Drink Magic Masterpost

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Sorry, not the alcohol type drink, but you can find a masterpost for that here! This masterpost is organized by purpose/need. The ones involving coffee are bolded, since most of them are teas! 

DO NOT BLINDLY ASSUME HERBS IN TEAS ARE OKAY FOR YOU! DO YOUR RESEARCH.

Emotions + Emotional healing:

Health + Healing:

Morning + Sleep:

Odds and Ends:

Correspondences:

Related posts:

heximari:

Non-Dairy Milk Correspondences 🌿🥛

Milk corresponds with love, nurturing and spirituality, but what happens when your milk is non-dairy? Here is a list of correspondences for vegan witches, lactose intolerant magic practitioners, and anyone else who doesn’t dig dairy in their craft. Enjoy!

(This is a collection of correspondences I’ve gathered from all over the web. I am not claiming that these are my own original correspondences.)

Non Dairy Milks:

🌿 Soy: Protection, Psychic Awareness, Spirituality

🌿 Almond: Healing, Prosperity, Wisdom, Overcoming Addiction, Abundance, Luck

🌿 Coconut: Allure, Confidence, Diversity, Flexibility, Protection, Psychic Awareness, Purification, Spirituality

🌿 Hemp: Positive Energy, Manifestation, Healing, Protection, Peace, Meditation, Removal of Negative Influences, Love, Binding, Psychic Visions

🌿 Oat: Grounding, Prosperity, Beauty, Healing, Health

🌿 Rice: Fertility, Abundance, Blessings, Protection, Rain, Security, Wealth

🌿 Cashew: Prosperity, Increase Energy, Communication

🌿 Flax: Beauty, Healing, Protection, Money, Psychic Enhancement

🌿 Pea: Love, Prosperity

🌿 Hazelnut: Fertility, Luck, Mental Enhancement, Wisdom, Dreams, Divination, Spirit Work, Wishes

🌿 Macadamia: Prosperity

🌿 Sunflower: Protection, Success, Positive Energy, Confidence, Happiness

🌿 Pistachio: Breaking Hexes/Curses, Breaking Trances, Grounding, Divination

Flavors:

🍫 Chocolate: Love, Romance, Friendship, Grounding, Prosperity, Comfort, Healing

🥛Vanilla: Love, Energy Restoration, Mental Enhancement, Good Fortune, Healing, Joy

🍓 Strawberry: Purification, Fertility, Love, Abundance, Dedication, Inner Vision, Success, Intensity

🍬 Sugar (not a flavor but many milks have added sugars): Love and Protection

PNW Plant Magic

[Photo Source]

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research. 

  • Meet Claytonia sibirica, also known as Siberian Miner’s Lettuce, Pink Purslane, or Candy Flower. This small beauty loves to grow along the sides of trails and along openings in the forest. I think the luscious, alternate leaves and delicate flowers brighten up the forest floor. I once lived off of this plant for a week during a survival trip!
  • I haven’t interacted with these plant spirits much, other than to thank them.
  • Stems. Young, brief life and growth.
  • Leaves. Depth, knowledge, sustainability. 
  • Flowers. Innocence, shimmering/light-like glamour.

[Photo Source]

  • Meet Claytonia perfoliata, also known as Perfoliate Miner’s Lettuce, Spring Beauty or Winter Purslane. This small beauty also loves to grow along the sides of trails and in sandy/rocky areas. The leaves are simply magical, and it has teeny white flowers.
  • I have never interacted with these spirits, I actually rarely see this form of the plant.
  • Stem. Young, brief life and growth.
  • Leaves. Strengthen magic, confidence in power, connection to spirits.
  • Flowers. Fae, concealment, close friendship.

Edible/Medicinal information. [X] [X] [X]

PNW Plant Magic

Meet the common ferns! (Find part one here!)

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research.

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[Photo source]

  • Meet Adiantum pedatum, also known as Maidenhair Fern! With delicate black stems and lacy blades, they hardly look like they belong in any forest on earth.
  • The spirits of these plants tend to be observers, and enjoy being observed and admired in return.
  • Stalk. Daintiness, elegance. 
  • Blades. Glamour.
  • Fiddleheads. Confident power, mystery.
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[Photo source]

  • Meet Pteridium aquilinum, also known as Western Bracken Fern! These ferns can grow very wide fronds, and I’ve found some that are over 6 feet tall!!
  • I haven’t had many interactions with these plant spirits.
  • Stalk. Strong relationships/bonds, personal strength.
  • Blades. To find silence, a quiet mind.
  • Fiddleheads. To conceal yourself in mystery, the unknown, cryptid. 
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[Photo source]

  • Meet Athyrium filix-femina, also known as Lady Fern! Delicate, yet abundant – this fern adds a burst of color everywhere it grows!
  • These spirits are very gentle.
  • Stalk. To find the ability to continue the routine, to do what you must.
  • Blades. Gentleness, light, happiness. 
  • Fiddleheads. Recovery.

