Herbs: Magickal Properties
Herbs: Magickal Properties
Herbs: Magickal Properties
Ginseng is ruled by Saturn and Uranus. The mystical and magickal lore
goes back for thousands of years. Legend has it that these plants
mysteriously rise from the ground at night, glowing, and flitting around
the forest floor. The forked root of the plant also sometimes quite
clearly resembles that of a human figure, giving rise to the aphrodisiac
qualities associated with it. In fact, the most valuable roots of all are
the few found with an appendage between the forked "legs" of the
figure.
Ginkgo:
Ginkgo is an absolutely fascinating herb, magickally speaking. For one,
it is the only tree on the planet that has survived basically unchanged
since the dinosaur age. For another, it's not too much of a stretch to
look at the leaf shape and see one half of the hemisphere of the
human brain. Indeed, the ancients saw this correlation and as a result,
the leaf has been used as a brain food for centuries, both in medicine
and in magic. Lastly, it is a tree that can survive for 1,000 years or
more, making it a true "Tree of Life."
Wood from Ginkgo trees can be carried for healing, and the leaf can be
used in healing rituals. Also try a tea for healing and for mental acuity
before an examination or important business dealing.
Goldenseal:
Goldenseal is also one of the healing herbs, and can be used alone or
in combination with other healing herbs in spells and rituals for
illnesses and health problems. Lastly, it can be used in just about any
charm or spell to increase the power of that spell.
Horehound:
Hyssop:
Hyssop is bound to Jupiter and fire. It has a camphor-like odor, and has
long been known as a cleansing herb. Records of it's use date back to
the 7th century, where it was used as a strewing herb to freshen
sickrooms and kitchens, and as a cleansing herb for sacred places.
Use it in protection rituals for mind and body (drink as a Tea), or
sprinkle the Oil around the house to protect it. Use in purification and
healing baths (place a handful in a mesh bag and attach it to the tap
so the water will run through it).
Hyssop has also been associated with the energy of dragons. Burn it
as incense, or throw it in a fire to gain the power of the dragon.
Lemon Balm:
Lemongrass:
Lovage:
Lovage is bound to Sun and water. It is mainly a beauty and love herb,
but is also associated with psychic sleep, energy, and purification.
Make a Tea of Lovage leaves or root and drink just before bedtime for
psychic dreams, or drink a tea to make the mind alert before business
meetings or school. Carry it in a sachet or charm on the person to
attract love. Place the root in a mesh bag and hold under the tap
water when running a bath for cleansing, and for beauty and
attractiveness to the opposite sex. Add rose petals to the bath to
enhance this property.
Marjoram:
Marjoram is bound to Mercury and air. It is one of the love herbs, and
through history has been used in wedding ceremonies. Legend has it
that if you anoint yourself with Marjoram before bed, you will dream of
your future spouse.
Put Marjoram around every room of your house for protection from
negativity and evil intent. Mix it with violets when doing this to protect
the family from colds and flu.
Make a Tea and drink for love, happiness, healing, health, money,
peace, protection, sleep, joy, wishes, and psychic enhancement. Use it
in a bath by placing a mesh bag under the tap water for love and
peace. Burn it over a burner for help in accepting life changes and for
anti-sorcery spells. Carry it in a sachet to protect against evil, and add
to food to share with your object of affection to strengthen love.
MINT:
Mint is bound to Venus and air. It is a premier healing herb magically,
and can be used in healing incenses, healing charms, and healing
baths. Don't burn mint independently, but rather throw the leaves into
an existing fire for the effects. For a bath, place leaves in a mesh bag
and hang under the tap water.
Make a mint Tea to sprinkle around the house for peace after an
argument, and drink it for it's healing and calming properties before
meditation or rituals. Use the essential Oil in spells to tap into positive
life changes. Place mint leaves in a pillowcase or under the pillow for
prophetic dreams.
