Chronos Chronicles


February 1998 Part Four

Digest 78

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 15:42:16 -0800

Subject: Ouch

Hello.

I was working on a post to Occulthaven when the telephone call message showed on the screen, I ripped the phone cord out of the webtv box, stuck it in the phone and no one was there. When I went to stick the phone cord back in webtv I hit the reset button and, long and laborious, the post is toast. Damn, what will die next for Chroni's conspicuous lack of funding?

The gist of it, while it did contain every esoteric thing I know about race and race relations, was that I got an aperiodic Australian plants newsletter on the Mediterranean plants list, perhaps because Medit-L had had a thread on whether "Kaffir Lily" for Clivia is a racial slur. A remarkable example of an Australian plant was given that would otherwise be unknown to me in this context, because of this laundering.

It isn't realistic to lay hands on countless rare botanical works that are around a hundred years old looking for racial references in the folk names of plants...

My concern is that clues embodied by racial references in the colloquial names of plants, part of the Doctoriine of Signatures, much as Anita Bryant as observed by Gurudas in regard to anoth demographic group, are about to be obscured by "over-correcting" any racial reference right out of them. I can certainly give enough background to justify this when I feel up to taking a half-hour to re-write the post.

My question is how might I tactfully speak such a concern to the persons in question, I may have already alienated several very important contacts with my bent toward the esoteric by showing a bit of it on these plant lists.

BTW, in the spirit of the Doctorine of Signatures, I have just finally subscribed to Pegasus Products' "Essence-talk" list and announced my presence and interest in the Doctorine. I have had to inquire whether there is an archive there, and await good news.

I am hopeful, of course, and hope for more than I got on the Homeopathy-list. I was told there professionals shun the Doctorine, although my Doctorine page does link to their archives, where there's a file of posts that took a small branch of the Doctorine further than I usually would, everything you'd ever want to know about spider signatures almost, and you thought I was scary bringing up Scorpio in negative mode! Rather paradoxical all of that. Alas, I know the Black Widow persona from years engrossed in color therapy. So I don't argue, but the rest really hasn't been rewarding.

Chroni the Chronically Concerned http://www.oocities.org/Athens/Olympus/6581

*****

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 16:29:26 -0800
Subject: Gardening

Hello.

You know, maybe it is the mugwort... And rats I just found a whole big bag of it. :-)

A couple of third degree secrets from my "Book of Shadows and Indoor Lights".

Whilst others are engaging in lovingly putting manacles on mangos and other fine stuff, here I sit cutting up old vinyl window blinds for affordable plant markers. So far this is working great indoors, I'm a little skeptical that some of the old ones may be too brittle already to do well outdoors, time will tell on that one. Somewhere out there you can get ready made markers for @ $12/per 1000, but it takes four magic mirrors and twelve search engines to tell anymore where, I think.

And for those who have tiny seeds to distribute- I have literally hundreds of professional packages that are leaking, including those from prestigeous Botanical Gardens- if you have a hard time finding glassine envelopes to help correct this, one supplier of mine showed ingenuity and put the seeds in gelatin capsules, for which I am eternally grateful.

I do find them easier to get than glassines, case in point, I have some actually, and they may even be cheaper in the long run, depending. And you don't have to play with that d*mned glue...

Good gardening to all!

Here is a hope, that Stillingia sylvatica will find it's way into some magician's garden this year.

Peace!

Chroni

*****

Digest 81 (forthcoming)

*****

Digest 83

Date: Fri, 27 Feb 1998 14:17:32 -0800
Subject: "Purple Hearts"

Hello.

I might be fit fo walking into a church or a college and putting the resident authorities to shame, but over on the Essence-talk list, there is really a master who exceeds me nearby. I'm still a little trepidatious and intimidated about throwing ideas around there (and they don't archive posts !?!) until I get a little more hair on my aetherial chest...

So I have this Agastache that was rescued from my previous existance as a whipping boy, it's Agastache brevi- something, brevifolia or breviflora that I got from Alan Bradshaw at Alplains. It was very cooperative and set seed even under the plastic dome where it began life... doing more laying to rest of nasty rumours about the role of pollenators in the chain of life...

As an Agastache, I don't suppose it is special, it looks alot like Agastache cana "Heather Queen" and smells like it too, but just the fact it is with me inspires me on the subject.

Agastache urticifolia which has rained and poured into my collection from many sources last year virtually astonished me that in the second year it has an aroma that approaches that of cooked meat.

Almost All of the genus that I have encountered previous to my pallete have an overtone of blood or metal or both to their citrus aromas. Even when Nichol's in Oregon provided me with a Licorice-scented form of Agastache mexicana, that overtone was present. Only Anise Hyssop, Agastache foeniculum, seems to differ, and Agastache rugosa, Korean Mint, since it has a strong mint aroma along with any licorice that may be present.

Now these are Clearly enough to justify, BY SIGNATURES, the Native American use of the genus as a "Hunting Medicine" which I define as: 1. An agent that masks the smell of hunters so animals are not aware of them & 2. An agent which alters human nuerotransmitters, often aromatherapeutically, so their intuition is in harmony with their objectives.

Obviously there is a conflict of interest possible there, this is Not going to guarantee that one gets to fill Bambi with buckshot, but at any rate, the undersides of Agastaches, usually the ones that look the most like Catnip, and the specie in question is one of them, have a conspicuous purple coloring (as do the Bee Balms in their youth).

And that is also enough to recall the signature presented by Mugwort, for the purposes of turning the white underside up are legendary, clear to the symbolism of turning a key in a door and thus Scott Cunningham indeed refers to Artemisias as having the magickal property of opening locks.

