The Rowan Tree's Gift This is my story and so I shall begin: A beautiful songbird, its belly full of ripe red Rowan berries, flew to a rocky crag and there it rested, singing its' thanks to the tree that had fed it so well. And there it left its gift of tiny precious seeds scattered on the cold stone. One of those seeds began to grow in the peaty shelter of the crack in that rock. Its roots reached out and wound their way around the stone, searching for the nourishment it needed to flourish. Little by little the Rowan grew where other trees would have perished, holding fast to the Mountain against the wild winter storms. She endured the coldest of nights, the fiercest of winds, and the ice and snow that the Winter Hag, the Cailleach, brought as she stalked the land. But beneath the roots of this Lady of the Mountain was held a secret, and one so precious that she protected it through those long hard winters from the wrath of the Cailleach. It was a sleeping Dragon, curled in her roots and waiting ... waiting for Father Sun to awaken it with his fiery arrows of light. And as the Sun gathered strength and climbed higher in the sky, the Rowan called softly to the Dragon below 'Awaken from your winter sleep and with breath of fire - arise!' Slowly by slowly the Dragon stretched, and opened his mouth from which flowed a fiery breath warming Mother Earth, melting Winters' icy grip, and awakening the seeds and plants from their long sleep. The birds sang with joy whilst snowdrops and aconite raised their tiny heads to watch as new born lambs drank their mother's rich creamy milk. The spark of new life was beginning. And the Winter Hag little by little loosened her grip, and journeyed to the Well of Youth to gather her strength to walk the land again. The Lady of the Mountain, the Rowan, was happy. She dressed herself in beautiful fragrant white flowers, and leaves that looked like the feathers of the birds who sang in her boughs, calling to the Spring. And come Midsummer the Faerie folk who lived in the grassy knolls where she grew, would dance beneath her boughs, singing and playing sweet music until Father Sun rested his head.