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Hollies are among the most traditional
greens used for holiday decor.
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Holly, Ivy, Poinsettias and more…
by Ginny Stibolt
This column is the second part of a discussion of greenery used for
holiday décor. This time I discuss legends and botanical information
on holly, ivy, poinsettias and the unfortunate Christmas pickle.
The previous column covered mistletoe
and magnolias.
Hollies
Hollies are one of the few trees found in all fifty states, and
indeed are found in much of the world. The Christmas legends based
on the evergreen English holly (Ilex aquifolium), which most
resembles our American holly (Ilex
opaca). This holly is native in the whole southeast including
this region of Florida. A classic holly, it has dark shiny evergreen
leaves with sharp spines. But keep in mind that even though it’s
evergreen, the holly will lose its old leaves in the spring after
the new leaves are fully formed. One article on the Internet said
to plant hollies around your pool because there are no leaves to
clean up. Obviously the author had no experience with stepping on
those hard, sharp holly leaves with bare feet. Ouch!
Almost all hollies are dioecious which means that trees will bear
either male or female flowers but not both. The female tree is the one
with all those attractive berries. (Nurseries should label whether a
holly is a male or a female. If you know the parts of a flower, you
can identify the gender of a tree in the spring when they bloom. Be
sure there is at least one male tree in the neighborhood or your
female trees won’t produce berries.) Hollies grow best in acidic
soil and require little care. The USDA reports that the biggest
destroyer of this holly is not disease or insects, but people
harvesting its branches for the Christmas trade! (I’ll cover more
hollies in an upcoming column.)
Holly legends abound. As we discussed in the last column, holly was
included in the evergreens brought in during the winter to provide
safe haven for the gods of spring; but it was especially prized
because of its shiny leaves and its ability to bear fruit in winter.
Some people used holly bark to make a syrup to cure coughs; others
hung it over their beds to produce good dreams. Holly was a popular
Saturnalia gift among the Romans (The Roman celebration at the winter
solstice honored their god, Saturn.) who later brought holly to
England, where it was also considered sacred. The Christians adapted
the legends; and during some periods of history, it was called the
holy tree. Some say that the sharp leaves symbolized the crown of
thorns and the red berries symbolized the blood of Christ. Legend says
that hollies sprang forth wherever He walked.
A Celtic holly legend pits the twin brothers, the Holly King and
the Oak King, against each other to explain winter & summer, good
& evil, dark & light and more. Somewhere in this story, we
also meet Robin Hood, St. George who slew the dark Turkish knight who
turned out to be his brother, St. Nicholas disguised as the Holly King,
and more. In the carol “The Holly and the Ivy” the words allude to
these struggles and the holly wins during the winter because it’s
evergreen. “The holly and the ivy, When they are both full grown, Of
all the trees that are in the wood, The holly bears the crown.”
Ivy
Ivy’s tradition as a Christmas plant (aside from the carol) has
not widely carried over from England, but the plant itself (Hedera
helix) has become a noxious weed in many parts of the country. In
the ravine next to my house in Maryland, mature stands of ivy climb up
all the trees. The ivy plant becomes mature and bears its black
berries after a decade or more of climbing on an object. If it is
not allowed to climb, it remains in its juvenile vine form. If you
root a cutting from mature growth ivy, it will be an upright bush with
more oval-shaped leaves and not a vine.
At some point, genders were assigned, and because holly is strong,
it represents the male. Ivy’s clinging habit and need to lean on
something to grow, assigned it the female role. Ironically, if you
look at the botany, those highly-prized holly boughs with the
magnificent red berries are from female trees!
Holly and ivy have been used together to create kissing balls to
substitute for mistletoe when it was thought to be too evil for use as
Christmas décor. It was considered to be bad luck if there was more
ivy than holly in the ball, though. Later mistletoe was added back
into the mix.
Ivy was associated with Bacchus, the Roman god of wine, and thought
to bring good luck and joy. (I always assumed that the vine pictured
with Bacchus was grape, but with further research I found that ivy is
the winter vine, while grape is the summer vine for Bacchus.) Like
other evergreens, ivy was seen as a symbol of eternal life. Growing
the plant on the outside walls of a house was believed to be a
deterrent against misfortune. However, if it died, it was thought that
financial trouble was approaching. Those of us who’ve had the misfortune
of having to scrape ivy from our houses and repair the damage to
shingles, window frames and anything else with a crevice might argue
with this legend.
The popular potted poinsettia is not poisonous
The poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima) is the most popular
potted plant in this country despite the fact that more than 90% are
sold in just a six-week period. It’s a member of the spurge family.
