This is a charged decorated bottle for your living room, or your bedroom, Entryway,
Office even for your craft. Just put your bottle to the East of the room
A beautiful gift for you and others.
An excellent idea for birthday or wedding gift
Charged bottle
A great Altar tool, with Tree Nymph for fertility
TThe Tree Nymphs are based on the dryads from Greek Mythology.
Tree Nymphs are human in appearance.
Tree Nymphs are said to be of eternal nature
Tree Nymphs were beautiful, supernatural, young maidens referred to as Wood Nymphs who featured in the legends and mythology of Ancient Greece. Forest, Tree Nymphs were minor goddesses of nature. The ancient Greeks believed that Tree Nymphs inhabited the forests, woods, groves and trees of ancient Greece.
The Dryad wood nymphs were originally the spirits of oak trees (from the Greek word 'dryos' meaning “tree”) but but with the passing of time the name was later applied to all tree and wood nymphs. The Dryad wood nymphs were believed to be immortal and lived forever.
Forest and Wood nymphs were also companions of Pan, the Greek god of fertility, shepherds and music. Wood nymphs were also the favorite companions of Artemis the Greek goddess of the hunt. Artemis had twenty Wood Nymphs who served as her handmaidens and to watch her dogs and bow while she rested.
Tree nymphs contribute to their description:
Young, slender and beautiful maidens
The Dryads lived forever, the Hamadyads lived only as long as the trees they inhabited
They were described as minor goddesses, whose special duties assigned by the powerful Olympian gods
They were usually conceived as being both lovely and amorous
Forest, Tree and Wood nymphs were quite fragile, delicate creatures but would punish any thoughtless mortal who had somehow injured a tree
The lives of the wood nymphs were irrevocably connected with that of the trees
They were worshiped as spirits of fertility and guardians of vegetation
They could disappear by stepping into a tree
Offerings were made to the Forest and Wood Nymph to appease or thank the dryads it was necessary to harvest trees or branches
They were generally very kind and believed to watch over the fate of mortals.
They were also known as the Forest Queens