And while the faint green border around this purpleness also symbolizes some Theosophical, subtle body things, oh, call it a Valentine if you want to, that probably works too, there is also no reason I know of that the *smells-like-shrapnel* specie are not to symbolize the familiar war award of the Purple Heart.

And of course the very heartness of it may recall Melissa officinalis, whose possible use as a heart medicine was recounted by the emminent ethnobotanist, James A Duke in the CRC Handbook, and probably extends to at least Catnip itself in the genus Nepeta if not others. Not much imagination or research should be required to help validate Catnip. I have suggested on the Alchemy-L list that a substance mimicking the use of ATP in medicine might help protect one from the Heavy Metal poisoning that is so possible by following old alchemic proceedures, that this could explain Paracelsus' great praise of Melissa officinalis, Lemon Balm, and that perhaps no one in their right mind would practice such proceedures without a preventative and or remedy/cure for such poisonings readily at hand.

I will leave out any actual effort to further the obvious suspicion that Culpeper would have thought mugwort to work against tetanus, by it's myriad virtues involving iron (and calcium, being my contribution) from the signatory circumstances that surround it at this time. So at any rate, the wonderful tapestry of omens surrounding the genus Agastache has barely begun to be addressed in the here and the now, so while I am repeating myself almost entirely in regards to the content of previous posts, I thought I would bring this up.

Those who cannot access a copy of Andersen Horticultural Library's Source List of Plants and seeds and who would like to interact with this fabulous genus of plants are advised to obtain the catalogs of Southwestern Native Seeds and Alplains, the former to simplify a good, rapid start to their collection, and the latter to particate in conservation of several specie that are much more seldom recognized. I can testify that Agastache cusickii can perish even as close to its native Idaho as I am, if given substantial neglect.

I should also like to highlight the possibilities that "hunting medicines" and "warrior medicines" should overlap so that hunters cannot accidentally kill one another, and so this is another thing to look for in opening one's heart to the mysteries of the genus Agastache and the purposes that surround it. And I believe this to be part of the Purple Heart signature, that not only can it grant the good clear instincts to stay out of harm's way, but can be used in rituals of invulnerability by the wise, and may even yet be proven to somehow mimic a good number of properties of coneflowers or yarrows.

I should also like to put forth that I am not longer certain that the strain of Agastache cana (Mosquito plant) that was sold by Sandy Mush Herb Nursery in North Carolina is still available by that name. The original specimen which never made it through the winter of ten years ago, unlike other specimens of Agastache cana, was strongly mint scented without other overtones, to the point of being like pennyroyal.

If you encounter such a specimen, it is likely worthy of nurturing, propogation, pampering, and zealous collection of seed, in which case I will be tempted to trade my right "gonos" or "orchis" for several dozen of such seeds, so please let me know.

We are presently suffering a market overkill of the fruity "bubblegum" strains of the specie Agastache cana, and then too who knows how muddled the nomenclature has gotten? It could have been the mint-scented strain of Agastache mexicana not to have made it through a winter here. (And just to further confuse things, the anise-scented strain Did get through a rough winter here last year.)

And something tells me, as it probably should, all this is still just of the tip of the iceberg with the Wild Hyssops, genus Agastache (which I still haven't figured out how to pronounce by the way, thanks to the disharmonious efforts of the experts.)

So if plants or photos of wild hyssops start talking to you and they say something in addition to all this, pleas let me know. In return, I will let you know when one starts giving off the aroma of mangos and handcuffs, which I suspect will be Very soon...

Blessed Be!

Chroni "not a leaf turns in the forest that I stop and ask for a second opinion on it" Apolloni

*****

Date: Sat, 28 Feb 1998 14:36:14 -0800
Subject: Memoirs of a Garden Weasel

Hello.

Chroni having the fair weather today by gosh.

So you know me and St. John's Wort, right? For all I know it kills the brain cells that get depressed which will probably turn out to be the wise and compassionate brain cells too. Mark my words, there are some spooky thoughts about Feverfew in that department at least and everyone doubtlessly remembers last fall when I actually told Tarot over the role of various herbs and a peculiar caution about SJW came up...

So I have several voluteers of some specie, probably the "officinal" (medicinal) one, and I'm looking at it... Thought for a moment it was one of the local spurge weeds trying to take over the world again...

So even after most of a winter freezing it's little botanical bum off, here are these *evergreen* shoots, and they look like thyme or especially that "Kent Beauty" Oregano whose Iconography seems to compliment that of Dittany of Crete/Diktyanna so beautifully, what with the little leaf striations... So when I break off a peice to bring in and meditate on, I notice it has this lovely invigorating warm smell.

So I am thinking, maybe one should think of a thyme or oregano to use first? Geez only knows, my first magic was wearing little satchets of Rosemany to cheerful me up. For all I know, SJW could be packing armotherapeutic powers...

(And so you could get some really far out things about it by applying the Gurudas on oregano or thyme to this, and um, gee, some of it might even apply?)

So I thinking some more, why is anyone thinking of ingesting this? Here we not only have umpteen tons of pagan/wiccan literature on the virtues of it's bery presence, but sure as a bear is Catholic, I but stuck in it my pocket and here I am tearing into the yardwork with my bare hands. Hell, I had the flu this morning...

It seems to be doing something, which is good since I am not about to scarf the stuff...

And I probably did this last year, but you know, the wintered over leaves of Mugwort look so much like flames I just want to burn big piles of the extra at big heathen festivals or something...

It all just makes me wonder, you know? And kind of really happy, too...

Well, back to the real world. Cheers, everyone!

ChroniHomegrowni

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