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Mistletoe Sellers |
Good Luck but for Whom?
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Mistletoe is parasitic plant, living on the branches of a host tree. Although it can photosynthesise through its own green leaves, it derives almost all its energy by tapping into the sap of its host tree, typically apple, hawthorn, polar or lime, among several species.
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Mistletoe has white berries that birds, especially the thrush family, love to eat. However, inside this tasty berry lays a trap, the seed is wrapped in viscin an extraordinarily sticky mucilaginous sap. It is also indigestible and passes through the bird retaining its gluey coating. Due to this enduring sticky quality mistletoe seeds often get stuck firmly on birds’ beaks or other parts causing such irritation the birds try to rub them off on tree branches, thus firmly planting them in ideal locations to germinate.
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In history and folklore mistletoe is widely considered to represent luck, health and in many cultures, fertility. The druids used mistletoe to ward off evil spirits, which may be the origin of us hanging it over doorways. So important was it to the druids, that battles would be called off or truces agreed if mistletoe was found growing within sight of the battlefield. The Romans believed it was a medicinal cure-all and prescribed it liberally but now we know it’s poisonous and will give you a bad tummy at best! More recently in England hanging mistletoe at Christmas gave men permission to kiss the women. Today while the tradition persists, men now seek permission before the kiss and rightly so, because they were expected to marry the girl after the kiss!
Fertility is also closely associated with mistletoe and is likely to be due to its evergreen nature meaning it shows conspicuously green during the winter on its bare host. It can also suddenly and magically turn golden yellow as a result of nutrient loss when its host’s sap stops flowing, resulting in an even more striking winter display.
This is the astonishing mistletoe, celebrated for bringing health, luck and fertility. Not a bad reputation for a poisonous parasitic plant, propagating itself by sticking to birds’ bits!
from one of my favourite wild life sites Ark Wild Life
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