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In this episode of the Plant Cunning Podcast, hosts Isaac & AC Hill talks with Sian Sibley—witch, author of Black Paths and Green Cathedrals, and founder of the Dragon Oak Coven in Wales—about building real relationships with plant and tree spirits, including mugwort as an initiator and yew as a teacher around death and continuity. Sian shares how to approach trees respectfully, how to recognize a clear “no,” and why taking plant material without permission can undermine magical work. They discuss key allies like hazel, apple, hawthorn (including timing Beltane by local hawthorn bloom), and elder’s seasonal “three faces,” plus practical astral/meditation safety and grounding. The conversation also critiques modern pagan and wellness habits that harm ecosystems—crystals, frankincense, wasteful candles, and commodified entheogens—calling for smaller, more local, less consumerist practice.
01:24 Meet Sian Sibley
01:54 Springtime Blackthorn
02:29 Finding the Plant Path
03:07 Mugwort Opens the Gate
06:06 Yew and Death Mysteries
08:53 Patience and Plant Consent
09:37 Blackthorn Says No
13:57 When Plants Reject You
14:37 Buttercup and Monks Hood
17:30 Who Is Charubel
19:54 Sigils and Personal Practice
22:55 Astral Safety Basics
26:33 Protective Tree Allies
27:41 Hazel, Apple, Elder, Hawthorn
28:20 Elder Medicine and Folklore
30:45 Elder Initiation Poem
32:22 Pruning and Asking Permission
34:37 Elder Tree Lore
35:41 Hazel Nuts Wisdom
36:29 Hawthorn Beltane Timing
39:51 Local Time Cycles
42:44 Circadian Clock Health
47:13 Rest, Boredom & Imagination
47:43 Eco-Spirituality Critique
48:55 The Ethics of Crystals and Frankinscence
57:21 Living Smaller Solutions
01:04:20 Closing Poem
01:06:06 Where To Find Sian
By Plant Cunning Podcast4.9
4848 ratings
In this episode of the Plant Cunning Podcast, hosts Isaac & AC Hill talks with Sian Sibley—witch, author of Black Paths and Green Cathedrals, and founder of the Dragon Oak Coven in Wales—about building real relationships with plant and tree spirits, including mugwort as an initiator and yew as a teacher around death and continuity. Sian shares how to approach trees respectfully, how to recognize a clear “no,” and why taking plant material without permission can undermine magical work. They discuss key allies like hazel, apple, hawthorn (including timing Beltane by local hawthorn bloom), and elder’s seasonal “three faces,” plus practical astral/meditation safety and grounding. The conversation also critiques modern pagan and wellness habits that harm ecosystems—crystals, frankincense, wasteful candles, and commodified entheogens—calling for smaller, more local, less consumerist practice.
01:24 Meet Sian Sibley
01:54 Springtime Blackthorn
02:29 Finding the Plant Path
03:07 Mugwort Opens the Gate
06:06 Yew and Death Mysteries
08:53 Patience and Plant Consent
09:37 Blackthorn Says No
13:57 When Plants Reject You
14:37 Buttercup and Monks Hood
17:30 Who Is Charubel
19:54 Sigils and Personal Practice
22:55 Astral Safety Basics
26:33 Protective Tree Allies
27:41 Hazel, Apple, Elder, Hawthorn
28:20 Elder Medicine and Folklore
30:45 Elder Initiation Poem
32:22 Pruning and Asking Permission
34:37 Elder Tree Lore
35:41 Hazel Nuts Wisdom
36:29 Hawthorn Beltane Timing
39:51 Local Time Cycles
42:44 Circadian Clock Health
47:13 Rest, Boredom & Imagination
47:43 Eco-Spirituality Critique
48:55 The Ethics of Crystals and Frankinscence
57:21 Living Smaller Solutions
01:04:20 Closing Poem
01:06:06 Where To Find Sian

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