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The
grove is the centre of their whole religion
- Tacitus
In ancient
times, Sacred Groves were places of sanctuary and worship for the Druids. Like
a temple or chapel set within the natural world, they were places of spiritual
refuge: places to calm the mind, refresh the spirit, and give comfort in times
of distress. Druids today continue this tradition of seeking tranquil clearings
in woods and forests, in which to meditate and hold ceremonies. And in addition,
many contemporary Druids are creating new sacred groves in their gardens,
on their farms or on public land.
In 1988 The Order began the Sacred Grove Planting Programme offering
support, advice, and financial aid to members of the Order and members of the
public who wanted to create new sacred spaces across the world. As a result,
thousands of trees, and hundreds of groves have been planted around the world.
These groves form a network of woodland sanctuaries that radiate peace,
and offer refuge to both wildlife and humankind.
Many of these groves are small private sanctuaries in members gardens,
using trees native to the land they are planted in, or where appropriate
sacred trees from Celtic tradition. But there are other kinds of groves
that can be planted too: as community projects, in schools, as ones that encourage
endangered tree species, or that are woodland sanctuaries dedicated to Peace,
or to those who have died. We would like to invite you to join in this project.
Even if you have no land, no time or money, there are many ways you can help
to create this network of sanctuaries across the earth.A Grove can be a natural
clearing in a forest, or it can be created by planting at least five trees in
an oval, circle, horseshoe or cauldron shape. If you would like to help with
this project, by planting one or more groves, here is what we suggest:
1. Commit yourself to this project. Ask us to mail you our book The Sacred Grove which gives lots of information on what, where and how to plant and care for your grove. Send an email to the project coordinator Bill Melnyk (Donations for printing and mailing requested!)
2. Read the book, which tells you how to go about planting and caring for your grove.
3. Invite friends to help - make it a party! Together, decide where you want to plant the Grove. You don't have to own the land. You can offer to plant one in your local school or park, as members have already done. If you contact your council, they will be more than happy to help you plant trees, often helping towards the cost of purchasing the trees too.
4. If you feel you need expert advice on which trees to plant for your local environment, ask the experts at your local garden centre, or for this and any further support, contact one of the following groups who will be happy to help you:
British Trust For Conservation Volunteers (BTCV) 36 St Mary's Street, Wallingford, Oxon, OX10 0EU Phone 01491 8397 656 www.btcv.org.uk
The Tree Council, 51 Catherine Place London SW1E 6DY Phone 0171 828 9928 www.treecouncil.org.uk
The Royal Forestry Society, 102 High Street, Tring, Herts HP23 4AF. Phone 01442 822028 www.rfs.org.uk
International Tree Foundation, Sandy Lane, Crawley Down, West Sussex RH10 4HS Phone 01342 712536 www.eclipse.co.uk/jns/
National Arbor Day Foundation, 100 Arbor Ave., Nebraska City, NE 68410 USA Phone: (402) 474-5655 www.arborday.org (The foundation has an introductory membership fee of $10 for the first year. One of the benefits that comes with the membership is they will send 10 seedlings appropriate for planting in the member's geographic area. They also have tree care information available.)
5. Plant your trees. Create your own ceremony to welcome your trees and to help nurture them, or use the suggested ceremony in the book. The Grove is more than just a great environmental addition to your landscape - it becomes a new 'sacred site' that you have helped create.
6. Visit your Grove regularly. Planting your Grove is the beginning of a relationship of trust and care. Your trees will need lots of water, mulching, hand weeding and observation for squirrel, deer or human damage. And create ceremony there. This is your sacred space, one you have created, and it will need love and attention. You can add a stone circle to your grove, you can celebrate handfastings and namings there, and you can add trees later perhaps to commemorate a loved one or to mark a special occasion.
POTENTIAL PROBLEMS AND HOW TO SOLVE THEM
I havent
got the land
If you dont own a piece of land, choose somewhere you feel a grove could
be, and approach the landowners and ask if they would like some trees planted.
They might be delighted! You may already know a piece of land that you have
a special relationship with, and would like to plant a Grove on. And if you
dont know who the owner is, you can find out who owns it by doing a land
search in the Land Registry at your county offices. Or contact your local council
or school. OBOD members have already done this - planting groves in local schools
and parks.
I haven't got the money
Members can apply to us for a grant. Thanks to generous donations by members,
and with proceeds from the sales of the Barddas album and the Ffrythwau collection
(details of this music album and poetry collection are enclosed with the Sacred
Grove book) we now have a fund to help members buy trees, stakes and protective
sleeves.
