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Sunday, March 2, 2008

Building a Blue Bottle Bush


I'm slowly collecting blue bottles for my bottle bush.

What is a bottle bush, and why would I want one?

There is a photo of one on Flickr that is a very good example. And here is another on Gardenweb.

Now, why on earth would anyone hang blue bottles on trees and bushes?

According to folklore, especially in the American south and the Caribbean regions, bottles were placed in trees to ward off evil spirits. According to some people, the spirits would get trapped in the bottles and not be able to get into your house. Blue bottles were thought to be the strongest deterrent, because blue, apparently, is considered a strong color against evil. But the trees were often decorated with green, brown and clear bottles too. According to the excellent article at Hill Country of Monroe Mississippi blog, Eudora Welty described bottle bushes in her story Livvie.

The Tuscaloosa News online has an article and video about Cindy Norwood, who has a large blue bottle bush tree in her yard. According to the article, the practice is of African origin, which seems quite likely given the prevalence of the bushes in the south.

That same article cites noted Alabama storyteller Kathryn Tucker Windham's book of folklore as a source of information about the blue bottles tradition. I first heard about the blue bottle bushes from Kathryn at a storytelling event and the idea has intrigued me ever since. After seeing my storytelling friend Donna Wilson's bottle bush, I decided it was time to start collecting bottles for my own bush.

The tradition has made its way north, at least as far north as Maine, where writer Tom Seymour had this information about bottle bushes (along with photos of his own bottle trees: "Bottle trees (Silica transparencii, according to famous horticulturist Felder Rushing) have a long and somewhat ambiguous history. The bottle tree is said to have originated in the slave-holding south, where Africans placed bottles on tree limbs in order to trap evil spirits. One legend tells that the people would place corks on each bottle in the morning in order to trap spirits trapped during the previous night. Then they would throw the bottles away.Another tradition suggests that the morning sun would instantly dissipate any trapped spirits. And yet another story says that wind, blowing across the lip of the bottles, would scare away any spirits. A variant on this proclaims the whistling to be the sound of the unhappy, trapped spirits."

In the Far East, a Korean folktale includes magical blue and red bottles that are hidden inside gourds. Did the African bottle lore inspire that story too, or did the idea of magical bottles actually originate in Korea and surrounding areas?

Sliding slightly from the bottles themselves to the word bluebottle, the Orkneyjar site offers insight into the bluebottle fly, and left me wondering if the fly's name originated from its being trapped in the blue bottles on bushes? Questions, questions--that is what I find so intriguing about folklore: the questions as to why people believe and do the things they do.

So, if you happen to have any blue bottles, and you're not worried about evil spirits getting in your house, send the bottle my way. I'm not too concerned about evil spirits, but I sure like the look of a bottle bush!

Here are some other sites with additional information about bottles and bottle bushes/trees:

A review of a collection of Jamaican tales called Skin Folk notes than in one tale, blue bottles hold the spirits of the dead, and if the bottle is broken the spirit will return.

Guyanese folklore includes a small spirit called bacoo who is trapped in corked bottles.

Find out about Tressa Prisbrey's "bottle village" here.

A recipe for seeing the fae folk includes using a "special bottle."

"Blue bottles hanging around a house meant a death from fever." --from The Encyclopedia of Superstitions, Folklore and the Occult Sciences of the World, vol. II (a 1903 title now available again for $50 online).

Biddy Early's magic bottle--"by looking into the bottle with one eye and keeping the other eye open, she would be able to see what ailed people and view the future." Was she truly powerful or was it all legend? In her book The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog, author Patricia Monaghan notes that Biddy's bottle was blue.

Ready to make your own blue bottle bush? Just in case...

4 comments:

  1. Granny Sue, Blue bottles are scarce these days! I, too, am collecting bottles for a bottle tree --- green and clear and brown are easy to find; blue is, as I'm sure you are finding, more difficult to obtain. I found a bright fuchsia colored bottle at the thrift store the other day to serve as the topper.

    Thanks for the mention/link. Good luck on building a blue bottle bush. Hope you will share photos of it when complete.

    Regards,
    Terry Thornton
    HILL COUNTRY OF MONROE COUNTY MS (blog)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Terry!

    Loved your blog--I'll have to add it to my feeds. I'll definitely add a photo when the bush is done. I'm debating whether to use a live bush, or to cut a small tree and "plant" it, or to use the copper tubing idea I saw online. All three have good points. I think the copper would look stunning, more like an artpiece, but the bush would be more authentic. We'll see. First I want to gather at least six bottles to start. Back to eBay!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Isn't there some lore about putting out a blue bottle full of water during a full moon as a woman's ritual? I don't remember what this is supposed to accomplish, but I recall wishing I had a blue bottle once--long ago--so I could do this. I never found the blue bottle and forgot about it until I read you post.

    ReplyDelete
  4. There's a lady here in East Tennessee who has a bottle tree and she has all kinds of bottles. I don't know where this idea came from but it could be glass bottles break and long ago if you had a drink out of a bottle just stick the bottle on a limb. Or could be a good place to keep collectibles. I'm going to try & find out!
    Truly,
    Carol Rosenbalm

    ReplyDelete

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