Dana O'Driscoll

Dana O’Driscoll has been an animist druid for 20 years, and currently serves as Grand Archdruid in the Ancient Order of Druids in America (www.aoda.org). She is a druid-grade member of the Order of Bards, Ovates, and Druids and is the OBOD’s 2018 Mount Haemus Scholar. She is the author of Sacred Actions: Living the Wheel of the Year through Earth-Centered Spiritual Practice (REDFeather, 2021), the Sacred Actions Journal (REDFeather, 2022), and Land Healing: Physical, Metaphysical, and Ritual Approaches for Healing the Earth (REDFeather, 2024). She is also the author/illustrator of the Tarot of Trees, Plant Spirit Oracle, and Treelore Oracle. Dana is an herbalist, certified permaculture designer, and permaculture teacher who teaches about reconnection, regeneration, and land healing through herbalism, wild food foraging, and sustainable living. In 2024, she co-founded the Pennsylvania School of Herbalism with her sister and fellow herbalist, Briel Beaty. Dana lives at a 5-acre homestead in rural western Pennsylvania with her partner and a host of feathered and furred friends. She writes at the Druids Garden blog and is on Instagram as @druidsgardenart. She also regularly writes for Plant Healer Quarterly and Spirituality and Health magazine.

Recommended Articles

19 Comments

  1. I wholeheartedly agree. The smells of oak – hickory forest are a daily experience, living as I do surrounded by trees. Petrichor after a shower, acorns warming in the sun, damp leaf mold, the list goes on.

    Yet if I walk to the mailbox it is often Eastern Red Cedar and fescue that dominate the scent scape.

    It is truly amazing what we can learn or understand if we just follow our noses.

    1. And how each of those smells has their own rooteness in both place and in the wheel of the year. Right now, my yard is full of maple leaves that have been dropping….the smell is amazing. By next week though, the smell of the maples will be gone and new smells will arise as the wheel continues to turn.

    1. I am trying to follow your blog and WordPress said I have to use a valid email. Well, I was. lol
      Any ideas to help me? Thanks
      Patti

      1. hmm…i have no idea! WordPress is its own program. Maybe try again or try a different one?

  2. Reblogged this on Blue Dragon Journal.

  3. Thank you so much for this beautifull text. There is so much to learn from the sense of smell. It is a gateway to such great magic!

    1. Thanks for reading and commenting, France! Magic indeed :).

  4. Thank you for this. What a wonderful journey and lesson we can use daily.
    Patti

    1. You ae most welcome, Patti! Thanks for reading and following the blog 🙂

  5. […] via A Journey through the Senses: Breathe Deeply — The Druid’s Garden […]

  6. Too often we take our sense of smell for granted. We’re aware that as we age, we might not see or hear as well, but smell? Not so much. Until something happens and it’s gone. This happened to me over the course of several months last fall through late spring. As a gardener, herbalist, and maker of botanical perfumes, I was devastated and didn’t know how I would go on. Smell is so very important, and when I lost it I felt isolated and depressed. Luckily the cause was nasal polyps, that are, for now, under control. So I can revel in the smells all around me, and take joy in making fragrances.

    The memory connection is something we’re all aware of but when you don’t have it, that’s when you understand how important these types of memories are. It’s so different to smell something and have the memories flood my consciousness, rather than using my rational, thinking brain to remember. It’s like the difference between color and black and white. The waft of a fragrance sweeps us away in such a different and organic fashion than mindfully thinking of something in the past. I’m not sure if I’m communicating this accurately, but when I couldn’t smell, I got none of that and over time I felt less whole, less myself. I didn’t lose my memories, of course, but without smell bringing this or that into my present moment, everything was more linear, and for me given how important fragrance is, there was less magic in my life.

    1. Susan, thanks for sharing this story! I understand what you mean! Over the summer, my partener and I took a trip to Iceland at the summer solstice. It was light 24 hours a day. At first it was cool, novel even, and we enjoyed being out all hours of the night. But by about day 4 or day 5, we were getting a little delirious; it was affecting us deeply. I will never forget that first night we returned. After long flights and a long drive, we were exhausted and turned in early. But at 4am, I woke up and simply wandered the property in the dark….taking in the night. Breathing in the stars. I hadn’t realized it, but I never knew how important the change of the day to night was to me until suddenly, it wasn’t there. Not quite the same as one of our senses, I realize, but perhaps, a similar “you don’t realize how important it is till its gone”.

      1. Thank you for sharing this experience of yours. I compare day and night to the four seasons as well. For me it’s a natural rythym. And what a beautiful image “to breathe in the stars” when all is dark and quiet and still; when all that is heard is the scurries of itty night creatures. Thank you for this beautiful picture in my mind.

    1. Thanks for the reblog!

  7. I adore your teaching…a gift to the world!

    1. Thank you! And thank you for reading 🙂

Leave a Reply