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20 | They/Them | A proud devotee to Mother Earth. I have been a witch for around 4 years and want to explore this community while learning more about myself and the world around me. My dms and ask box are open - I LOVE chatting to other pagans and witches! Free 1 card readings - TEMPORARILY CLOSED 💚🌱🪲
257 posts
Foraging In Witchcraft
Foraging in Witchcraft
![Foraging In Witchcraft](https://64.media.tumblr.com/ae709bf280721fe0d718052a9cb789ee/72fd84d4c24dd656-57/s500x750/5c39e06379f8907929d06d0d3dafa6de1143c3da.jpg)
I'm a big fan of working with the land, and one of the easiest ways to do so is by gathering your own plants. This is also free! No having to stop at an occult/metaphysical shop to pick up that random plant you forgot you needed. I will be making individual posts on different plants that can be foraged in my own bioregion, but first we should go over a few tips and housekeeping notes about foraging and witchcraft.
⸙༄𓆤𓆩𓆪❁𓇢𓆸🏵
Contents:
Natural Isn't Always Safe
Laws and Foraging
Invasive vs. Native vs. Naturalized
Animistic Foraging
Conclusion
⸙༄𓆤𓆩𓆪❁𓇢𓆸🏵
Natural Isn't Always Safe
First thing I want to get out of the way is that not everything you find outside is going to be safe to put in your body or even touch. On top of that, not everything that is safe for someone else is going to be safe for you. We each have different bodies and how we react to something will not always be the same. When you first start foraging, it's important to have a guide book that will tell you of any safety measures to take when dealing with a plant. Some will interact with medications in ways that are not healthy, some have fluid that can make your skin photosensitive, and some... some people are just allergic to.
When it comes to medications, you can find contraindications (when not to ingest something) with a quick google search of "[plant name] contraindications." Generally this will give you a safe answer, however always check with your doctor if you are unsure. Better to pay for a consultation than a hospital visit.
Some risks come from the environment that the plant grew in. If you are foraging near train tracks or buildings that could leach lead into the soil, the plants will pick that up as well. Contaminated soil and pesticides sprayed onto the plants can also lead to health risks. Be very mindful of where you are foraging.
Some plants that are safe will also have toxic look-alikes. A famous look-alike is wild carrot and poison hemlock (thank you Oregon Trail video game). Unless you know what characteristics you are looking for, it's very easy to confuse the two plants. One is a delicious snack, while the other is highly toxic (the poison hemlock), to the point of causing muscle death and kidney failure. This isn't to scare you away from foraging. Only to drive home the importance of making sure you know what you are gathering.
![Foraging In Witchcraft](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9ea1fd1fe92dfba0a4d2325c37fc64b6/72fd84d4c24dd656-1c/s500x750/91925ac411e8545e08aba93182234607eacbc51e.png)
*credit to the Minnesota Department of Agriculture
⸙༄𓆤𓆩𓆪❁𓇢𓆸🏵
Laws and Foraging
I am a resident of the United States so these will be more geared towards that country. It would be to your benefit to look into the foraging laws of your own country/state anyway, as it can still differ. The majority of states in America prohibit foraging on public lands, which makes it really hard for those who don't own their own property. If you live in Alaska and Hawaii, however, congratulations your local government allows it. Even among those states that do allow it, there can be designated areas where it's not allowed such as a nature preserve. Breaking these laws tends to come with a hefty fine and possible jail time, if caught. Though these laws are hard to find with a quick google search, especially for a specific area.
The laws in the United States prohibiting foraging are generally colonial, imperial, classist, and racist (surprise, surprise). Foraging was protected by law well into the 1800s (except for Native Americans who were pushed off their ancestral hunting and gathering grounds), even when doing so on another person's private property. After the Civil War, many newly-freed African-Americans would sell their foraged and hunted goods for an income, while also using the practice to become self-sufficient. The southern plantation owners needed this system to go away so they could chain what used to be their "property" to their old line of enslaved work. Starting with criminal trespass laws. Eventually anti-foraging laws spread to the average white rural American. Outside elites began to believe that the "backwards" people of the countryside, who made a subsistence living off the practice of foraging, fishing and hunting, could not be trusted with the stewardship of the land; using "conservation" as a way to "protect" it from the people who lived there (Linnekin, "Food Law Gone Wild: The Law of Foraging" p.1008-1014).
