Guineforte to stay at the Castle and protect his Heir. The Dog knows his duty and barks his assent. The Knight sallys forth to slay the Wolf pack. Gone all night, he is unsuccessful. When he returns to the solarium of his tower keep, he is shocked and dismayed to see the interior all torn up, tapestries ripped, crib broken, the baby not to be seen, and blood everywhere, even on the Dog's jaws... In a rage, his sword flashes out and slashes down the big Dog. The Greyhound's last move is to lick his master's hand in forgiveness. Just then, the Baby cries -- concious that something bad has happened to his dog friend and protector. The Knight realizes his error. Guineforte has stood off a pack of Wolves, protected his charge, and is now dead from a rash judgement. The Knight lowers the Dog's body down a well, rocks it in, and plants trees around the well. In time, local peasants find miraculous things are done with the Dog Saint's intersession. * * * I'm sure if a Templar subsect, devoted to St Guineforte, were hard pressed by the Avignon Antipope's Inquisitors, He would have interceded on their behalf, and allowed them to shapeshift into dog form to escape. Whether they are immortal, but stuck in dog form -- in a sort of Limbo -- is beyond my Powers to know. Their Templar's holy habit is still visable in their Dog coats' form, the Old Ones say. . May the Holy Dog lift His leg and bless us all.
@juliewilliams489
@juliewilliams489 8 ай бұрын
Ive just found you love the tree ones. If elm is one of these trees id ❤ to here that one. Thanks for sharing your knowledge
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 8 ай бұрын
Oh, I’ll get round to it 🙏😊
@firecracker187
@firecracker187 Жыл бұрын
Every single time I watch one of your videos. I like you a little bit more. Are you kidding me? You have grass stains on your knee.. I freaking love that. You just seem like the kind of folk that I would love to sit around a fire, drinking mead, tokin', and being fully amused by your stories while MsS.Crow widdles me a 'walking stick' .....If that is her in this video she is stinking adorable ! Heyyy I have that same little scythe thingy
@firecracker187
@firecracker187 Жыл бұрын
It seems a little ridiculous to get a vibe even though it is on the internet. But I get a strong energy from that lass and it's very positive.. like she's got very .. joyful (?) vibes. I know what i'm getting I don't care it sounds corny
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Mrs crow 😂 Yeah she’s a good un, I’m a lucky boy. Thanks for watching friend 😊🙏
@ladygwarth
@ladygwarth 8 ай бұрын
I stood on a blackthorn thorn last year and it went straight through my boot into the ball of my foot, I swore a bit! I went in and researched what to do and freaked myself out with the fungus part, I soaked it and poulticed it and made sure no point was left and luckily it didn’t get infected, but it hurt for ages. I had planted a long blackthorn hedge, not sure what that says about me ha, ha. The birds do love it though.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 7 ай бұрын
I’ve been there. Made a callous years later. Right through the shoe!
@ladygwarth
@ladygwarth 7 ай бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow I had something similar about a year after, I thought it was a verruca as first, but it wasn’t, just hard skin, interesting 🤔.
@johnpower-m5o
@johnpower-m5o 13 күн бұрын
Thank you. The Irish Gaelic word for Blackthorn is: Draighean. Draighneach has two meanings 1/ an area full of blackthorn bushes, thorny, prickly. 2/ Bardic metre with triple rhyming, and lines of irregular length. The Shilleliegh, is a hefty blackthorn stick in Ireland. Used for walking of course, but also, used famously in faction fights, which existed here up to the 18th century. A faction fight was when hundreds of people would be involved in brutal conflicts and fights using these hefty sticks. A person would drag their coat or garment along the ground, and if someone dared to step on it, the fighting would commence. The faction fight probably had its origins in the age old clan rivalry and warfare. The blackthorn, or Draighean, had its association with the fairies in Ireland, the more dangerous, and malignant sort, the Siabhradh. The Druid Maelgenn called on these entities, a sort genii, to inflict damage, even death on others.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 12 күн бұрын
Didn’t know that re the cloaks on the ground, very interesting, cheers!
