I. Plants and the holidays
- most plants that we associate with Christmas a long history of association
- date to early pagan festivals
- celebrating winter solstice - Dec 21st
- Church sought to root out pagan plants, considered evil or as symbols of old ways
- people continued to use, therefore church changed & Christianized the plants
- in early Rome - Saturnalia - decked in greenery, not Christian
- N. Europe - Yule celebration, slaughter sheep, two month non-stop feasting to anticipate
winter scarcity (even now we overindulge)
II. Soma - Fly Agaric
It has been suggested that the origin of Santa Claus is the mushroom, Amanita
muscaria (Fly agaric). Many parallels between the mushroom and Santa story:
- Santa wears a red suit with white trim. The Fly agaric is an extremely beautiful
mushroom that has a brilliant red cap with white spots.
- Santa lives at the North Pole. The Fly agaric is a circumboreal mushroom that grows in
association (called mycorrhizae) with conifers (Christmas trees!?) and deciduous trees
such as birch. This mushroom has been used as an inebrient by inhabitants of these
northerly climes, notably in the Kamchatka peninsula region of Siberia. In fact, the Fly
agaric was the primary inebrient of these peoples until the 1500's when whalers and
soldiers introduced vodka.
- Santa has reindeer. Reindeer are common inhabitants of Siberia and are reported to have
a "taste" for Fly agaric. It is also reported, but I question the validity of
the reports, that if a person eats the flesh of an intoxicated reindeer, they too will
become intoxicated.
- Santa has elves for helpers. Approximately 20 minutes after ingestion of Fly agaric,
most people fall into a deep, vision-filled sleep. During this period, the intoxicated
individual may receive divine revelations from 'Mukhomor spirits', which are described as
small (elves?) people. [As an aside, after awaking, the inebriated person reportedly feels
elated and capable of exaggerated physical feats. It has been suggested, although it is
most likely incorrect, that the Viking berserkers were inebriated with Fly agaric when
they went on their barbaric raids.]
- Santa enters your house through the chimney. The Mukhomor spirits, which provide divine
guidance, enter a dwelling through the smoke hole.
For more information, check out the essay I wrote
"Is Santa a
Hallucinogenic Mushroom"?
III. Mistletoe
A. Taxonomy - Viscaceae
- several species - including Viscum album (European mistletoe), Phoradendron
leucarpon (North American), and Arceuthobium sp. (dwarf mistletoe).
- hemi-parasitic on tree branches
- brittle stems, dichotomously branched, jointed nodes
- roots haustoria
- flowers actinomorphic, imperfect (plants dioecious), epigynous
- perianth 3 or 4 tepals in 1 whorl, sepal-like, yellowish or greenish
- androecium - 3 or 4 stamens, short filament to absent
- gynoecium, syncarpous, 3-4 carpels, large placenta-like structure fills ovary
- fruit - berry, viscous layer surrounding seed, sometimes explosive
- endosperm lots
- Phoradendron
in the southeast US blooms in late autumn. The fruit takes more than
year to mature.
B. Economic uses
- Viscum
and Phoradendron sold for mistletoe at Christmas
- Arceuthobium
pest on conifers
- haustoria often cause witches broom, deformation of wood
C. History
- early people fascinated with parasitic plants
- believed to have spiritual powers - ward off evil
- Druid priests in white robes harvested mistletoe with golden sickles and it was caught
by virgins, distributed to homes to ward off evil.
- harvest was accompanied by the sacrifice of 2 bulls
- Christianized version - symbol of incarnation, just as Christ sprang from God through
Mary
D. Christian legend
- mistletoe was originally large tree
- used to make Cross
- shrunk to present size in shame
E. Norse Legend
- Freya, Norse God of love and mother of Balder, asked all thing to protect her son
- She forgot mistletoe
- Balder bragged he was invincible
- Loki, arch enemy, dared to prove invincible
- shot arrow of mistletoe
- killed him
- Freya brought back to life with a kiss as we do now
- berries picked by suitors as they steal a kiss
IV. Christmas Trees Check out the essay I have posted at my web site on
Christmas trees
. The take-home-message from this essay is that:
- many species used
- favorites have changed over time
- red < white < scotch < balsam/frasier fir (in order of preference)
V. Euphorbia pulcherrima - Pointsettia
- introduced to US in 1825 by the US Ambassador to Mexico, Joel Poinsett
- New World - Mexico
- Mexican legend - young girl sad because there was no gift for the Christ child. She
gathered green weeds. When she brought them to the alter they miraculously turned red
- toxicity questionable
- family characteristics - review Euphorbiaceae
- red bracts subtended the cyathia
- milky sap.
- Poinsettia is not poisonous as it is sometimes incorrectly assumed
- Growth - light sensitive; requires 12+ hours of darkness to make red bracts
VI. Christmas Cactus
- native to Brazil
- light sensitive
- requires darkness to flower
- most sold as Christmas cactus are Thanksgiving cactus (Zygocactus
truncatus) (D Hershey, 2002)
VII. Holly (Aquifoliaceae)
- Ilex
sp.
- I. aquifolium
(old world), I. opaca (New World)
- revered because they are evergreen
- chewed for strength & courage and to protect from evil spirits by warriors
- Christianized - red berries - drops of Christ's blood; white flowers - his purity;
thorns - his crown of thorns.
- it was so revered from holy to holly
- When Europeans arrived used I. opaca. They believed that if holly is brought inside it
would placate and make woodland spirits happy that live within
- male and female trees (dioecious)
- often hand-pollinated because there is little pollen
- grown extensively in WA and OR
- can collect in wild, but rare to uncommon because of over picking
- good wood instruments, furniture, fine grained wood
-
Winterberry for the Holly-days - article I wrote for Sagatagan
Seasons