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Crystal Raven
July 11th, 2006, 07:54 AM
1. Rosemary

Rosemary was one of the first plants to be used as an incense. The really wonderful thing about it is that, in a pinch, you can use rosemary as a substitute for any other herb and get good results. Rosemary is used for protection, love, lust, mental clarity, purification, healing, banishing, and cleansing. It rids any place of negative energy and drives away nightmares. Stuff it in a healing poppet or scatter it at your door to keep nasties away from your home. The scent of rosemary oil also aids the memory.

2. Lavender

Lavender is another general-purpose herb, though its energy is gentler than that of rosemary. It aids in sleep, purification, peace, love, and smelling nice. It also repels pests. The scent is said to disperse sorrow, promote long life, and give good health. The oil, which is fairly cheap and plentiful, is a mild antiseptic and one of the very few essential oils that can be applied directly to the skin undiluted without unpleasant results. The oil aids in healing burns, bug bites, and mild abrasions. Lavender is good to use in any magical operation that involves the heart.

3. Bay

Bay is readily available, being a culinary herb; it is used for protection, purification, physical strength, healing, and the enhancement of psychic powers. The scent of bay is reputedly what the Delphic Oracle used to obtain a trance state. Bay placed in a dream pillow can bring prophetic visions. It wards off negativity and is a bloody excellent protector. If you place bay leaves under your office equipment you'll notice fewer crashes and other technical tragedies (don't laugh, it really works). A popular "game" back in the day was to write your wishes on bay leaves and then burn them, letting the smoke carry your desires to the gods.

4. Dragon's Blood

This is one amazing resin, which comes from a species of palm tree. It is a very powerful protectant and banisher of all manner of nasties both astral and temporal. It doesn't mess around; since it is kind of pricey, and so potent, most people only bring it out when it's time to open a magical can of Whoopass. There is no true Dragon's Blood essential oil (or if there is it's extremely rare), as the resin contains very little moisture, but there are a number of synthetics and oil/tincture combinations that achieve some semblance of the smell.

5. Sage

Sage is a hand-me-down, and a fantastic one, from our Native American cousins. It is a strong purifier used before many rituals, and it eliminates negative energy in the home and everywhere else. It is also utilized in healing rituals. Sage grows well here in Texas, and once you get used to that sweatsocks smell you get to like it quite a bit. If white sage is too pungent for you there are other varieties with different aromas. The essential oil is EXTREMELY POISONOUS, and since the plant is quite fragrant there's no reason on earth to risk using the oil. If you want an oil with sage's properties, try clary sage.

6. Patchouly

Patchouly is all about money, sex, and dirt. It's an earthy herb that looks like potting soil and smells like an aging hippie, but there are few better choices for use in finding a job, a house, a monetary windfall, or someone to shag. Patch vibrates the lower chakras and gets your mojo working. In olden times it was reportedly used interchangeably in spells calling for "graveyard dust." It also does a fine job of covering up the smell of pot, which of course I know nothing about.

7. Chamomile

One of the most popular herbal teas, chamomile is widely used for sleep, peace, happiness, and love-related spells. The tea is a wonderful way to induce peaceful slumber and sweet dreams even if you don't magically charge it. Add chamomile to the bath to attract love, including self-love. It is also a gentle protector and aids in meditation. The essential oil is ghastly expensive, Roman chamomile being the cheapest, but the flower itself is easy to find and works well for magical applications. The essential oil of German chamomile is blue.

8. Lemon

Another cheapie; all the citrus essential oils are a steal, and the fruit itself is wallet-friendly. Lemon oil is an excellent cleanser for magical tools and can be added to household cleaning products to purify the home. Lemon promotes healing and friendship, attracts love, and evokes Spring. The oil is a bit irritating to the skin if left undiluted.

9. Cinnamon

I love cinnamon, even though I'm allergic to it. The reason I find it so useful is not so much that it promotes spirituality, success, healing, psychic powers, lust, love, and protection; I love it because it's so easy to use. You can bake cinnamon into almost any dessert, thereby creating a sort of semi-incense state that releases its energies. If you're planning to burn it straight, start with the sticks and crush them for a purer scent. The Egyptians adored the stuff as well, and mixed it with a variety of other powders in temple incenses. Cinnamon-laced cookies and other treats encourage love and cooperation among your kindred. Oddly enough, most of what is sold as cinnamon in the West is actually cassia; usually there isn't a difference in how it behaves magically, but if you are a purist you can buy genuine cinnamon bark from gourmet catalogs (and pay gourmet prices for it).

