In our tradition we divide the year not only by eight solar and 
agricultural holidays, but also by the Kalends. We celebrate twelve 
months of the year by the common calendar, plus a special thirteenth 
month for Samhain.  These month cycles are associated with different 
totemic spirits. Each month is assigned an animal, a bird (or other 
flying creature), and a tree. October's totems are Salmon, Hazel, and 
Lapwing.
The totemic associations are as follows:
Salmon – (Bradan) oldest animal; wisdom, knowledge, inspiration
Hazel – (Coll) wisdom, intuition, creativity, divination, the source
Lapwing – (Curracag) resourcefulness, distraction, wisdom, divination
Hazel
The
 Hazel is deciduous and grows to the height of a small tree/large shrub –
 12-20 feet tall. Hazels are plentiful in copses, oak woods, and 
hedgerows, and they thrive in damp places near ponds and streams. Their 
bark is smooth and light brown with lighter brown specks that are the 
pores of the tree. They have tough, elastic stems and slightly 
heart-shaped, asymmetrical leaves.
Hazel’s magical 
associations include fertility, wisdom, marriage, divination, healing, 
protection, intuition, dowsing wands, individuality, finding the hidden,
 luck and wishes. Hazel’s atmosphere brings exhilaration and 
inspiration, and it has been called the ‘Poet’s Tree.’ It has 
associations with faerie lore and entrance into faerie realms. It is 
aligned with the element of Air and with the feminine.
Hazel
 is one of the “Seven Chieftain Trees” of the Celts, and the unnecessary
 felling of hazel trees brought the death penalty in Ireland.
The
 Hazel is considered to be the Tree of knowledge for the Celts. Its nuts
 are ultimate receptacles of wisdom. Hazelnuts were considered the food 
of the Gods.
Hazel was used in combination with other 
woods (oak, apple and willow) for various magical purposes, and it has 
associations with love divinations and love wands (possibly due to the 
shape of the leaves).
Because it is plentiful near water, Hazel is associated with wells and springs. For example, nine hazels
 of “poetic art” surrounded Connla’s Well, the destination and home of 
the first salmon. Magically speaking, silver snakes and silvery fish 
dart around its roots, which signifies swift energy. Hazel brings speed 
through the air and water.
In Cornwall, it was used for
 dowsing (to find water, ley lines, thieves, murderers and treasure). In
 France, it was used for beating the bounds (to define the boundaries 
and make sure they didn’t fall into a state of neglect). In Wales, twigs
 were made into wishing caps.
Hazel’s healing qualities
 were used to cure fevers, diarrhea, and excessive menstrual flow. The 
kernels were used for clearing cough and head congestion. The nuts were 
used in divination rituals, especially concerning love. 
Hazel
 wands or rods bring poetic and magical inspiration. They can also be 
used as “talking sticks” for order in large group discussions. The 
Druids also believed they could achieve invisibility from hazel rods 
fashioned in a certain manner.
 

 

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