#Yellow Plantains
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
S2E4: "Floundering Around"
Appetizer Ingredients: Beef Shoulder, Fish Sauce, Canned Pumpkin
Entree Ingredients: Flounder, Yellow Plantains, Baby Bok Choy, Mini Watermelon
Dessert Ingredients: Plain Donuts, Tomatillos, Creme Fraiche
Judges: Aarón Sánchez, Amanda Freitag, Scott Conant
Chefs: Julio Lazzarini, Marc Spooner, Massimo Felici, Christine Campbell
#food network#chopped#Aarón Sánchez#Amanda Freitag#Scott Conant#Julio Lazzarini#Marc Spooner#Massimo Felici#Christine Campbell#Beef Shoulder#Fish Sauce#Canned Pumpkin#Plain Donuts#Flounder#Yellow Plantains#Baby Bok Choy#Mini Watermelon#Tomatillos#Creme Fraiche
1 note
·
View note
Text
NC-WV is finally enjoying a dry, sunny spring weekend after weeks of near nonstop, flooding rain. That was all the incentive I needed to take my first long hike of the spring at Coopers Rock State Forest. The wildflower progression on top of Chestnut Ridge is running about 2 weeks behind that at lower elevations, but there were plenty of early spring beauties on display this afternoon. From top: Allegheny serviceberry (Amelanchier laevis); long-spurred violet (Viola rostrata); halberd-leaved yellow violet (Viola hastata); downy rattlesnake plantain (Goodyera pubescens); trailing arbutus (Epigaea repens), which is not herbaceous but a mat-forming, evergreen shrub in the health family; broadleaf toothwort (Cardamine diphylla), also known as two-leaf toothwort; and round-lobed hepatica (Hepatica americana), which prefers drier woods than sharp-lobed hepatica (Hepatica acutiloba), which I typically find growing on the rocky, calcareous slopes along the Monongahela River.
#appalachia#vandalia#west virginia#wildflowers#flora#spring#coopers rock state forest#chestnut ridge#allegheny serviceberry#long-spurred violet#halberd-leaved yellow violet#downy rattlesnake plantain#trailing arbutus#broadleaf toothwort#two-leaf toothwort#round-lobed hepatica
87 notes
·
View notes
Text
look at this thing
wtf silly alert
#cartoon ass bird#what!!#western plantain eater#<- good name too#is ur beak yellow because u eat plantains. so silly
15 notes
·
View notes
Text
I LOVE FRUIT if you want me to fall in love with you give me. fruit. give me the fruit. i want natures sugary goodness on my tongue cut me appy slices. gimme a kiwi. gift me a pineapple and i will show you the way my mother and my mothers mother and her mother before her cut her pineapple unlike those HEATHENS who waste like half an inch of seam allowance of pineapple when they cut it. gift me cherries and i will worship you. they are a pair. like us. or give me a pear. we are bonded forever. do you understand me.
