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Hello. First post in this bit of the forum.

I visited the Avebury area for the first time the other week. Taking the path over Waden Hill to Silbury Hill, I passed a tree festooned with ribbons. I just wondered what the significance of this tree is.

Ta.

marinade wrote:
Hello. First post in this bit of the forum.

I visited the Avebury area for the first time the other week. Taking the path over Waden Hill to Silbury Hill, I passed a tree festooned with ribbons. I just wondered what the significance of this tree is.

Ta.

Who’s going first on this one :-)

Sorry marinade (and hi). The tree you ask about, and other similar places where (cough) ‘offerings’ are left, has caused quite a bit of debate, not to mention controversy, here and elsewhere.

marinade wrote:
Hello. First post in this bit of the forum.

I visited the Avebury area for the first time the other week. Taking the path over Waden Hill to Silbury Hill, I passed a tree festooned with ribbons. I just wondered what the significance of this tree is.

Ta.

Hello CQ. Fancy seeing you here..
Each ribbon represents a comedy writer who was ritually sacrificed upon Waden Hill. ;)

marinade wrote:
Hello. First post in this bit of the forum.

I visited the Avebury area for the first time the other week. Taking the path over Waden Hill to Silbury Hill, I passed a tree festooned with ribbons. I just wondered what the significance of this tree is.

Ta.

Hello and welcome to the Forum. I know that tree quite well - it's a hawthorn I believe and yes, for some reason people have tied ribbons to it. They do the same to an oak on the path up to West Kennett Long Barrow and also over at Swallowhead Springs. Why? I don't know, some sort misguided neo-pagan custom I should think. I don't mind really ... live and let live, me.

marinade wrote:
Hello. First post in this bit of the forum.

I visited the Avebury area for the first time the other week. Taking the path over Waden Hill to Silbury Hill, I passed a tree festooned with ribbons. I just wondered what the significance of this tree is.

Ta.

Significant trees are very much part of history, and if you read about the Yggdrasil tree you can see why, the Uisneach tree, an ash tree, is supposed to represent in mythology the centre of Ireland, the Yggdrasil tree represents 9 worlds.
This is interesting because the ash tree should have 9 leaflets as part of a whole. 'Celtic' myths are just stories of course, but there is written evidence, and the Gundestrup cauldron depicts a 'sacrificed' tree being carried away by soldiers.....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yggdrasil

marinade wrote:
Hello. First post in this bit of the forum.

I visited the Avebury area for the first time the other week. Taking the path over Waden Hill to Silbury Hill, I passed a tree festooned with ribbons. I just wondered what the significance of this tree is.

Ta.

Apologies Marinade as I didn't welcome you to the forum. Welcome.
Roy

Thanks for the welcome and responses.

I don't know who the person is who knows me, though evidently I do. Know them.

Hello and welcome Marinade.

I haven't read all the responses above, so please forgive repetition. There are several examples of "cloutie" trees around Cornish healing wells (if you have a look at TMA entries for Madron and Sancreed, there are several pictures). Like Bladup says, there seems to be a water connection. This also seems to be a long-standing tradition there, I'm not sure if the ones near West Kennett are so long-standing?

I've also seen them at Doll Tor and Nine Ladies stone circles in the Peak District and at Harold's Stones in Monmouthshire. Of course in the Peaks they also "dress" their wells in annual festivities, but the decorations are removed afterwards, which is rather tidier than leaving pairs of pants and old rags ties to a tree until they bio-degrade (or don't).

My own view is that it simply adds unwelcome tat but, as has been said above, there are plenty of different points of view on that. The main issue to me is that it starts to extend to include other stuff, plastic flowers, teddy bears, etc, etc. Sooner or later the place starts to look like a landfill.