
Here are just some human gardening trends that, I’ll have to Human gardening trends are right for the ecosystem as a whole. They mightīe really cute, and if they resonate with you, go for it! However, not all He did a lot of shadow working in that story.
#Witch herb garden skin
They give me real The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe feels, echoing that time when Edmund was stuck in a dragon’s skin and needed Aslan’s help. Some garden guardians – the lion and the dragon.


The shallowness of the dish will ensure that animals of all kinds can sip without fear of drowning.

Nice for the shrine, and nice for birds, too. For example, you can leave a shallow dish in front of your shrine, and feed it with magically charged water now and then. Think of ways to leave regular offerings that don’t adversely impact on the garden’s wildlife residents. Offerings – If you have a garden guardian, spirit, deity or avatar, it’s nice to feed or venerate it. It perhaps looked a bit more witchy than it intended to. I don’t know what the neighbours thought of the black cloth covering my mirror. I had to cover my mirror with a black cloth last summer, although I am training my clematis climber to cover its secrets and its awesome/terrifying burning power. However, I learned to my cost that, in the hot season, mirrors can create enough reflected heat and light to actually burn a nearby plant. Mirrors are some of the most magical surfaces, to my mind. Mirrors – Be careful with garden mirrors! I have a beautiful outdoor mirror in my garden. Shrines – Build a weatherproof shrine in a corner of your garden – it can be as simple as a pile of stones with something important hidden beneath them Garden art – Consider garden art that makes use of bare walls but, again, attracts certain energies (perhaps a bronze butterfly or bee on the wall as a sign that you welcome both pollinators and personal transformation) Statues – Acquire symbolic statues for garden guardians or energies you wish to attract to your witch’s garden (think dragons, lions, fairies made of stone) I like statues made from wood, stone or dark unglossy metal. It’s nice to have statues in your witchy garden. The kind of art that you can take away with you to your next home (after all, many witches may be renting, rather than living in some nominal forever home). When it comes to statues, ornaments, shrines and similar.Ī witch’s garden need not only be filled with plants. Shrines and guardiansĪ witch’s garden can be as open or as subtle as you wish A witch knows about responsibility and duty of care to the universe, and the way I see it, your role as a witch is to create a garden that reflects your ideals of natural beauty, acts as a safe space for you and wildlife, and is a space filled with the power of the invisible. A witch’s garden – or any garden – is a green space you’re borrowing for a while, as a caretaker. You came from stars and ideas, and you’ll return to dust. And, importantly, it’s not entirely yours. It was such a lovely question, I thought I’d share my practice here!Ī garden, or any space in your kingdom where there is a hint of green, is a haven. My friend the writer Mar Stratford asked me for tips on creating a witch’s garden.

Take what resonates and discard the rest!
#Witch herb garden how to
These tips on how to create a witch’s garden come from the heart, and from personal practice, but they’re not written in stone.