#this post does NOT apply to bananas#get the fuck out of here with your primate ass bland failed cloning expirement when your predecessor died to the plague fuckin-#minion feed ass telephone lookin condom experience simulator 2000 mushy pale yellow monstrosity get that shit ouTTA HERE#the only way i’ll ever love bananas is their crushed up corpses in banana bread <3#plantains can stay though i like you
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
made something and i didn't like it
#i was always curious abt grits so i wanted to make some but they didn't have the white one at the store#only the yellow cornmeal to like make polenta so i was like ok close enough#ERMMMMMMM#it tastes so bad 😔 i want to say it's on me and maybe i didn't make it right but 😔😔#the same thing happened to me when i made mangu (dominican dish of similar consistence but with plantain)#😭 i'll just stick to mashed potatoes
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
A bouquet of yellow rose, plantain lily, amaranth, heather and sunflower VS Sunflower 3
First, let's talk about the bouquet of yellow rose, plantain lily, amaranth, heather and sunflower
Meaning and why those flowers were chosen: Yellow rose (friendship. I'd also argue that the idea of it representing new beginnings also fits her both after her arc. Also yellow, which is her color) | Plantain Lily (devotion and once again friendship. The devotion is the big thing here though) | Amaranth (immortal, unchangeable love, which I think is a very her idea) | Heather (often used to represent loneliness, a very her thing, but also represents admiration and protection) | Sunflower (loyalty and admiration) Description: Funny little time looper who really just can't face the future! A previous life of solitude which was interrupted by having friends with the same interest made this character very afraid of what would happen when everybody graduated and parted ways, so, to protect everybody, time loops were used as the perfect way to not confront those feelings at all, even if nobody else actually wanted the time loops! This character is also a bit morally questionable, especially following the main plot of the media she's from, since this character acts very cold in that to progress the plot, and gets up to a lot of overprotective bs, but is also very silly and full of love
Check her post here
Now, let's talk about the sunflower 3
Meaning: Unwavering faith and unconditional love Why this flower was chosen: They are packed with symbolism in his media Description: Hes just a sweet little boy whose mom died when he was ten. his brother dissapeared at the same time. Then he went on a quest with a thief with a limping leg, a princess (who is. really gay tbh) and his dog!
Check his post here
#round 1#mysterious character: a bouquet of yellow rose - plantain lily - amaranth - heather - sunflower#mysterious character: sunflower 3
14 notes
·
View notes
Photo
June 2023
#cottagecore#farmcore#fairycore#plants#flowers#plantain#orange hawk bit#yellow rattle#red clover#clover#insect#beetle#naturecore#nature photography#spring
16 notes
·
View notes
Video
n123_w1150 by Biodiversity Heritage Library Via Flickr: River gardens London :S. Low, son, and co.,1857. biodiversitylibrary.org/page/56455658
#Aquariums#Aquatic plants#University of Toronto - Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library#bhl:page=56455658#dc:identifier=https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/56455658#flickr#stratiotes aloides#alisma natans#Luronium natans#sagittaria sagittifolia#iris pseudacorus#crayfish#tree frog#water soldiers#water pineapple#Floating water-plantain#Luronium#arrowhead#yellow flag#yellow iris#water flag#astacus fluviatilis#Astacus astacus#rana arborea#Hylidae#botanical illustration#scientific illustration
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
me, Saturday, buying three types of eating bananas bc suddenly Meijer just has that many?!: this will probably be too many bananas but fuck it I can just like... make banana bread Cavendish (modern standard issue banana), Wednesday: eaten up with the last banana today just starting to freckle with black and so nearly, but not quite, riper than I prefer manzano bananas, Wednesday: still yellow but not freckled with black the way (imo) they need to be to not be astringent. hopefully ready in a day or two baby bananas, Wednesday: remain dauntingly green?! I probably have eaten a Cavendish or two at this stage but they aren't quite pleasant yet and I really doubt the baby banana will be
#I like Cavendish between when they are just turning yellow and when they start to freckle#After they get many black spots they are consigned to banana bread and such#but as I said I find that manzanos remain astringent longer (plus they have some tartness)#bananas#technically I could have bought four types of fresh banana at Meijer but I wasn't anticipating a plantain recipe in the near future so
0 notes
Photo
Pastelon de Platano Maduro Dominican-Style Yellow Plantain Pie This is a typical dish from the Dominican Republic. It can be served as a main dish, with a salad on the side, or as a side dish. 1 pound ground beef, 1/2 cup milk, 1 green bell pepper chopped, 1 yellow onion chopped, 10 plantains peeled and broken into chunks, 1/2 pound shredded Cheddar cheese, cooking spray, 1/2 cup tomato sauce, 1/4 cup butter, 1/2 cube chicken bouillon, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon crushed garlic, 1 tablespoon canola oil
0 notes
Text
S1E6: "Canned Peaches, Rice Cakes, Beets"
Judges: Aarón Sánchez, Alex Guarnaschelli, Chris Santos
Chefs: Chris Coleman, Cindi Avila, Lucas Manteca, Robert Burmeister
Appetizer Ingredients: Asparagus, Chorizo, Button Mushrooms, Canned Peaches
Entrée Ingredients: Rice Cakes, Chicken Thighs, Yellow Plantains, Fruit Punch, Cocktail Onions
Dessert Ingredients: Beets, Goat Cheese, Oatmeal, Crystalized Ginger
#chopped#food network#Aarón Sánchez#Alex Guarnaschelli#Chris Santos#Chris Coleman#Cindi Avila#Lucas Manteca#Robert Burmeister#Asparagus#Chorizo#Button Mushrooms#Canned Peaches#Rice Cakes#Chicken Thighs#Yellow Plantains#Fruit Punch#Cocktail Onions#Beets#Goat Cheese#Oatmeal#Crystalized Ginger
0 notes
Text
you know how people say "cats domesticated themselves?" I find this statement irksome because as i've been studying plants and particularly weeds, a theory has slowly been forming in my head about domestication that makes a lot more sense than other theories.
Basically, I think everything domesticated itself. Or rather, domestication involves adaptation and active participation on both sides.
Evidence for this is found in studying weed and crop plants—truth be told, most weeds are or were also crops.
Amaranthus, the genus that gives us the most costly USA agricultural weeds? All edible and healthy, and several members of the genus are domesticated. They were staple crops for Mesoamerican empires.
Kudzu, the vine so aggressive in the USA it turns trees into looming kudzu monoliths? It's been bred and cultivated by humans since the Neolithic in its native range, in China it was one of the main sources of fiber for cloth for MILLENNIA to the point that the Zhou dynasty had a whole government office of kudzu affairs. Kudzu roots are edible and they can be as tall as a human and weighing over 200 pounds, you can make them into flour, make noodles out of the flour, you can process them down into a starch and use it just like potato or tapioca starch and make all sorts of sauces and confections and stuff out of it. In Japan it was used for clothes too, if you see pictures of clothes worn by a samurai that's probably kudzu! It has loads of unresearched phytochemicals that probably have medicinal use, it's good for making paper, a researcher even made a biodegradable alternative to plastic out of it
Yellow Nutsedge is a food crop, Purslane is a food crop, at least some species of morning-glories are food crops, crabgrass is a food crop, Nettles are food AND fiber, Milkweed is food and fiber too, Broadleaf Plantain is food and medicinal, Dandelion is food and medicinal AND great companion plant (they used to sell them in seed catalogues around the 1890's or so!) and have y'all ever seen queen-anne's-lace along the side of the road? THATS CARROTS. That's the wild ancestor of carrots! (ofc don't eat anything you aren't 1000% sure you can identify)
Simply put. A weed is a plant that has co-evolved with humans. And most of them are Like That because they co-evolved with us. And honestly I reckon that many plants were domesticated in the first place because they liked to grow in disturbed environments near human settlements and agricultural fields.
Now thinking about this in terms of animals...when our domestic species were first domesticated, there weren't fences, there wasn't "inside" or any controlled environment to bring animals into, and if you tried to overpower or coerce any of those species, they would 100% just kill you. It makes a lot more sense if the humans were just following herds around, and it gradually developed into protecting those herds from predators and tending to them more intentionally until we were kind of just part of the herds ourselves.
a lot of people are familiar with Biblical stories and metaphors about shepherds...it's clear those guys were basically living with sheep 24/7. They were assimilated to the sheep lifestyle.
this theory kinda suggests that we've lost the ability to domesticate new animal species to some extent because domestication has never really involved removing an animal from its natural environment. Feeding wild animals and trying to socialize them to humans isn't in line with the mutualistic nature of domestication because it's trying to change the animal to our whims, and usually decreases the fitness of the animal rather than increases it. And domestication probably takes a long long time to reach the level where an animal can be a "pet" instead of a more distant form of domestication where the association is not as close.