PNW Plant Magic

Meet the common ferns! (Find part two here!)

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research.

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[Photo source]

  • Meet Polystichum munitum, also known as Western Sword Fern! These beauties are the backbone of many local forests, and often go unnoticed. 
  • These spirits tend to seem very wise, and unconcerned with whatever you’re doing.
  • Stalk. Endurance, well-being.
  • Blades. Tough skin, to help things bounce off.
  • Fiddleheads. Warmth, fae.
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[Photo source]

  • Meet Blechnum spicant, also known as Deer Fern! These ferns tend to be the smallest on the forest floor, but hold their own!
  • I haven’t had the pleasure of interacting with any of these plant spirits.
  • Stalk. To stand out above the rest, new growth.
  • Blades. To know, to find hidden things.
  • Fiddleheads. Whimsy, child-like energy.
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[Photo source]

  • Meet Polypodium glycyrrhiza, also known as Licorice Fern or Licorice Root Fern! These ferns prefer to grow their rhizome systems in moss – so they’re found on the sides of rocks and in trees! How cool is that!?
  • I’ve found these plant spirits to be tight-knit (literally and personality wise) and share the same opinion of you, even if they’re on different trees.
  • Stalk. Thriving in spite of circumstances, strength.
  • Blades. Social confidence, fitting in.
  • Roots. Sweetness.

PNW Plant Magic

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[Photo source]

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research!

  • Meet Dicentra formosa, aka Pacific Bleeding Heart! With delicate, lacy leaves and heart-shaped flowers – it truly looks like it belongs in a fairy tale!
  • The spirits of this plant tend to be shy, vain or uninterested which makes it rather difficult to interact with them! They can be nice though.
  • Stem. Represents fragile emotions.
  • Leaves. Hiding beneath the surface, strength despite circumstance. 
  • Flowers. Delicate beauty and energy, glamour.
  • Seed pod. Deeply rooted emotions.
  • Seeds. The last bit of the foundation, an ability to rebuild from nothing.

Medicinal uses

PNW Plant Magic

[Photo source]

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research!

  • Meet Oxalis oregana, also known as redwood sorrel! This beautiful plant brings an air of magic with it’s shamrock-shaped leaves and dainty flowers. It has oxalic acid in it, making it taste sour (but yummy)!
  • I haven’t interacted with these plant spirits much, but I certainly get a “fae-like” vibe from them!
  • Leaves. Use the leaves to cut something bad out of your life, a harsh block of sorts.
  • Stem. Warmth, to encourage friendship and appear open and willing to talk.
  • Flowers. Fae, to remember, to lighten up a space or mood.

Info on edibility + Possible risks of ingesting

PNW Plant Magic

image

[Photo source]

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research!

  • Meet Sambucus racemosa, also known as Red Elderberry! This plant has beautiful, almost tropical looking leaves, bright red berries that aren’t for eating, and can grow much taller than you or I!
  • I haven’t had much of a chance to connect with the spirits of this plant (at least not yet!)
  • Branches. Fast growth without a foundation.
  • Bark. Payback, to make others get what they deserve. 
  • Buds. To bring a halt to something.
  • Leaves. Confidence in self and appearance. 
  • Flowers. Glamour.
  • Berries. Grittiness in curses.

More information – Do not ingest.

PNW Plant Magic

image

[Photo source]

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research.

  • Meet

    Rubus spectabilis, also known as Salmonberry! This plant is the foundation of many forests. It’s wooden, thorny stalks provide protection for many creatures. They brighten the forest with their flowers, have the first berries to ripen, and have butterfly-shaped leaves!

  • Thinking back, these plant spirits were a childhood friend for me. They let me hide in their thickets, eat their flowers and berries, and weren’t afraid to scratch me when I plowed through them. Patient, easygoing, and unapologetic about their traits. You gotta be tough sometimes.
  • Young shoots: Rejuvenation.
  • Woody stalks: Deeper connection, staying true to your core.
  • Bark: To shed your skin.
  • Thorns: Passive protection/wards.
  • Leaves: Whimsical energy, vitality.
  • Flowers: Glamour, love.
  • Berries: Friendship.
  • Seeds: Strengthen bonds.

Edibility and Uses

PNW Plant Magic

[Photo source]

This series is a collection of my personal (UPG) correspondences for local plants. Please do not utilize this post as a sole way to identify them, and do not ingest unless you have done the proper research.

  • Meet Gaultheria shallon, also known as Salal! These plants will often cover the forest floor, making it a sea of dark green, knee-high plants! I think they’re very beautiful and tend to get overlooked. 
  • I’ve found that these spirits tend to have varying personalities based on region and how many there are in an area. The plants in my area (which are spread out) tend to be cold at first, but with a little prodding open right up!
  • Stalks: Protection, ward.
  • Buds: Endurance.
  • Leaves: Shelter, guidance.
  • Flowers: Seeing through falsities and lies.
  • Berries: Grit. 
  • Seeds: For doing what must be done.

Medicinal information / Edible information