I haven't got the time
Send in a donation so that we can help others plant groves. Buy a copy of the
Barddas compilation music album or the Ffrythwau poetry anthology to help others
plant groves. And help in an inner way by meditating: visualising a network
of groves springing up around the world.
I'm physically unable to plant or care for trees
You can still be a part of the project. Ask your local council, school, Woodcraft
Folk, Boy Scouts, Girl Guides or Friends of the Earth group if they would be
willing to plant a group of trees if you paid for them. Six trees with stakes
and ties cost about £42. If you can't afford this, ask us to send the
money directly to the group.
I don't know how to care for trees
You can learn by reading this booklet, looking in books, asking at your local
garden centre, or by taking advice from friendly experts, such as the BTCV or
Arbor Day Foundation.
Ive already planted a Grove
Hooray! Let us know about it by completing the form in this booklet. What were
the problems? How did you solve them? Can you write a few paragraphs for Touchstone
about it? Send us photos. And plant another one!
IDEAS AND INSPIRATION
Members have
planted sacred groves in Ireland and Britain, Holland, Bulgaria, America, Canada,
and Australia. In New Zealand in 1998 two groves were inaugurated: one with
the blessing of the Orders Chief and a Maori Elder at a Permaculture community
near Auckland on the North Island, and another, with help from the City Council,
in a public park in Nelson, on the South Island.
In Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, members care for, and hold regular ceremonies,
in the AIDS Memorial Grove. And in the Scottish Borders, near Carlisle, and
in upstate New York, near Niagara Falls, members have begun planting Memorial
Groves, where members and friends may have trees planted in memory of loved
ones who have left this world for the Blessed Isles. (If you would like a tree
planted in either of these groves, contact the office).
Peace Groves
Druids have been known as peace-makers ever since Classical times, when Greek
and Roman authors recounted the way in which Druids would often pacify warring
factions. In the year 2001, The Order initiated the first in what we hope will
become many Peace Groves, with the planting of Peace Groves in Northern Ireland
and in Israel.
Endangered Species Groves
Your Grove can also help to protect endangered tree species. The World Conservation
Monitoring Centre reports that about 9000 species are under threat, and 976
species are critically endangered and facing extinction unless urgent action
is taken. A further 77 species of trees are already extinct, and virtually every
country in the world has some tree species under threat. Malaysia has the highest
number of critically endangered species at 197. Indonesia, after being ravaged
by forest fires, has 121, India has 48, and Brazil, the most heavily forested
country on the planet, has 38. Logging activities, the use of timber for fuel,
uncontrolled forest fires and the expansion of human settlements are cited as
the main reasons for the crisis. The situation is so bad in some countries,
that there are several species with just one tree left, such as China's single
remaining Carpinus Putoensis, which survives fenced off at the edge of a sparse
forest.
Eleven tree species in Britain face extinction, all from the Sorbus group. They
include Ley's Whitebeam - with only 16 individuals surviving in two sites in
Breconshire. Another endangered species is Sorbus Wilmottiana, which has only
20 trees clinging on in the Avon Gorge. Most of the threatened Sorbus trees
have a reproductive system unique in Britain, spreading seeds which are identical
clones to the mother plant. It may take a little research to discover the endangered
species which will grow well in your soil, and whose seeds you can obtain, by
consulting local conservation organisations or the World Wide Web, but your
effort will be amply rewarded if you can include them in your grove.
In the Order's training, we learn how to work in an Inner Grove we create
a place of beauty and safety in the world of Soul and the Imagination that becomes
our own personal sanctuary. The Grove, then, is the hallowed heart of the Druid,
the place we create in the Otherworld - a place of learning and wisdom and peace.
But the Grove also needs to exist in the Apparent world, for without it there
can be no inner Grove. Only the physical Grove can teach us the aromas, the
sounds, textures, visions, flavours and ambience that we might find in our own
inner Groves.
Sacred Groves
are not unique to the Druid tradition. They are recorded in the Classical world,
and in the Middle East. And all over Asia, in India, China, Thailand, Burma
and many other parts of Indochina, for thousands of years sacred groves have
existed, and continue to exist. They act as sacrosanct areas, which are at the
same time temples, places for spiritual retreat and meditation, wildlife sanctuaries,
and places where medicinal plants can grow in safety. As you plant and care
for your grove, you can feel how you are continuing this ancient and powerful
worldwide tradition, and you can experiment with growing medicinal plants in
your grove too.