EXCEPT. Animals that adapt to our environment are prime candidates for domestication. This actually checks out because rats and mice are some of the most recently domesticated animals, iirc. Basically, pest animals are the most likely to be domesticated because they've already started evolving into a relationship with us. Just like weeds.
An interesting side note is how both animals and plants can de-domesticate and become "weeds/pests" again. Like "weedy rice" is becoming a problem in some crops where rice has evolved into a weed. And with animals, there's pigeons who were domesticated by us and now their habitat is cities because they co-evolved with us.
4K notes
·
View notes
Text
June 2024 witch guide
Full moon: June 21st
New moon: June 6th
Sabbats: Litha/Summer Solstice- June 20th
June Strawberry Moon
Known as: Aerra Litha, Birth Moon, Blooming Moon, Brachmanoth, Dyad Moon, Egg Laying Moon, Green Corn Moon, Hatching Moon, Hoer Moon, Honey Moon, Lovers Moon, Mead Moon, Moon of Horses, Moon of Making Fat, Partner Moon, Rose Moon & Strong Sun Moon
Element: Earth
Zodiac: Gemini & Cancer
Nature spirits: Sylphs & Zephyrs
Deities: Aine of Knockaine, Bendis, Cerridwen, Green Man, Ishtar, Isis, Neith & Persephone
Animals: Butterfly, frog, monkey & toad
Birds: Peacock & wren
Trees: Maple & Oak
Herbs: Dog grass, meadowsweet, moss, mugwort, parsley, skullcap & vervain
Flowers: Lavender, orchid, tansy & yarrow
Scents: Lavender & lily of the valley
Stones: Agate, Alexandrite, cat's eye, chrysoberyl, emerald, fluorite, garnet, moonstone, ruby & topaz
Colors: Gold, green, orange & yellow
Energy: Abundance, balance, change of residence, communication, decision making, education, family relations, full & restful energy, love, marriage, prosperity, positive transformation, prevention, protection, public relations, relationships, responsibility, strength, tides turning, travel & writing
While strawberries certainly are a reddish-pink color and are roundish in shape, the origin of the name “Strawberry Moon” has nothing to do with the Moon’s hue or appearance.
• June's full Moon is typically the last full moon of spring or the first of summer. The June Full Moon will be extraordinary. For the first time since 1985, Full Moon happens precisely on the summer solstice, when the Sun is highest up. Because the Full Moon is always opposite the Sun, this year, you will see that the Moon is 10 widths lower on the horizon than the Sun ever is.
This “Strawberry Moon” name has been used by Native American Algonquian tribes that live in the northeastern United States as well as the Ojibwe, Dakota, and Lakota peoples to mark the ripening of “June-bearing” strawberries that are ready to be gathered. The Haida term Berries Ripen Moon reflects this as well. As flowers bloom and early fruit ripens, June is a time of great abundance for many.
