Pine cones - image source |
There were three parts to the session:
- getting to know pines - we walk past them, we pick up the cones but rarely realise the elegant intricacies of their life cycles.
- finding some Parables of the Pines - reflecting on different aspects of the pine and how that might influence our own journeys.
- acting and reflecting - actively meditating on a specific pine cone of your choice.
Getting to know pines:
Having been banished from the house back into the garden, the potted Christmas tree was brought back indoors and around its base we had the life cycle from
- the male cone at the base of the tree producing pollen to
- the pollen spore (complete with 'air bags' to help buoyancy) floating off and hoping to find a female cone,
- the unfertilised female cones high up in the tree (to reduce self fertilisation since wind rarely blows upwards!) receiving pollen from nearby trees,
- the tiny pollen grain building a pollen tube from the cone surface, drilling down to find the female egg cells,
- the fertilised egg cells growing into seeds behind the pine cone scales,
- the pine cone scales opening (when the conditions are right) to let the winged seeds blow in the wind to start a new seedling.
The Parables of the pines:
These are the three parables we told - the misfit, the benefactor, the architect.
Parable 1 - the misfit
The first conifer fossils date back to around 300 M yrs ago –
a time when the earth’s oxygen levels were higher and huge areas of land were
bordering the warm tropical and equatorial regions.
Most plants at the time were fern-like – including tree
sized ferns – all adapted to warm moist conditions and all able to reproduce
quickly and effectively.
The conifers were slow and ponderous in comparison. They
took 2 or more years to create the next generation and even then it was only a
seed rather than a proper plant like the ferns produced. True, the seed could
sit out drought and even fire but there are few droughts and fires in continents
bordering tropical oceans.
But things change. A hundred million years later the
continents had slowly drifted together and instead of thousands of miles of coastlines,
a supercontinent meant most of the landmass was far from the sea. Many areas
were desert or semi desert. Water was in short supply. The age of tree ferns
had gone but the slow, plodding conifers with their wind blown pollen and resilient
seeds that could sit out a few bad seasons began to take over the world.
In time, the other plants would arrive that enclosed their
seeds in fleshy food stores – berries and fruit – to give them a better start
in life but the conifers were here and would dominate the landscape wherever
tough conditions and strong seasonal changes were to be found. Many are fire adapted and wait for years until a fire has reduced competition and fertilised the soil. Then they release the precious seeds into this optimum environment.
Parable 2 – the benefactor
Each male pine tree cone annually releases an estimated 1-2
million pollen grains. As well as benefitting female cones, pine pollen
is regarded as a superfood (rich in vitamin D and anti-oxidants) with
anti-aging and analgesic properties.
Native pines support a wide range of insects, birds,
mammals, moss and lichens. Many types of pine needles (NOT Yew!) can be used to
make a tea rich in vitamin C. Simply steep a handful of needles for 5-10
minutes. Pine nuts from all varieties of pine are edible, although some are
small and not typically harvested.
Native Americans chewed pine resin as sort of a natural
chewing gum. The inner bark of large pine trees is edible, and the bark from
young pine twigs can be eaten as well. The inner bark can be eaten raw -- it
can also be boiled, fried or cooked over a flame.
Pine resin is a natural antiseptic and disinfectant. It also
has antimicrobial and antifungal properties. It can be directly applied to wounds
or sores and helps keep germs out. Pine resin can also be used to staunch the
flow of blood. The resin and needles of the Scots pine have traditionally been
used to treat respiratory problems.
The resin can also be used to extract splinters -- just dab
some on the skin where the splinter is embedded and within a day or two the
splinter should come out on its own.
Pine resin makes a great fire starter, particularly in damp
settings.
Parable 3 – the architect
The pine cone structure follows the Fibonnaci sequence with
5, 8, 13 or 21 spiral sets.
When St Boniface felled the Thor Oak in Germany in front of
disbelieving pagans, he saw a small fir tree sticking up through the broken
boughs of the felled oak.
“This little tree,” he said, “a young child of the forest,
shall be your holy tree tonight. It is the wood of peace… It is the sign of an
endless life, for its leaves are ever green. See how it points upward to
heaven. Let this be called the tree of the Christ-child; gather about it, not
in the wild wood, but in your own homes; there it will shelter no deeds of
blood, but loving gifts and rites of kindness.”
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