10. Sandalwood

Last, but not least, the mother of all good-smelling things. Sandalwood is expensive, rare, and precious; it is grown commercially only in India, where each tree is numbered and protected by the government. Even then, the supply is dwindling with the trendiness of "new age" stuff like incense and oils. Sandalwood oil's price tag will probably give you an embolism, so buy in small quantities and guard it like gold. The powder and chips, which are byproducts of the sandalwood carving industry in India, are cheaper and make fantastic incense. What does sandalwood do? What doesn't it do! Sandalwood is an all-purpose ritual incense; it aids in any magic involving healing, protection, love, spirituality, sex, or general yumminess. The Indian folk also used to build entire temples out of sandalwood. A bit of the powder will give almost any herbal blend a magical boost and can even out the most prickly of scents. It's one of the few things that can mask the reek of valerian.

by Dianne Sylvan

Nitefalle
July 11th, 2006, 08:19 PM
Is this a personal list? Can other people add their own lists?

Kendrah
July 11th, 2006, 09:18 PM
Is this a personal list? Can other people add their own lists?

Why not add your own list? Won't hurt anyone. My top 10 favvy herbies are: Lavender, Patchouli, Oakmoss, Sandlewood, Rose Petels, Woodworm, and... shot, I can't think of any others.

I obviously love to make incense and this list shows that. ;D

Nitefalle
July 11th, 2006, 10:33 PM
My top ten magical herbs are:

Thyme
Spearmint
Lemon Balm
Yarrow
Passionflower
Roses
Cinnamon
Marjoram
Flax (mainly the seed)
Sandalwood

Zephyrstorm
July 11th, 2006, 11:14 PM
Mine are: Rosemary, Ginger, Garlic, Sandalwood, Vanilla bean, Rose, Pine, Oregano, Mint, Jasmine

adrianne
July 11th, 2006, 11:48 PM
In no particular order: cedar or white pine, lavendar, High John, lotus, sage, lucky hand, Queen Elizabeth root, poppy, and tobacco. Ooh, also violet, Balm of Gilead, raspberry leaves, and witch hazel.

This is a good thread, it's causing me to rekindle my love of herbalism.

_Banbha_
July 12th, 2006, 01:25 AM
Nettle, Red Clover, Calendula, Lavender, Mints(can't just pick one), Poppy and Roses, Sage, Yarrow, Chickweed, Lemon Verbena, Broom and Irish Moss, Comfrey, Heather and Meadowsweet and Dandelion and Garlic and flax... :p

Zephyrstorm
July 12th, 2006, 02:58 AM
ooo! oo!
Gotta have cinnamon, cloves, allspice, allheal, aloe, lavender, chamomile, catnip... basil, clover... Do we have to have just 10?

Libris
July 12th, 2006, 08:44 AM
Oh, cool lists!

My Favorites Are: Lavender, Rosemary, Sage, Clove, Cinnamon, Basil, Hawthorn Berries (I know they aren't berries but hawthorn fruits sounds odd), Patchouli, Sandalwood and last a tie between Rowan Berries and dried orange peel.

Crystal Raven
July 12th, 2006, 08:49 AM
very cool lists!!!
am not seeing mugwort though???

skilly-nilly
July 12th, 2006, 10:26 AM
very cool lists!!!
am not seeing mugwort though???


My list would have mugwort.

And sage, borage, mints--particularly lemon balm, evening primrose, elder, hawthorne. lavender, wormwood, and basil and rosemary.

I grow all of them myself (and much, much more) although basil and rosemary are annuals to us here, and sage and lavender are iffy.

And Rowan---can't forget Rowan.

And poppies.

And woodruff..............:boing: :boing:

Nitefalle
July 12th, 2006, 02:17 PM
I think I need to add on to mine....to include oregano, bay leaves, citrus peels & juniper berries. And I do love rosemary, as well. Oh, also eyebright, feverfew & vervain, too.