Litha
Known as: Alban Heruin, Summer Solstice & Whit Sunday
Season: Summer
Element: Fire
Symbols: Besom, fairies, God's eyes, sunflowers & symbols of the sun
Colors: Blue, gold, green, orange, red, tan & yellow
Oils/Incense: Cinnamon, frankincense, heliotrope, lavender, lemon, lily of the valley, mint, musk, myrrh, orange, orange pine, pine, rose, saffron, sandalwood & wisteria
Animals: Cattle, crab, horse & octopus
Birds: Goldfinch, kingfisher, meadowlark, owl, robin & wren
Mythical: Fairies
Stones: Bloodstone, diamond, emerald, jade, lapis lazuli & tiger's eye
Food: Ale, bread, cheese, edible flowers, garden fresh vegetables & fruit, lemons, meade, milk, oranges, pumpernickel bread, summer squash & wine
Herbs/Plants: Anise, basil, betony, cinquefoil, copal, elder, fennel, fern, frankincense, galangal, hemp, ivy, larkspur, lemon, lemon balm, mistletoe, mugwort, mullien, nettle, orange, orpin, plantain, rue, saffron, sandalwood, St.John's wort, thyme, verbena, vervain, wild thyme & ylang-ylang
Flowers: Carnation, chamomile, daisy, heather, heliotrope, honeysuckle, lavender, lily, marigold, orchid, rose, wisteria & yarrow
Trees: Elder, holly, laurel, linden, oak & pine
Goddesses: Amaterasu, Aine, Anahita, Dea, Cerde, Dag, Dana, Eiru, Fenne, Gwydion, Kupala, Mabd, Phoebe, Skhmet & Sul
Gods: Apollo, Baal, Balder, Bel, The Dagda, Donnus, El, The Green Man, Helios, Huon, Jupiter, Llew, Loki, Lugh, Maui, Mithras, Oak/Holly King, Ogmios, Ra, Surya, Thor & Zeus
Issues, Intentions & Powers: Agriculture, changes, divination, ending, fertility, life, light, manifestation, power, purpose, strength, success & unity
Spellwork: Fire & water magick
Activities:
• Charge and cleanse your crystals in the solstice sun
• Make Sun water
• Create crafts with natural elements such as flowers
• Burn a paper with things that no longer serve you or that you are trying to let go
• Invite friends & family over for a bonfire and/or feast
• Gather & dry herbs for the upcoming year
• Clean, decorate & cleanse your altar with summer symbols
• Brew some sun tea
• Take a ritual bath/shower with flowers
• Make your own sun dial
• Craft a door wreath out of flowers & herbs
• Enjoy some sunrise/sunset yoga
• Volunteer at a food kitchen or animal shelter
• Plant trees (especially ones that may provide fruit or berries to feed the wildlife)
• Watch the sunset & say a blessing to nature
• Make flower infused anointing/spell oils
• Eat fresh fruits & berries
• Participate in a handfasting
• Create shadow art
The history of Litha reveals its deep connections to ancient agricultural societies & their reliance on the sun's power. Celebrated as part of the Wheel of the Year, Litha symbolizes the balance between light & darkness. Throughout history customs such as bonfires, herb gathering & the construction of sunwheels have marked this festival. Today, Litha continues to be celebrated by various communities, with gatherings at sacred sites & private rituals in natural settings. It serves as a reminder of our connection with nature and the cycles of life.
• The traditions of Litha appear to be borrowed from many cultures. Most ancient cultures celebrated the summer solstice in some way such as the Celts celebrated Litha with hilltop bonfires & dancing. Many people attempted to jump over or through the bonfires for good luck. Other European traditions included setting large wheels on fire & rolling them down a hill into a body of water.
Litha is often associated with Midsummer, a celebration that extends beyond the pagan and Wiccan traditions. Midsummer festivities are observed in many cultures around the world, including Scandinavian countries where it holds a prominent place in their cultural heritage. Midsummer dances, bonfires, & feasts are integral parts of these celebrations, often accompanied by folklore and traditional rituals that honor the sun's energy and the abundance of nature during this time.
The summer solstice is the longest day of the year & in some traditions, Litha is when The Sun(The God) is symbolically at it's peak time of power & the World will soon be ripe to harvest. It is also when The Goddess is pregnant with The God who is to be reborn at Yule.
• In the Northern Hemisphere the Summer Solstice occurs when the Sun reaches its highest and northernmost points in the sky. It marks the start of summer in the northern half of the globe. (In contrast, the June solstice in the Southern Hemisphere is when the Sun is at its lowest point in the sky, marking the start of winter.)
Some also believe the history & spirit of Litha revolve around two deities, The Oak King & The Holly King. In Wiccan and Neo-Pagan traditions, each King rules the Earth for half of the year. From Yule to Litha, the Oak King rules. On Litha, the two battled for the crown and it is then that the Holly King triumphs. The Holly King will rule through fall until Yule, and the cycle will begin again.
Related festivals:
• Vestalia- June 7th -15th
Was a Roman religious festival in honor of Vesta, the goddess of the hearth & the burning continuation of the sacred fire of Rome. It was held from 7–15 June & was reserved as a women's-only event. Domestic & family life in general were represented by the festival of the goddess of the house & of the spirits of the storechamber — Vesta & the Penates .
On the first day of festivities the penus Vestae (sanctum sanctorum of the temple of Vesta which was usually curtained off) was opened for the only time during the year, at which women offered sacrifices. As long as the curtain remained open, mothers could come, barefoot and disheveled, to leave offerings to the goddess in exchange for a blessing to them and their family.
For the last day, the penus Vestae was solemnly closed, the Flaminica Dialis observed mourning & the temple was subjected to a purification called stercoratio: the filth was swept from the temple and carried next by the route called clivus Capitolinus and then into the Tiber.
Sources:
Farmersalmanac .com
Llewellyn's Complete Book of Correspondences by Sandra Kines
Wikipedia
A Witch's Book of Correspondences by Viktorija Briggs
Encyclopedia britannica
Llewellyn 2024 magical almanac Practical magic for everyday living
#summer solstice#strawberry moon#litha#midsummer#witchblr#wiccablr#paganblr#witch community#witchcraft#witches of tumblr#witch guide#wheel of the year#sabbats#traditional witchcraft#witch tumblr#witch tips#beginner witch#baby witch#GreenWitchcrafts#moon magic#witchcore#grimoire#book of shadows#Spellwork#spellbook#witch#witchyvibes#june 2024#witchlife#witch friends
724 notes
·
View notes
Text
Resourcefulness in the Craft
You can divine by throwing twigs and pebbles onto a graph you made with a sharpie and some printer paper, or use said printer paper to make your own cartomancy deck.
Use cool stuff you find outside as offerings if you want.
My mom taught me how to make wreaths out of porcelain vine or wild grape vines when I was a child, try it. Or teach yourself how to weave a basket.
Use dried "kindling" twigs to make a small besom in the fall.
Find interesting places outdoors, mark them on maps. Create your own correspondences for components you find while out and about.
Raid your own art or office supply storage boxes.
Use twine or tape for binding spells, use staples for curses, fold origami for attracting abundance, use paperclips for memory spells.
And sticky notes for sigils. And felt for poppets.
And a binder with loose leaf notebook paper for your grimoire! Spice it up with dividers for different topics!
Spending money on the tools and ingredients to make a money bowl is incredibly counter-intuitive. Grab stuff from the kitchen like rice, cinnamon, and basil, and stuff from outside like broadleaf plantain, blades of grass, and a cool rock. Scribble some sigils on yellow or green sticky notes, gather some loose change, and toss it all in a bowl you already have with your intention layered between your ingredients and components.
