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- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!news.bbn.com!bbn.com!dhardin
- From: dhardin@bbn.com (Dawn Hardin)
- Newsgroups: alt.pagan
- Subject: Re: the care & feedig f staves
- Date: 20 Nov 1992 22:03:39 GMT
- Lines: 62
- Message-ID: <lgqo5rINNkp6@news.bbn.com>
- References: <4f2xC8C00Vp58btl4y@andrew.cmu.edu> <Bxzro6.8LF@world.std.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bbn.com
-
- In article <Bxzro6.8LF@world.std.com>, marty@world.std.com (Marty M HaleEvans) writes:
- > While we're at it, can we have a little basic seminar on wands? How
- > would one best go about getting and/or making one, what steps should one
- > (I know that's a loaded word -- how about "would you") use? What are some
- > of the traditional woods and their attributes? Wands vs. staves: pros and
- > cons? And what, generally, do you use yours for (if you have one) and why
- > don't you use one (if you don't)?
- > Thanks
- > (wow, a non-political discussion here about pagan practice!)
-
- I agree, it would be a huge relief to talk about something other than
- gun control for a while.
-
- I have two wands, a male and a female. The male wand is one that I found
- on the ground after a storm and is almost certainly oak. I took the bark
- off (I think with a knife but I can't remember now) and rubbed it down
- with patchouli oil. Then I tied a nice, large, testicle-resembling
- walnut on the end. Until recently, when I handed it to my sweetie and
- he said, "it's nuts are cracked, I'm not touching it." I had a carnelian
- on hand that looks something like a penis if you have a lot of imagination
- and see penises everywhere. I put it on with some femo clay
- and baked it a little bit and it looks pretty impressive. I can't remember
- where I heard about using a wand for the male principle, but they called
- it a Priapic Wand, and they recommended using oak with an acorn tip for
- it.
-
- (I really wish I could remember where I read about the different types of
- wands. This was when I lived in Nebraska and I was tearing through about
- 20-30 books a week because there was nothing else to do. A lot of them
- were those silly Llewellyn books, and I was left with this big mental
- correspondence table and no idea where it had come from. Graves originally,
- I guess.)
-
- My second one is my fairie wand, made out of Hawthorn. In fairy tales,
- Oak, Ash, and Thorn are sacred to fairies, and especially thorn, which
- is usually considered to be hawthorn. It's a really gorgeous white
- wood with lots of little crooks and wiggles -- you're not going to be
- able to find a straight wand. My unknown source that I might be completely
- making up recommended tying offerings in the branches to give to the fairies
- so they'll be nice to you and give you good luck, and making wands out of
- the wood to make wishes on, and sleeping underneath the tree For A Good Time.
- The thorns are really more like spurs, and they're supposed to have uses
- as well. I broke mine off the branch that I picked for my wand and saved
- them. My unknown source said to keep them in a jar to catch any bad
- feelings that people have about you, so you can bury them. The only thing
- I've wished for on it so far was a great job, and I did get one. Two
- years later. So don't hold your breath.
-
- I've also seen some beautiful crystal wands in the New Agey stores in
- Salem. They had some wonderful foot long crystal points with amethysts
- and other stones bound onto them with silver wire. Really beautiful
- things to look at, but they wanted $100-$500 for them and I feel sheepish
- about buying crystals period, even when they're cheap. I think they'd
- be decorative only, but other people may disagree.
-
- (And Marty -- we live on the same street. You can walk down and see mine
- anytime you like.)
-
- Dawn
-
- Joseph Campbell gave me hope and now I have been saved.
- "Folk Song" by Bongwater
-