You might want to look into the
Findhorn Foundation.
QUOTE
Yes, you can cooperate in the garden. Begin by thinking about the nature spirits, the higher overlighting nature spirits, and tune into them. That will be so unusual as to draw their interest here. They will be overjoyed to find some members of the human race eager for their help.
They were able to grow record crops & such, I remember reading about it in one of those "Mysteries Of Nature" condensed books a while ago. I've had limited success in gardening with spirits' help; but the most difference has been my fish-tank plants, they seem to die like mayflies in the Sahara, yet ask for a little help and they almost instantly become healthy!
The only thing I'd recommend is to point out which plants are going to be totally consumed and which are just going to be harvested when communicating with the entities. Otherwise they don't seem to see it coming and the whole plot sorta wilts to varying degrees. Then again... it could just be my lack of a green thumb.
-Most Used-
Grown: mint, lavender, chives, rosemary, and red cabbage.
Bought: garlic, onions, ginger, cinnamon, thyme.
Why have herbs for spells that you can't make delicious food with as well? (IMG:
style_emoticons/default/happy.gif) You probably don't need a specialist wiccan/druid supplier, local places tend to have a lot of variety and can order things for you if you ask. They can also give out some good gardening tips from their personal experience. I tend to avoid corporations, as they have a bad habit hiring clueless people & making embarrassing recommendations from past purchases.
For plants that don't grow in your climate, you might need a basement (fungi) or greenhouse (tropical) area to simulate specific growing conditions. And growing things in your house is also a great excuse to turn up the heat when you have a certain someone who insists on arctic temperatures at all times, though if it raises your heating bill too high you can always buy a portable heater and put it in a large closet. Or, if your hot water heating system is in an accessible area, you could build shelves around it, most people seem content to just let all that radiant heat go to waste.
And that's all
I can think of...
This post has been edited by SeekerVI: Feb 10 2008, 06:53 PM