It’s typical of this family that the flowering heads contain small
flowers with no petals that are arranged to mimic the form of a
typical flower. The female flowers sit up on a stalk and are
surrounded by small male flowers and below the flowers are the
modified and brightly colored leaves called bracts that substitute as
petals to attract pollinators to the flower. For more information on
the weird Euphorbs, link here:
http://waynesword.palomar.edu/trmar98b.htm.
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Poinsettias do quite well here in northern Florida.
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Flowering is induced in the poinsettia when the nights are longer
than the days. Without long nights, this plant will continue to
produce leaves and will grow but will never flower. You must make
certain it receives no light from any source. Of course, there are
exceptions to this rule–witness my neighbor’s four-foot specimen
blooming merrily not far from a street light that shines all night
every night. My guess is that it doesn’t emit an offending
wavelength of light and that there’s no other source of light on
this side of his house.
This plant doesn’t have a long history of European traditional
folk legends for Christmas because it’s a native of Mexico. The
Aztecs used the milky sap to control fevers and the bracts to make a
red dye.
William Prescott, a historian and horticulturist, provided us with
the common name, poinsettia in honor of Joel Roberts Poinsett’s
discovery of the plant. And remember, this name has four syllables:
poin-séh-ti-a.
In the 1820’s President Andrew Jackson appointed Poinsett as the
first United States Ambassador to Mexico. In 1828 he found a beautiful
shrub with large red flowers growing next to a road. He took cuttings
from the plant and brought them back to his greenhouse in South
Carolina. Even though Poinsett had an outstanding career as a United
States Congressman and as an ambassador, he’s primarily remembered
for introducing the poinsettia into the United States.
Since 1923, growers have noticed that some of the poinsettias were
dwarfed and had many more branches. Recently, microbiologists at USDA
proved that the dwarfing and free branching in poinsettias is a
disease symptom caused by a phytoplasma virus. The interaction between
the virus and poinsettia result in traits that poinsettia growers
desire. So like the virus associated with classical color breaking of
tulip petals, the poinsettia phytoplasma is beneficial to growers,
generating multi-flowered Christmas showpieces and $325 million
annually.
Various versions of the one poinsettia legend tell the tale of poor
children in Mexico picking some weeds to add to the nativity scene at
their church because they couldn’t afford to buy anything. When they
laid down the green branches, miraculously, the green top leaves
turned bright red and soon the manger was surrounded by beautiful red
star-like flowers as we see them today.
The unfortunate Christmas pickle legend
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Hang a pickle on your
Christmas tree??
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The story goes that it’s an old, but little known, German tradition
that the last ornament hung on the Christmas tree is a pickle-shaped
glass ornament. The first child on Christmas morning to find the
well-hidden ornament receives an extra present from St. Nicholas.
According to Hyde Flippo, the German guide on About.com,
there are two flaws: no one in Germany has heard of this as a
tradition, and St. Nick didn’t traditionally come on Christmas Eve.
The one possible connection to Germany is that in 1847, craftsmen in
the small town of Lauscha began producing glass ornaments in the shape
of fruits and nuts using a unique hand-blown process combined with
molds. Today Lauscha exports pickle ornaments to the US—where they
are sold along with the spurious German tradition story.
I queried Kerstin and Annika Ebsen, who live in Germany today about
this. They wrote, “They blame the people in the East of Germany of
that pickle custom-?! …where they didn't have fresh fruits and
therefore took a pickle instead of an apple to decorate their trees.
(Which was a joke, anyway.)”
There are two other versions of the origins of the Christmas
pickle. One is a family story of a Bavarian-born ancestor who fought
in the American Civil War. A prisoner in poor health and starving, he
begged a guard for just one pickle before he died. The guard took pity
on him and found a pickle for him. The pickle—by the grace of
God—gave him the mental and physical strength to live on.
The other, perpetuated in Berrien Springs, MI, is a medieval tale
of two Spanish boys traveling home from boarding school for the
holidays. When they stopped at an inn for the night, the innkeeper, a
mean and evil man, stuffed the boys into a pickle barrel. That
evening, St. Nicholas stopped at the same inn, became aware of the
boys' plight, tapped the pickle barrel with his staff, and the boys
were magically freed.
Berrien Springs calls itself the Christmas Pickle Capital of the
World. They celebrate with an annual Christmas Pickle Festival held
during the early part of December. A parade, led by the Grand
Dillmeister who passes out fresh pickles along the parade route, is
the featured event. You may even purchase the German glass pickle
ornaments at the town’s museum.
Oh by the way, Berrien Springs is the heart of pickle-packing country.
Are they pulling our collective legs for commercial gain?
See previous column:Mistletoe
and Magnolia Myths.
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