@johnpower-m5o
@johnpower-m5o 12 күн бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow Cheers to you! Thank you for your inspirational talks! people are starved of their own history and traditions.
@virginialochowicz8560
@virginialochowicz8560 4 ай бұрын
Just found your channel and love it! Subscribed 😊 such a n engaging story and tree lore, fantastic 😀
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 4 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard! 🌳 🌳 🌳
@aswang13
@aswang13 4 ай бұрын
Thanks man, very educating
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 4 ай бұрын
No worries mate ☺️🙏
@mykcaz7494
@mykcaz7494 7 ай бұрын
Wonderful to watch and listen to
@timtaylor1365
@timtaylor1365 8 ай бұрын
Second video running I've seen where you've mentioned "semen". But fascinating history. I'm pondering subscribing ...
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 8 ай бұрын
It’s only those two times officer i promise
@katystratten
@katystratten Жыл бұрын
Really liked this! And am now following! Very easy to listen to!
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard! 😊🙏
@madaboutmusic248
@madaboutmusic248 Жыл бұрын
Can Looking forward to you covering Rowan...my birth tree under the Celtic tree calendar
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
I reckon Rowan is next on my list 👍🌳☺️
@daragildea7434
@daragildea7434 Жыл бұрын
"The Celtic tree calendar" was invented in the 1940s by Robert Graves.
@briganfree3656
@briganfree3656 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
I thank you Sir!
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Or Madam
@melony71ify
@melony71ify 8 ай бұрын
Elder please!
@suzannebinsley5940
@suzannebinsley5940 7 ай бұрын
I have alot of these.😅 I don't know what that says about me.😊 I have used it to start trees as a windbreak and to protect against deer.
@rafaelramos1486
@rafaelramos1486 2 ай бұрын
I found this video quite interesting.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 2 ай бұрын
I found this comment quite amusing.
@jamiethea1194
@jamiethea1194 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this one! I've been collecting the slow berries for their seed over the last month. I'm going to grow lots of this. Maybe it will protect me from climate change :/?
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Doubt it 😂😕
@Flutterby-W
@Flutterby-W Жыл бұрын
Might keep a few politicians away... Hopefully..
@thealchemistdaughter3405
@thealchemistdaughter3405 6 ай бұрын
Fabulous ✨ I really enjoyed your tales .. And your wee Patterdale buddy listening in 💞.. He looks so like our boy Murphy.. Magical wee critters are our beautiful Patterdales ✨..
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 6 ай бұрын
He does probably have patterdale in him, well spotted! It’s always interesting hearing people wonder what breed he is - proper mongrel from the streets of Romania 😂 Black lab and collie too I think, but lots of terrier for sure. He loves a good dig and a sniff
@susanmenke2669
@susanmenke2669 4 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@adriennewalker1715
@adriennewalker1715 8 ай бұрын
Love these videos!
@gaz8891
@gaz8891 10 ай бұрын
Really interesting, only half-way through so far. Just thought I'd mention where the name 'sloe' may come from. I recently read that Slow Worms were so named by the Anglo-Saxons, after their word for 'slay,' meaning to strike, and 'slay' became 'slow.' Well, given your information about the dark connotations of Blackthorn, its spikes that slay and and its use as a slayer, surely this is the same origin ? In past-times, it was sometimes called the Sloe-thorn ... so the Thorn that Slays ?!
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 10 ай бұрын
That’s really interesting I didn’t know that. Could be. Etymology is a labyrinth. Now I’m thinking of thunor / Thor the slayer, specifically slayer of serpents (and trolls and giants) and how the thorn rune represents Thor (and trolls and giants). Thanks for sharing! 🙏
@gaz8891
@gaz8891 10 ай бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow That's great, an ancient link between 'thorn' and 'slaying'! I wonder what Thor's weapons were ... actual thorns ?! Given what you say about how the thorns can cause deadly infections, a spiky Blackthorn branch could have been an effective way to get rid of enemies in days gone by, before metal weapons came about ... I hacked off a couple of branches today and they do look deadly! Perhaps the infections come from the grey 'bloom' that covers the twigs (might be a yeast like the yeast bloom on the sloes).