Gemmagic
July 12th, 2006, 04:51 PM
Yay Sylvan! I love that list of hers (from her website, www.dancingdownthemoon.com). Everyone has their own personal favourites of course, but she lists some really great herbs there. :cheers:

PoisonIvy
July 13th, 2006, 12:06 AM
Mmmmm. My top ten favorite magickal herbs would have to be........Sandalwood,Dragonsblood,Yarrow,Valerian,Sage,Burdock,Lavender,Chickweed,Lobelia and Coltsfoot.

Semjaza
July 13th, 2006, 06:18 PM
I only get to pick ten? :)

1) Wormwood... I love the smell, and I'm all about the home-brewed absinthe...

2) Opium Poppy... So beautiful... and sleepy... *yawns* All hail chthonic Greek gods...

3) Bittersweet Nightshade... *cackles*

4) European Mandrake... Mine keep dying when the roots hit the bottom of the container, but someday I will succeed...

5) Borage... For those starry blue flowers

6) Thyme, any variety... Delicate leaves and a great smell

7) Tomatoes *grin*... Okay, so they're not really an herb, but I have this thing for the smell of their leaves; I've always loved it since the time I was little. I think it's part of my Solanaceae obsession, born to love the Witches' Herbs...

8) Old Man's Beard (Usnea)... I love when trees are just dripping with this stuff, not to mention its Echinacea-like medicinal uses...

9) Marijuana... I do love my folklore...

10) Pumpkins... 'Cause it's such a fun word to say... :)


I feel bad for those I've had to leave off here, like I'm neglecting old friends or something... I'm such a plant geek... Huzzah for Vervain! And Rue! Okay, I'll stop :)

Cheers,

Semjaza
FFFF


Edit: I cannot spell...

misty
July 18th, 2006, 09:03 AM
Awesome list! I printed that baby out! Thanks :).

CalisticSunrise
July 26th, 2006, 07:41 PM
oh... i couldn't choose ten if my life depended on it... but i use my herbs in oil for and some of my most used and favorites are peppermint, thyme, vanilla bean, rosemary, tea tree, dragon's blood and sage... like i said there is a ton more.

For dragon's blood oil you have to make it yourself almost always... melt the resin and blend it with another oil... I like to use cinnimon because they compliment eachother.. you can also mix it with a carrier oil that is universal like grapeseed. if you don't shake it up once and a while (like once every two months) it'll settle then after about 3 more months you'll have resin on the bottom of your bottle. great information though i love it

AoibhellFaeryMoon
August 31st, 2006, 09:40 AM
Mmmm...I will likely go over ten, but my faves are:

1) lavendar
2) sage
3) wormwood
4) mugwort
5) sandalwood
6) frankincense
7) myrrh
8) cedar
9) rosemary
10) basil
11) lemon balm
12) mint (all of them)
13) lemon grass
14) willow
15) rosehips
16) cloves
17) nutmeg
18) juniper berries
19) cardamom
20) cinnamon

and that's just the tip of my usual collection in my herb cupboards!

Jadewynd~
August 31st, 2006, 02:43 PM
Same, my list goes over 10:

Lavender, Sandlewood, Sage, Rosemary, Thyme, Dragonsblood, Nutmeg, Cinnamon, Chamomile, Honeysuckle, Mugwort, Ginger, Rose, Garlic, Mulberry, Jasmine, Basil, Valerian, Oregano, Parsley, Sea Salt.

I use this herbs in various ways home remedies, beauty treatments, cooking or incense with or without magical intention. But, herbs are already magical :apumpkin:

Semjaza
January 26th, 2008, 11:00 AM
*bump*

'Cause it's snowy out and I miss my garden... *sniffles* Where are the seed catalogues when you need them?!

Cheers,

Semjaza

Astara Seague
January 26th, 2008, 11:36 AM
Chamomile
Rosemary
Thyme
Jasmine
Lavander
Mugwort
Sandlewood
Mint
Angelica
Clove
These are the ones I use the most in no particular order

Juniper138
January 26th, 2008, 03:09 PM
Hmm My favorites would be

Juniper (surprise surprise)
Sage brush
Rosemary
Jasmine
Pine
Cedar
Lavender
Cinnamon
Fennel
Yarrow

telegale
November 20th, 2008, 11:57 PM
I find this thread very informative.Loved reading all of the properties of the 10 herbs in the authors kitchen..And I agree Sandalwood is an immensely powerful perfume.Definitely an aphrodisiac:thumbsup: