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28th June 10, 01:49 PM
#41
Will do Terry!!!
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28th June 10, 02:28 PM
#42
Thanks for posting the white heather! It's also the plant badge for clan MacIntyre. Iy won't grow in Houston, TX.
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28th June 10, 02:41 PM
#43
Greetings all,
The following photos are examples of how I wear my clan's plant badge. I typically alter the actual size of the sprays of heather; from large, multiple sprigs bundled together for a more dramatic look (first few photos taken locally), to maybe two or three sprigs for a lighter look (final photo taken in Scotland).
Like I mentioned in a previous post in this thread, I would order all of my Scottish white heather direct from a wee company located in Argyll (now I grow a different species of white heather that has noticeably larger flowering buds than its Highland counterpart-I prefer the more delicate look of the Scottish variety), however, they have seemed to go out of business, or perhaps they just ended their online sales, because their wonderful website does not exist anymore. I would order several sprays of white heather at a time, usually fresh white heather during the blooming season (May-early October). However, one could order dried white heather at any time during the year. They also sold fresh and dried purple heather as well. I really wish they were still around. Enjoy the photos.
Last edited by creagdhubh; 29th June 10 at 01:02 PM.
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29th June 10, 12:38 PM
#44
This has been a most interesting thread to follow.
When I was with my regiment we once travelled through an area where heather grew, and I put some behind my bonnet badge. But for some reason the NCOs didn’t like it, and they told me to throw it out!
I stuck the heather in because I had been reading a novel about campaigns fought in Scotland, so I was quite taken with the idea.
But then there were many in the regiment that were ignorant of Scottish customs.
Erica is a genus of heath that is endemic to the fynbos region of the Western Cape and the western part of the Eastern Cape.
A school here in Port Elizabeth uses the red erica as its badge. The school is aptly named: Erica Girls’ Primary.
The ferns shown in the picture are similar in many respect to the indigenous South African ferns that grow in my garden.
Thanks especially to Kyle for posting those pictures showing the various possible uses of a plant badge in the bonnet – or should I say bonnets. That’s a nice collection of headgear.
Regards,
Mike
The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
[Proverbs 14:27]
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29th June 10, 01:07 PM
#45
Originally Posted by Mike_Oettle
This has been a most interesting thread to follow.
When I was with my regiment we once travelled through an area where heather grew, and I put some behind my bonnet badge. But for some reason the NCOs didn’t like it, and they told me to throw it out!
I stuck the heather in because I had been reading a novel about campaigns fought in Scotland, so I was quite taken with the idea.
But then there were many in the regiment that were ignorant of Scottish customs.
Erica is a genus of heath that is endemic to the fynbos region of the Western Cape and the western part of the Eastern Cape.
A school here in Port Elizabeth uses the red erica as its badge. The school is aptly named: Erica Girls’ Primary.
The ferns shown in the picture are similar in many respect to the indigenous South African ferns that grow in my garden.
Thanks especially to Kyle for posting those pictures showing the various possible uses of a plant badge in the bonnet – or should I say bonnets. That’s a nice collection of headgear.
Regards,
Mike
Mike,
Thanks for your interesting post, I wonder why your former NCO's didn't like the heather behind your badge? I think you are correct in saying that many within your regiment were ignorant of Scottish customs-not all are educated and informed of such traditions.
You are more than welcome for the photos and thanks for taking the time to take a wee look. Yes, I have collected my bonnets over the years and am quite proud of them. They are all made by Robert Mackie in Scotland, and are indeed treasured items that I will pass down to my wee bairns one day.
Stay tuned to this thread from time to time, as I am quite sure more information, discussions, and photos will be posted very soon. I plan to post several photos once I attain some red whortleberry!
Cheers Mike,
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28th November 10, 09:18 AM
#46
Below is a photo of me wearing a few sprigs of boxwood in my bonnet at a local Highland games this past October. Boxwood is another plant badge, besides white heather and red whortleberry, of the Clan Macpherson - also, there are other Clan Chattan clans and families who choose to wear boxwood as their plant badge.
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28th November 10, 09:29 AM
#47
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28th November 10, 09:47 AM
#48
I always have lots of xmarks dandelions growing on the embankment behind my house. I was going to dig them out a few years ago but a neighbour said their roots were needed to bind the shale like soil and that removing them could lead to landslips.
I may have fewer next year as I am having the lower part of the slope terraced.
Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.
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29th November 10, 05:49 PM
#49
I was just perusing some Clan Young sites and found this "The historical plant badge of the Youngs has been lost over the ages so we have adopted the Yew. Our Clan Crest Badge design comes from the Arms of Peter Young of Auldbar. The site of Castle Auldbar, near Brechin, Scotland, has a remarkable line of Yew that the locals say is over 400 years old. It is gnarled, grotesque, rugged and distinctly a minature forest. It is a survivor and so in honor of that plant, we have taken the Yew as the official bit of flora for the Clan Young."
I need to do some landscaping in the spring. Perhaps I will put in a yew hedge!
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29th November 10, 09:08 PM
#50
Originally Posted by Kornkob
Thank you.
Now to find a Juniper tree in Wisconsin.
Eastern Redcedar, Juniperus virginiana. Not a Scottish species, obviously, but grows everywhere in the midwest.
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