Magical practitioners have always used what was around them. Being resourceful is part of the practice :)
#witch#witchcraft#witches#witchblr#witchy#witch community#witches on tumblr#witches of tumblr#tumblr witches#witchywitchesshit
676 notes
·
View notes
Text
Day of the Week Magickal Correspondences:
Monday
Planet: Moon
Tarot: High Priestess, Moon
Color: white, light blue, gray
Stones: moonstone, pearl, fluorite, amethyst, quartz, sapphire
Herbs: moonflower, jasmine, gardenia, white rose
Influences : astral realm, clairvoyance, creativity, dream work, emotions, family, fertility, healing the home, illumination, inspiration, intuition, love, prophecy, protection, psychic ability, travel, truth
Tuesday
Planet: Mars
Tarot: Strength, Wands (5, 6)
Color: red, orange
Stones: carnelian, ruby, bloodstone, garnet, red jasper
Herbs: basil, ginger, blak pepper, patchouli, holly, dragon’s blood, nettle, thistle, thorns, wormwood, hawthorn,
Influences : power, war, courage, agression, revenge, hexes and curses, distruction, ambition, sexual identity, sex magick, self confidence
Wednesday
Planet: mercury
Tarot: The Magician, Wheel of Fortune, Pentacles (8)
Color: blue
Stones: Agate, citrine, aventurine, sodalite, lapis, hematite, emerald
Herbs: lavender, rosemary, fern, cherry, licorice, poppy, mugwort, plantain, apple, fennel
Influences : communication, arts, change, mental power, education, divination, psychic power, divination, wisdom, knowledge, traveling, spiritual enlightenment, mischief
Thursday
Planet: jupiter
Tarot: Pentacles (ace, 9, 10)
Color: royal blue, green and purple
Stones: amethyst, sapphire, turquoise, lepidolite, sugilite
Herbs: cinnamon, sage, nutmeg, melissa, clove, honeysuckle
Influences : money, business, manifestion, justice, healing, abundance, luck, fidelity, honor, justice (legal matters), leadership, loyalty, prosperity, relationships, well-being, success
Friday
Planet: Venus
Tarot: Empress, Lovers, Cups (2)
Color: pink
Stones: rose quartz, pink tourmaline, moonstone, jade, peridot, emerald, ruby
Herbs: red hibiscus, rose, lavender, rosemary, jasmine, blue lotus, violet, birch, sage, ivy
Influences : beauty, emotions, fertility, friendship, happiness, love, passion, pleasure, sexuality, wisdom
Saturday
Planet: Saturn
Tarot: Temperance, Swords (knight, 2)
Color: Black, Gray (dark), Indigo, Purple (dark)
Stones: onyx, obsidian, smokey quartz, jet, pumice
Herbs: myrrh, moss, thyme, basil, hemlock, nettle, peppermint, pomegranate, hyacinth, mallow, juniper
Influences : banish, binding magick, death, protection, freedom, justice, karma, banishing, uncrossing magick, hexes and curses
Sunday
Planet: Sun
Color: yellow, gold
Tarot: Chariot, Sun, Wands (ace)
Stones: citrine, sunstone, pyrite, gold, goldstone, carnelian, orange calcite, tiger’s eye, amber
Herbs: sunflower, chamomile, calendula, marigold, bergamot, oak, rosemary, oregano
Influences : accomplishment, action, ambition, attraction, authority, beauty, confidence, creativity, energy (solar), fame, freedom, friendship, goals, personal growth, healing, hope, illumination, justice, leadership, light, protection, spirituality
tip jar
#thecupidwitch#witchcraft#witch community#witchblr#witchcore#witches#witch#green witch#grimoire#book of shadows#days of the week#text
886 notes
·
View notes
Text
A bouquet of yellow rose, plantain lily, amaranth, heather and sunflower
Meaning and why those flowers were chosen: Yellow rose (friendship. I'd also argue that the idea of it representing new beginnings also fits her both after her arc. Also yellow, which is her color)
Plantain Lily (devotion and once again friendship. The devotion is the big thing here though)
Amaranth (immortal, unchangeable love, which I think is a very her idea)
Heather (often used to represent loneliness, a very her thing, but also represents admiration and protection)
Sunflower (loyalty and admiration)
Description:
Funny little time looper who really just can't face the future! A previous life of solitude which was interrupted by having friends with the same interest made this character very afraid of what would happen when everybody graduated and parted ways, so, to protect everybody, time loops were used as the perfect way to not confront those feelings at all, even if nobody else actually wanted the time loops! This character is also a bit morally questionable, especially following the main plot of the media she's from, since this character acts very cold in that to progress the plot, and gets up to a lot of overprotective bs, but is also very silly and full of love
(The pictures were taken from these sites: yellow rose, plantain lily, amaranth, heather and sunflower!)
#mysterious character flowers#mysterious character: a bouquet of yellow rose - plantain lily - amaranth - heather - sunflower
9 notes
·
View notes