Oak Tree Metal Signs

Oak Tree Metal Signs Custom made signs, wall and garden decor

Custom cut metal signs, wall, garden and/or yard decor, for Business, Farm, Camp or Home. Customized for the perfect gif...
04/21/2023

Custom cut metal signs, wall, garden and/or yard decor, for Business, Farm, Camp or Home. Customized for the perfect gift.

Cut these for the Boser volunteer fire people lol helmet plates
02/18/2023

Cut these for the Boser volunteer fire people lol helmet plates

Custom cut metal signs and wall art. Personalized for Home, Business or Farm, can be displayed inside or outside. Perfec...
01/13/2023

Custom cut metal signs and wall art. Personalized for Home, Business or Farm, can be displayed inside or outside. Perfect as a gift anytime of year.

Now that Christmas is over I feel I can post some of the orders I had.
12/26/2022

Now that Christmas is over I feel I can post some of the orders I had.

11/07/2022
Metal signs that I have left from setting up at festivals all for sale, most I will need to give a fresh coat of paint w...
11/03/2022

Metal signs that I have left from setting up at festivals all for sale, most I will need to give a fresh coat of paint when bought due to scratches from being stored and shipped around from festival to festival. If you see something you would like to.purchase message me for price.

Added a couple new designs for my Bill's fans
11/02/2022

Added a couple new designs for my Bill's fans

New files ready to cut. Looking for that special Christmas gift order yours today.
10/28/2022

New files ready to cut. Looking for that special Christmas gift order yours today.

New orders cut and painted
10/28/2022

New orders cut and painted

07/13/2022

Celtic oak tree
The word Druid actually comes from the Celtic word for Oak, 'Duir'. The Druids also believed that the Oak tree is host to the strength and energy of their gods and so to catch a falling Oak leaf brings good luck and prosperity. In mythology, the Irish Oak symbolises truth, courage and wisdom.

Solitaire >^..^<

Pagan Worship

We can never know for sure whether the Druids of the British Isles and Ireland practiced their religion in oak-groves like their continental cousins, but it seems likely. We know that the insular Celts worshipped in groves, or ‘nematon’, and the evidence from Ireland in particular makes it likely that these were oaks. Ireland was covered with oak trees, whose presence still echoes down the centuries in place names such as Derry, Derrylanan, Derrybawn (whiteoak), Derrykeighan and, of course, Londonderry, once Derry Calgagh, the oakwood of a fierce warrior of that name.

Many early Christian churches were situated in oak-groves, probably because they were once pagan places of worship. Kildare, where St. Brigid founded her abbey, derives from ‘Cill-dara’, the Church of the Oak. Legend says she loved and blessed a great oak and held it so sacred that no-one dare harm a leaf of it. Under its shade she built her cell (This ties in neatly with pre-Christian tradition, as the pagan goddess Brigid was daughter to the Sun-God Dagda to whom the oak was sacred).

St. Columcille, also known as Columba, whom many believe to have been a Druid before he embraced the new faith, likewise founded churches in an oak-grove at Derry (Doire), the monastery at Durrow (Dairmag, ‘the Plain of the Oaks’) and a monastery at Kells where he lived under an oak tree. According to the Irish ‘Life of St. Columcille’ a man took some of the bark of his tree to tan his shoes and contracted leprosy as a consequence.

When he was founding the church at Derry, St. Columcille burned down the town and the king’s fort in order to eradicate the works or worldly men and sanctify the site for his church. But the fire blazed out of control and he had to pronounce an invocation to save the grove of trees. He loved these trees so much that he built his oratory facing north-south instead of by the usual Christian orientation of east-west so none would be disturbed. He ordered his successors not to touch any tree that might fall, but to let it lie for nine days (the sacred Celtic number) before cutting it up and distributing the wood among the poor. When later in life he lived at the abbey he founded on the Isle of Iona in Scotland, he declared that although he feared death and hell, the sound of an axe in Derry frightened him more.

Early literature gives more evidence of the importance of the oak to pagan Celts. A great oak was one of the five sacred trees brought to Ireland by the strange being called Trefuilngid Tre-ochair who appeared suddenly at Tara on the day Christ was crucified; an emissary from the otherworld, he bore a branch on which were acorns, apples, nuts and berries which he shook onto the ground. These wondrous fruits were planted into five different parts of Ireland, and from them grew five great trees that oversaw each province until they were blown down by the disapproving winds of the Church in the 7th century. Among these was the great Oak of Mugna which stood in southern Kildare. This ‘bile’ or sacred tree was celebrated in the Edinburgh Dinnsenchas as:

Mughna’s oak-tree without blemish
Whereon were mast and fruit,
Its top was as broad precisely
As the great plain without… 3

It was said to bear nine hundred bushels of acorns 3 times a year and red apples besides, making its Otherworldly origins clear. The moment the last acorn fell, the first blossom of the year appeared, reminding us of the perpetual cycle of death and rebirth.

There were also some places that show traces of pre-Christian groves, however faint. We hear of an oak-grove near Loch Siant in the Isle of Skye that was once held so sacred that no person would dare cut the smallest twig from the trees. Also in Scotland is the sacred oak on the island in Lock Maree. The local story goes that it was once ‘Eilean-a-Mhor-Righ’ (the island of the Great King) who was in fact a pagan god. And in England, the remains of ancient oaks were discovered near the Romano-British temple at Lydney, dedicated to the god Nodons.

07/13/2022

With a long history of symbolism, the towering oak tree has deep roots within the realms of strength, wisdom and healing. Proving time and time again to be the embodiment of beauty and power.

Solitaire >^..^<

Healing Powers

The oak held its place of honour in the British landscape long after its veneration by the early Celts. John Evelyn told how one great oak was held in such high esteem, that if a bastard was born within its ample shade, neither mother nor child would incur the usual heavy censure of the church or magistrate.

Country-people frequented the oak for its curative powers, which in some places was considered so great that healing could occur simply by walking around the tree and wishing the ailment to be carried off by the first bird alighting on its branches. In Cornwall, a nail driven into an oak cured toothache, while in Wales, rubbing the oak with the palm of your left hand on Midsummer’s Day kept you healthy all year. It gave a special virtue to other plants that grew upon its trunk or branches, such as the mistletoe and polypody fern. The herbalist Gerard said, ‘that which growth on the bodies of olde Okes is preferred before the rest: in steede of this most do use that which is found under the Okes….’.

As we noted in the above, the oak is especially the tree of thunder gods in other Northern cultures, and this tradition holds true in Britain also. In Anglo-Saxon times, Thor was known as Thunor and groves of oak-trees were dedicated to him in the south and east of England, the village of Thundersley in Essex originally being one. Like the ash, it is said to ‘court the lightning flash’; lightning is popularly supposed to strike the oak more than any other tree. Such trees often survived the blow and flourished remarkably well, henceforth being known as ‘lightning oaks’. People often took pieces of these trees to put on their houses for good luck. In shamanistic cultures, a person who survived being struck by lightning often became a shaman, for the lightning bolt is seen worldwide as the sudden spiritual illumination that rends the darkness with a terrifying and irrevocable transforming force.

Just finished this large Medusa, currently for sale 26 x 21, 110.00
07/01/2022

Just finished this large Medusa, currently for sale 26 x 21, 110.00

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145 Martine Road
Naples, NY
14512

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