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Posted on Thursday Sep 3 0:00:00 BST 2009

Fairies have been with us since time immemorial. In recent years their role in human society has become more friendly and fluffy, largely due to Cicely Mary Barker’s Flower fairies and children’s authors such as Enid Blyton.

Historically though, the Fey inhabitants of the Kingdoms of Elfame were a race to be respected. Indeed many cultures lived in fear of upsetting their magical neighbours, for their retribution was swift and firm. 

Our relationship with Faeries in this day and age has evolved and diversified and they appear to people in all manner of forms. Children still love to draw their version of the fairies in their beautiful gossamer dresses with flowers in their hair, and these are the friends they seek in their gardens and parks.  Special, secret friends who offer unconditional love and understanding. These are the fairies conjured into our minds’ eyes in dreams and meditations.  Their purpose is very clear as they relate closely to garden flowers and trees, encouraging a relationship with our natural environment.

The true faerie spirits of nature or Devas appear in a rather different form as small orbs of bright light. Each tree and bush has its own guardian – a Dryad – who adjoins a tree whilst it is quite young and remains inseparably attached for the life of a tree.  Dryads are said to be ancient beings who know when their tree is nearing the end of its life, and seek a new young place to be.  Some people who have a particular affinity with these amazing tree faeries feel desperate sadness when visiting places where trees have been cut down, causing a wrenching and unexpected separation of Dryads from their trees.  In Scotland the tree fairies are known as Ghillie Dhu; in Scandinavia they are called Hyldermoder! Some trees have very specific fairies associated with them, such as the moon worshiping Lunantisidhe who protect and are protected by blackthorn trees, and the fairies who inhabit nut trees are Caryatids.

We can support and encourage our relationship with these nature spirits by taking care of our gardens and parklands, and teaching our children to do the same.

Posted on Friday Aug 21 0:00:00 BST 2009
Most people associate Spring and Summer plants with fairies, but there are lots at this time of year with strong fairy associations.
 
Heather is strongly associated with Fairy Portals or entrances to the fairy Kingdom, so indicates a good place to start looking for fairies. Romany gipsies used to sell white heather door-to-door to bring good luck to a household.
 
Autumn provides a rich larder for animals, people and fairies alike!  Keep a look out in nut trees for the Caryatids (nut fairies).  After the first frost, when sloes are ready for picking, take care not to have your fingers pricked by the blackthorn-tree guardians the Lunantisidhe.  Hawthorn (also known as Faerie Thorn) bears Faerie pears.  In Celtic countries it was once considered extremely ill-advised to eat blackberries because they were the plants of the fairies.
 
At any time of year you may be lucky enough to see flower spirits or Devas, or the spirit of a tree or bush - a Dryad.
 
As the sun gets lower in the sky, the shafts of light in woods and forests make it more easy to see the Wiskies!  Not the drink, but small black fairies with silver wings and cat like eyes. And if the wind gets up - keep an eye open for Sylphs, the elementals of air who love to drift on Autumn breezes.
 
And then there are the toadstools and mushrooms. This is the time of year when all manner of lumpy,bumpy toadstools spring forth.  From childhhod, we all associate the red ones with white spots with the Fey (Fly agaric is extremely poisonous, so do not touch it).  Are they houses?  Maybe special stools?  Fairy umbrellas? We can only imagine!  You may be lucky enough to come across a toadstool faerie ring, where the Fey dance in the moonlight. Some of the toadtools you will see have proper fey names - pixie hood, elf's stool, fairy club and Dryad's saddle.
 
Please let me know about your autumnal faerie encounters.
 
 
A Dryad's saddle (this was nearly 3 ft across!)
Dryad\\\\\\\\
 




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