@gaz8891
@gaz8891 10 ай бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow Now you've had me thinking ! I didn't know of the thorne rune and its connection to Thor. I looked it up, and the shape of the rune is actually like a thorny branch, a triangle sticking out from a stick ! The existence of this rune suggests to me that a thorn must be one of our primal concepts. 'Thorny' things were probably one of the main dangers to us in the natural world. And given that 'th' can be 'd' in other languages, I think I've worked out why Thor is also the storm god ... Blackthorn in Dutch is Sleedorn, and thorn in German is Dorn. Likewise, the old German name of Thor is Donar (site Mythology Source), and Donner means 'thunder' in German, presumably from where the word 'Donnerstag' would come from ('tag' means 'day'), which is the German word for 'Thorsday' (ie. Thursday). So I think the link between a thorn, storms and Thor is that lightning, the dramatic slayer from the sky can be seen as a powerful and deadly 'thorn' shooting down from the sky. I can't help also thinking that a lot of our European words may come from this root word/concept of thorn (possibly 'thorn' was once the plural word of a single 'thor'): such as words relating to the shape of a thorn (eg. tower/tour/tor), animals with 'thorny' heads (tauros, horn, aurochs ('os/ox/ochs' means 'cow')), and the effects of being caught by a thorn bush (tore / tear, terrier dogs), and perhaps even the horror of encounters with thickets of thorn bushes that tear and lightning that slays (terror, terrible ... ).
@MsAhutch
@MsAhutch 3 ай бұрын
Is bradford pear (callery pear) a suitable substitute for blackthorn?
@Karmaholik
@Karmaholik 6 ай бұрын
Sounds like step five 🍀
@annetteegerton6153
@annetteegerton6153 5 ай бұрын
I had a goat kid and he ate the leaves of my blackthorn hedge and he got a tiny bit of the thorn got into the outside of his cheek and it festered. Eventually the swelling burst and it blew itself clean! It is a really nasty thorn.
@MrPaulstride
@MrPaulstride 8 ай бұрын
Has that pint gone flat ?
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 8 ай бұрын
It was already flattish, being an English ale, before I waffled about trees for 20 minutes 😂
@MrPaulstride
@MrPaulstride 8 ай бұрын
@@TheStoryCrow thanks for all your knowledge on the trees and entertaining stories of historical lives. well put across.just bought two hazels as a squirrel sat on my shed roof and put her order in.
@hotelsierra86
@hotelsierra86 Жыл бұрын
Lyrical.
@MsAhutch
@MsAhutch 3 ай бұрын
I like how you occasionally turn off the hushed tone and start screaming at crows and trains
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 3 ай бұрын
😂 can’t remember doing that but sounds about right, I’m always editing out shouting at crows 😂✨🐦‍⬛
@larry6747
@larry6747 3 ай бұрын
Strange, how ANY separation, refers fundamentally, the difference, Us and Them
@SteveW139
@SteveW139 7 ай бұрын
The thorns are still used in protection magic today.
@wild-radio7373
@wild-radio7373 2 ай бұрын
No shipping to me in the USA?😭😭😭IM DEVASTATED 😔
@xspudx1032
@xspudx1032 8 ай бұрын
The Regiment of the British Army I served in had a strong Irish heritage and connections… most other Regiments Warrant officers carried pace or swagger sticks… Our Regiments Warrant officers carried Blackthorn Sticks/Clubs… The RSM ( in charge of discipline of all ranks not holding the Queens Commission) Had the biggest one, with a knot on the end the size of a knee cap… and he would bonk you on the head if he thought it was Warranted lol pun intended 🍺👍🏻
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow 8 ай бұрын
Love this, thanks!
@FreeYourMind-e9h
@FreeYourMind-e9h Жыл бұрын
hehehe Puritans in the US customs office
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
🫢
@hotelsierra86
@hotelsierra86 Жыл бұрын
Lyrical.
@TheStoryCrow
@TheStoryCrow Жыл бұрын
Fanks 😊
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