Oregano:
Rosemary:
Rosemary is bound to Sun and Fire. It's presence on the body is said to
aid in memory and learning. Try putting a sprig in your pocket before
an examination, meeting, or other situation where mental clarity is
important.
Bee balm:
Bee Balm is bound to Air and Mercury, and due to the influence of both
of these (Air for intellect and Mercury for success), it is believed to be a
good herb for money and success in business-related spells. Carry a
few leaves in your wallet to attract money, or rub leaves on the skin
before a business meeting or job interview for success.
Cornflower has been around as a magickal tool for a long time. It's
purported benefits magickally include enhancing psychic abilities,
fertility, love, sex, and abundance, The flowers are used to decorate
alters and the dried flower is carried in sachets or amulets to attract
lovers. One entry states that you should sprinkle the dried flower on
the right shoe when looking for a new lover. For enhancement of
psychic abilities it can be combined with other psychic herbs and drunk
in a tea. Possibilities include Anise, Bay, Borage, Calendula,
Lemongrass, Lovage, Marjoram, Mint, and Oregano.
Cornflower:
Dandelion:
The cheery yellow flowers and airy white puffs of dandelions seed
heads have lent themselves to many uses in magick and folklore over
the centuries, mostly in the areas of divination, wishes, good luck,
communicating with spirits, and dreams. In magick, Dandelions are
bound to fire and Jupiter.
- If you blow hard on a dandelion seed head and all the seeds blow off,
a wish will come true.
- If a woman blows hard on a seed head and all the seeds blow off, her
lover loves only her. If seeds remain, he is not loyal.
- Blow hard on a seed head and the number of seeds left will tell you
how many children you will have.
- Blow on a seed head and the number of seeds left will tell you how
many years you have left.
- Blow on a seed head until all the seeds are gone. The number of
puffs it took will tell you what time it is. Alternatively, blow three times
on the seed head and the number of seeds left will tell the time.
- Blow on a seed head and your wish will be carried to your lover.
- If you see seeds falling off the seed head when there is no wind, rain
is on the way.
Dandelion flowers also have a deep folkloric history, and beliefs include
the following:
- If a child picks a dandelion flower off the plant, he will wet the bed
that night.
- To find out if you will be rich, put a dandelion flower under your chin,
and the degree of the glow on your chin will be the degree of your
financial success.
- If you rub yourself all over with dandelion flowers, you will be
welcome everywhere you go and your wishes will be granted.
The roots and leaves of Dandelion plants can be made into teas for
spells or rituals concerning divination, luck, calling spirits, psychic
powers, and wishes. The steam from tea is believed to help call spirit
entities. Roots, leaves, and flowers can be used in sachets or dream
pillows for psychic dreaming and wishes. The flowers can be sewn into
small red flannel bag and worn around the neck for wishes.
Echinacea:
Eucalyptus:
Fennel:
Fennel is an important magickal herb that has been used for centuries.
It can be used internally as a tea, or sprigs can be carried on the
person in sachets or charms for clairvoyance, longevity, fertility,
healing, love, purification, and strength. It is also used in this manner
to prevent negativity and provide protection from harmful spells.
In spells, Fennel can be used alone or with other like herbs for courage,
divination, cleansing, strength, energy, meditation, virility, psychic
protection, and as a means for counter-magick.
Feverfew:
Foxglove:
Foxglove has been the subject of Fairy lore for centuries. Legend
indicates that Fairies are supernatural entities who live in enchanted
forests and shadow worlds, dancing and making magick (good or bad)
with childlike abandon.
The alternate names for Foxglove give a glimpse into how embedded
this plant is in Fairy and Magick folklore, and includes Fairy Petticoats,
Fairy Thimbles, Fairy Fingers, Fairy Weed, Fox Mittens, Witches Bells,
Witches Thimbles, Folks Gloves, and Fox Bells. Indeed, the name
Foxglove itself is derived from a legend that says that evil Fairies gave
a fox the flower petals to put on his toes so that he could rob the
chicken house without being heard - thus the name "fox glove."
Goldenrod:
Plant Goldenrod near your front doorstep for money, peace, love, and
prosperity in the future. Your luck will be even better if a plant
happens to spring up on its own near your front door.s
Sachets, charms and teas made of fresh or dried ground ivy can be
worn for help in rebuilding when you have given too much, as
protection from theft, and for fidelity, honesty, and weddings or new
love.
Oxalis:
Oxalis is bound to Venus and Earth. Venus is the planet of love, and
earth signifies home and hearth.
As an herb that stays close to the soil, spreading and running deep
roots in its territory, Oxalis is a moderately powerful magical herb that
can be used in rituals and spells for home, hearth, family, and
wellness.
Put a glass of water by the bedside with leaves and flowers for
speedier recovery for yourself or ill family members. The leaves and
flowers close at night, promoting restful sleep. Place a few flowers at
the foot of baby's bed for comfort and relief from colic or discomfort,
and restful sleep. Add tasty lemony leaves to meals for family
members to promote togetherness and love. Dry leaves and ground to
powder for sprinkling around the house for affection and family
togetherness. Add to similar herbs for more powerful effect in any spell
or ritual.
Periwinkle:
Periwinkle is used often in love spells, and works by making one feel
more attractive, thereby opening the door for a lover to enter. If
changes are needed in life or if you wish for money or prosperity, put
some dried herb into an amulet and carry it with you.
For parents who have lost children, planting Periwinkle on the child's
grave will provide comfort and happy memories, along with an inward
understanding that the child is embarking on a new and exciting
journey.
Plantian:
Today, Plantain is brewed as a tea for divination and vivid dreams, and
it is considered a protection herb when placed in a charm around the
neck of a child. For healing and purification, place fresh or dried
Plantain leaves or roots in a mesh bag hung under the faucet for
bathwater. Pinches of dried herb can be tossed into a fireplace or over
the flame of a candle, or thrown into an easterly wind for healing
wishes.
Poppy:
Poppies are bound to the Moon and Water. They seeds are burned and
used in spells for divinatory purposes including divinatory dreams,
invisibility, and for sleep and consolation after a loss. Placed in
sachets, amulets, or charms, Poppy seeds or flowers enhance fertility,
luck, imagination, good fortune, peace, and prosperity. Placed in food,
Poppy seeds promote love.
Sage:
Sage is bound to Jupiter and Air. It is believed that if you place some
Sage (or burn it) near an object belonging to someone in need of
healing, that healing will take place more quickly.
It is also said that the condition of the Sage plant itself in your garden
is an indication of your prosperity.
St.John’s worts:
St. John's Wort is bound to Sun and Fire. It has a long history in
folklore, and for centuries it was thought that burning it would drive off
evil spirits and demons. With the advent of Christianity, it was
associated with St. John the Baptist, and was said to start blooming on
his birthday, June 24. On the day of his beheading (in August), the
plant was believed to bleed red oil from its leaf glands. It is to this day
believed to be at it's most potent when harvested in mid-summer,
likely due to the timing of the birthday and death of St. John the
Baptist. The genus name Hypericaceae means "above an icon" in
Greek, and sprigs of the plant were used on images and statuary by
the ancients to drive off evil spirits.
For protection from lightening, fires, strong storms, and evil spirits
place sprigs of St. John's Wort in a jar and place the jar on a
windowsill. Similarly, hanging bunches of the plant over every window
of the house is said to protect from evil spirits and black witchcraft.
Placing St. John's Wort under the pillow of a single woman at night is
said to induce dreams of her future husband.
Lastly, one old Welsh custom was to hang a sprig for each family
member on a rafter for the night. The degree of wilting of each sprig
the next morning was said to foretell how soon each individual would
die, thus giving clues on the state of the health of the individual.
Savory:
Savory is bound to Venus and air. The Latin name for Savory is
Satureja - a derivative of which means Satyr, which is a half-man and
half-goat creature of legend. The plant supposedly belonged to the
Satyrs, who loved sex, drink and loud parties. The god Pan was a
satyr. There's not much else in mythology or modern magic about this
herb that I can find, other than you can carry it, eat it, burn it, or wear
it for intellect, creativity, and to maintain the good life.
Geranium:
The rose geranium with its highly scented leaves is used in protection
sachets, or the fresh leaves are rubbed onto doorknobs and windows to
protect them.
Thyme:
Thyme can also be added to the bath for purifying and mental clarity.
Put a handful in cheesecloth and hang it from the faucet while the bath
water is running. Fresh sprigs can be placed in a pillow to promote
sleep and prevent nightmares.
Tarragon :
Tarragon's name is taken from the French esdragon, which mans "little
dragon" because of it's serpentine root system, which will actually
strangle the plant if it is not divided often enough. It is bound to Mars
and Fire. It is known as a protective and calming herb and is used in
kitchen magic to put guests at ease and make them feel welcome. It is
used in the consecration of chalices, and can be carried in charms or
sachets for compassion love, peace, nurturing, and good luck.
Uva Ursi/Bearberry:
Uva Ursi was well-known to the Native Americans, who smoked the
leaves either alone or mixed with other smoking herbs in their
ceremonial pipes, believing that the smoke carried their wishes to the
higher powers. They called the herb "Kinnikinnick," which roughly
means "smoking mixture."
Not surprising, then, that the leaves ingested in a tea are believed to
increase psychic abilities and divination in modern magick. Powdered
herb can be sprinkled around the alter area or into burning candles in
divination rituals, and leaves can be made into sachets to help
increase psychic powers. Dried leaves can be mixed with tobacco or
other smokeable herbs and used for meditation and increased psychic
abilities.
For protection from evil and magick, use Valerian in sachets, amulets,
or talismans and carry it with you. Sachets placed around the home
help protect the home from lightening strikes. Placed in a dream
pillow, it protects against nightmares, and taken as a Tea, it promotes
peaceful sleep. A few leaves placed in the shoes protect against colds
and flu.
Valerian stalks can be dried and soaked in tallow or oil, then used as a
torch for spells and rituals. The torch can then be used to light sacred
fires. Meditation in the light of a torch improves clarity for a given
situation.
Violets:
Violets are bound to Venus and water. The most well-known use
magically seems to be that when mixed with Lavender in a sachet, it
makes a strong love combination. Carrying Violet flowers on the
person brings good luck, and putting the flowers in dream pillows
enhances prophetic dreams and divination.
Violets can also be used in spells for good luck, money, protection,
faithfulness, lust, wishes, peace, and healing, particularly after a
relationship break-up. Use the leaves to absorb evil spells and ill will.
It is said that if you dream of Violets, your life is about to change for
the better. Another belief is that if you harvest the first Violet in the
spring, your wish will be granted.
Yarrow:
Use Yarrow flowers in love sachets and charms. Place Yarrow flowers
under your pillow before sleep and your lover will appear in your
dreams. Hang flowers over your bridal bed to insure love that lasts at
least 7 years. Use Yarrow in spells and rituals to draw the attention of
long lost friends or lovers.
Yarrow carries the name Achillea because the Greek God Achilles in
mythology is storied to have given the plant to his troops to stop
bleeding in battle. Unfortunately, it didn't stop the bleeding when he
hurt his own heel, and he died from his wounds. The modern terms
"Achilles tendon" and "Achilles heel" originate from this myth.
Yarrow sticks (dried Yarrow stems) were used by the ancients for I
Ching divination for centuries. Yarrow was considered a spiritual plant
that was highly suitable for for this purpose. Sadly in modern times,
coins have largely replaced Yarrow Sticks for this type of divination..