go write three sentences on your current writing project.
# my favourite part about this post # is that nowhere does it say to reblog this # but we’re all reblogging it # because if we have to suffer # so do other writers
Are they the same thing? Different variety? Can I just gather some in spring and have the allegedly most expensive spice in the world for free?
YOU CAN ABSOLUTELY GROW SAFFRON CROCUS BUT THAT PIC ON THE BOTTOM IS NOT SAFFRON CROCUS.
I grow saffron crocus in pots on my patio. It’s hardy to zone 6…mayyybe zone 5 with protection. Colder than that, and you have to move the pots into an unheated garage or root cellar to ride out the cold.
But saffron crocus are unusual in that they bloom in FALL! Around here, mid-late September. The crocus you see in spring are a different variety and not edible.
“You know mistletoe is important to Druids but do you know why people kiss under the mistletoe? It’s a Norse myth. Baldur the son of Odin was the most beloved by the other gods. So much that they wanted to protect him from all the dangers in the world. His mother, Frigg, took an oath from fire and water, metal, stone and every living thing, that they would never hurt Baldur. At a gathering, they tested him. Stones, arrows and flame were all hurled at him. Nothing worked. But there was one god that wasn’t so enamored of Baldur, the god of mischief, Loki. Loki discovered that Frigg had forgotten to ask mistletoe, a tiny, seemingly harmless plant and completely overlooked. Loki fashioned a dart out of mistletoe and it killed Baldur. Frigg was heartbroken. She decreed that mistletoe would never again be used as a weapon and that she would place a kiss on anyone who passed under it. So now we hang mistletoe underneath our door during the holidays so that we will never overlook it again.”
Reblogging again because SOMEONE ASK ME ABOUT WHERE SANTA CAME FROM AND WHY HE HAS EIGHT REINDEER DO IT.
Santa? Is Odin. With a bit of the Turkish Saint Nicholas plastered over top to make him more acceptable to Christianity.
Let’s wind this back a bit.
So. In Norse tradition, Odin rose with the wild hunt on Midwinter. Children would leave out offerings of hay or root vegetables in their shoes for Slepnir, Odin’s horse. In norse tradition, all gifts create an obligation that must be returned in kind, so if Odin found the offerings pleasing he would leave treats and sweets in return.
So. We have a magical bearded man riding through the sky on a winter feast day and leaving treats for children in footwear if they pleased him. Sound familiar? Yeah.
As for Slepnir, Odin’s mount? He has eight legs. So. Bearded man with powerful magic flying through the air on an eight-legged steed on a winter feast day and leaving treats for children in their footwear if they pleased him.
Yeah.
Enter Christianity. Now, the midwinter season is important to all cultures that live in cold climates. The passing of the worst of the hard times and the beginning of the longer days and the promise of the return of life and light and fertility is a powerful thing. There were Christian festival days around the same time as Midwinter was celebrated in many polytheistic faiths. Christians found that they couldn’t get people to stop celebrating the feast days they’d been celebrating for several thousand years, so opted instead to just absorb those traditions into their OWN midwinter festivals. It was a far easier and more effective way of convincing people to convert.
However, the idea of him flying through the sky, being associated with elves, possessing powerful magic, and the eight-legged steed stuck. (reindeer, incidentally, are an animal with a lot of symbol and power in Norse tales. Ullr, the god of the hunt, had ties to reindeer, and at some point the eight legged horse became eight reindeer.)
Incidentally the image of Santa as a chubby little jolly man didn’t come around until modern advertising began depicting him that way. Before that? A tall, strong man, usually with a staff (echoing Odin’s staff or spear).
So. There you have it. Santa, the jolly bearded old man of beloved childhood Christmas memories? If you ever wondered where he came from in a ‘Christian’ holiday, there’s your answer. He didn’t. He’s the amalgamation of an ancient Norse god and a Middle Eastern saint, filtered through the lens of pop culture.
Jim Butcher actually did this very well in the Dresden Files, where Odin makes several appearances, one wearing the mantle of Father Christmas.
Christianity never really managed to make the old gods vanish.
animal husbandry is constantly changing. if you’ve been keeping your animals the same way 20+ years, then maybe you should look around and reevaluate your husbandry
^This. Seriously if you read about the history of the herp hobby, or even professional herp keeping in zoos and academic settings, it has come so far in such a short amount of time. It wasn’t very long ago that there were no rules, everything was wild caught, and reptile vet care was unheard of. We now know how to readily breed species that never used to survive more than a couple months in captivity. .
Next time you bite into a slice of watermelon or a cob of corn,
consider this: these familiar fruits and veggies didn’t always look and
taste this way.
Genetically modified foods, or GMOs, inspire strong reactions
nowadays, but humans have been tweaking the genetics of our favourite
produce for millennia.
While GMOs may involve splicing genes from other organisms (such as
bacteria) to give plants desired traits – like resistance to pests,
selective breeding is a slower process whereby farmers select and grow
crops with those traits over time.
From bananas to eggplant, here are some of the foods that looked
totally different before humans first started growing them for food.