I do believe we need to protect our resources and lands. However, foraging can be regulated, not outright outlawed as it is. Learning about the plants and animals that live around us and can help us in our lives, leads us to learn more deeply about their role in the environment and just WHY we should protect them...
All this to say, look into your local foraging laws (and how local law enforcement actually enforces them, if they do at all) and then you can decide if you want to follow them or not. At your own risk.
⸙༄𓆤𓆩𓆪❁𓇢𓆸🏵
Invasive vs. Native vs. Naturalized
There is a lot of talk in foraging communities about invasives vs. natives. Sometimes even bringing in naturalized plants. So let's talk a little bit about what these words mean in ecology and how this may effect your foraging habits.
Invasive and naturalized plants have one thing in common; they are both transplanted outside their natural ecosystem. A plant that is invasive in one place, can be naturalized in another. What matters is the impact the plant has on the ecosystem it has been transplanted into.
Invasive = plants or animals that harm regional ecosystems.
Naturalized = plants that have successfully established and reproduced in a new environment, integrating into their new home without inflicting ecological harm.
To make things a bit more complicated, let's introduce the 10% rule. According to the Huron River Watershed Council, "the '10% rule' postulates that of all species introduced to a region outside of their native range, only 10% will survive to reproduce in their adopted environment. This 10% of non-native survivors are often called 'naturalized' plants. Of that 10%, another 10% (or 1% of the original non-native transplants) may thrive to such an extent that they dominant their new home, out competing their native neighbors. These prolific competitors are known as invasive species."
So what makes a native plant? The US Forest Service defines a native plant as "plants [that] are indigenous terrestrial and aquatic species that have evolved and occur naturally in a particular region, ecosystem, and habitat. Species native to North America are generally recognized as those occurring on the continent prior to European settlement."
Some native species can be endangered due to habitat loss from agriculture and/or competing invasive species. It's good to have a list (many state DNR (Department of Natural Resources) will have a list available on their website) printed so you know which ones should be cultivated in your garden if you wish to work with them. Avoiding these and working with invasive species can help with conservation efforts as well. Native species can still be worked with in the wild if they are not endangered.
⸙༄𓆤𓆩𓆪❁𓇢𓆸🏵
Animistic Foraging
You'll often see witches giving advice about asking the plants permission before harvesting. This is from the belief that the plant has a spirit, an animistic belief. Asking permission to harvest isn't the only way we can forage mindfully and with respect to the plant. The way that I do this is by following the Honorable Harvest set out by Robin Wall Kimmerer (a Potawatomi botanist, and the director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry) in her book "Braiding Sweetgrass."
Know the ways of the ones who take care of you, so you may take care of them.
Introduce yourself. Be accountable as the one who comes asking for life.
Ask permission before taking and abide by the answer.
Never take the first, never take the last.
Take only what you need.
Take only what is given.
Never take more than half. Leave some for others.
Harvest in a way that minimizes harm.
Use it respectfully. Never waste what you have taken.
Share.
Give thanks for what you have been given.
Give a gift in reciprocity for what you have been given.
Sustain the ones who sustain you and the earth will last forever.
The first rule really helps you to follow the rest of them. Know the plant. Walk by it several times, offer water even if you aren't taking something, say hello. These plants are our neighbors and when we harvest we are asking for their help.
⸙༄𓆤𓆩𓆪❁𓇢𓆸🏵
Conclusion
Each plant will have it's own method of harvest to minimize the harm done to it. Some you have to pull the whole thing up, but there are ways to repopulate it. It's so individual that I couldn't add it to this post. Hopefully what's written here can help you keep a few things in mind when going out and learning about your local flora.
Foraging can be a great way to connect with your land and learn about it. Getting your hands dirty and making you feel as if you are a part of the landscape. Hopefully the first couple of sections didn't scare you off. Get a couple of good guidebooks for your region (the local library is a good place to start) and you're good to get out there and start identifying plants you want to work with!
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If that wasn’t enough of a yikes for you, the fact of the matter is, is that I have never seen cohesive information about the Records. I looked, years and years ago. Because of course I did. Everyone was talking about it back then. Some sources would say that you had to get permission from this angel, and this guardian. Some said you had to have a special key to get in. Some said you needed to enter a special state of being to gain access (whatever that meant). Many people on the internet disregarded all that and said that it was freely accessible to anyone. All that inconsistency is questionable as is, but consider this:
If the Akashic Records were real, and held all the information of the universe that had been, is, and will be, why didn’t anyone use it for more than just past life stuff or whatever folks were doing? If I had access to that kind of information, I would spend a crazy amount of time there. I would gather as much information as I could. Study hard and apply it to every inch of my life. I could see how each route of my life would play out and I would choose the best one. I would manipulate things to work out in my favor. With that kind of information, all spellwork, divination, divine relationships, etc. would become OBSOLETE. Why bother using divination if I can just look in the records for what I need? Why make petitions to the gods when I know how to make it work myself? Why would I even need witchcraft to make things work in my favor when I just know how to make it happen anyway? It would take away all meaning of life, all purpose and drive would be lost, the inherent power of uncertainty that is intrinsic in nature would be removed. The very concept of the Akashic Records goes against nature.
how terrifying metamorphosis must be for the caterpillar has no concept of what it is doing, or what a butterfly is, or what will happen to it as it spins itself the cocoon. we r more alike than different
picking up litter is worth it!!
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it would take less than 100 man-hours of labor per week to keep my whole college campus entirely litter-free. If you got two classrooms' worth of people to spend two hours per week each picking up litter, the whole campus would end up spotless and they'd straight up fucking run out of things to pick up.
If you're looking for some way to make a noticeable and positive impact on the world around you, go pick up some litter.
When you say Mother Earth - in your bio - do you mean Gaia!
I do not! Mother Nature/Mother Earth is simply a name that I use for the deity I worship. The deity I worship *is* Nature and the Earth, not a personification of it (though she may appear to me in that way for my sake).
Gaia is a hellenic deity, who is similiar to the deity I worship but they're not the same! I've never actually met someone who worships Mother Nature in the same way I do yet.
If you're curious, here is a post about my relationship to Mother Nature, as well as my beliefs more generally. But please feel free to ask any more questions about Mother Nature, how she's different from Gaia (and other Earth Goddesses) or anything else about my craft!!
PICK A CARD: intuition tarot reading
![PICK A CARD: Intuition Tarot Reading](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b66d79f76a3391f9a08c5a2da4aa172b/55668644540a0501-9d/s500x750/a4acc64f56e50a6dd9b02f8d6edc8ff080ffc6b1.png)
to make up for the fact that I had to miss a week of free readings due to some personal issues, I thought I'd offer up an intuition tarot reading! But how does it work?
Find out what the spirits want you to know today.... all you have to do is choose between the frog, the deer, or the water lily! then find your card below for your reading!
make your choice, and find it below:
![PICK A CARD: Intuition Tarot Reading](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b370c8aa935d4376d438e67b0f4e0bb3/55668644540a0501-17/s500x750/2176dc5ece59f224f7ae6e003e18de0b56f4db52.png)
🐸 THE FROG:
"there are those who want to take advantage of you. you must be wary of them, but do not become greedy. you must be a giver and a receiver in your life, but not allow others to take advantage of you."
🦌THE DEER:
"a journey is ahead of you, but the spirits know you are prepared to take it on. your curiosity and determination will lead you through this journey. you have the heart of a creative and it will take you through this."
🪷 THE WATER LILY:
"take a moment to wade in the water and find who you are. you have just been through war and it is alright to accept a moment of rest. forgive and forget whatever the past has taken you through. protect your magic so you have more to give. you will be fine, but you must find peace within yourself."
![PICK A CARD: Intuition Tarot Reading](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b370c8aa935d4376d438e67b0f4e0bb3/55668644540a0501-17/s500x750/2176dc5ece59f224f7ae6e003e18de0b56f4db52.png)
That's all for today's intuition reading! I hope that you found this helpful in your spiritual journey and I hope that you are able to apply this information to your practice.
if you have any questions regarding anything discussed here or if you'd like to make a request to be added to the list, please send an ask to my ask box! I appreciate all comments and questions!
I wish you all a blessed day filled with peace, endless wealth, and eternal health! Until the next time we meet!