I wrote this post in the spring of 2014 and rather to my surprise it has become one of my most viewed posts ever. Who knew that so many people were searching for articles about unlucky plants? Certainly not me! Anyway I thought that I would run it again for those of you that are interested in the subject or just like pictures of pretty blossoms.

Our old nectarine trees are blossoming again. I love seeing blossoms on trees. We have some lovely flowering trees in Australia wattle, bottlebrush and flame trees to mention just a few of the native plants. I always look forward to the apple blossom which comes and goes so quickly that you could easily miss it even in orchard laden Tassie. I always think that pink blossoms would look lovely in a vase with daffodils but I never pick any. Why? Superstition.


My mother always used to tell us “Don’t bring blossoms into the house. It’s bad luck.” Well mum thought a lot of things were bad luck but she was mum, we didn’t argue.
Some of her superstitions were:
- breaking mirrors – seven years bad luck unless you broke a match straight away
- walking under a ladder is bad luck – well that makes sense, something could fall on your head or you might dislodge it (bad luck for the person on the ladder)
- spilling salt is unlucky-you are supposed to throw some over your shoulder if you do that. I can never remember which shoulder though so I do both.
- black cats are unlucky – I love black cats and the worst bad luck I’ve had with them is that mine died way too young.
- peacock feathers in the house are unlucky – I never found out why this is unlucky, maybe they give you the “evil eye”? Some further research required here I think.
- Putting new shoes on the table is unlucky – Don’t know where this one came from but bet it was invented by somebody’s mother.
- Opening an umbrella indoors is unlucky – I don’t know where this one came from either. It’s certainly bad luck to be standing too close to someone opening one. You can get poked in the eye.
I don’t know if I really believe all these things myself but from habit I do what mum did – except the one about cats. I’d have another black cat any time.
I wondered about origin of the “no blossoms in the house” myth and googled it just now. I found that it was pretty widespread amongst my mother’s and grandmother’s generations. A lot of superstitions involve particular plants one of the main offenders being hawthorn or as it’s sometimes called in England, may blossom.
“Common hawthorn“. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.
This has just reminded me that two relatives in mum’s family were called May and Blossom.
Mauve lilac came in for a lot of mentions too and one superstition that I had never heard of was about having red and white flowers in the same vase. Supposedly they signify blood and bandages. I don’t know if mum had heard of that one as I am sure we did that many times when we had red and white roses growing. I also know that mum was not superstitious about honeysuckle because she loved perfumed plants and would often bring it in.
Plant Lore is a website that collects folklore about this sort of thing and it has some interesting information on it. Most of the responders to their “Unlucky Plants” survey seem to be like me, warned off by older family members with no real explanation given. “Just don’t do it. Because I say so!”
One writer, a former nurse said that she’d been told not to put red and white flowers together on pain of dismissal. Even in the 1960s this seems a remarkably superstitious attitude and a harsh penalty. Although this is an English site I’m sure that there is a lot of folklore about plants from other countries too.

As far as I know it’s not unlucky to post pictures of blossoms on your website so here are a couple more pictures of flowering trees. Will I be cutting some of my pretty blossoms to bring indoors? Probably not.

Links:
TOP TEN AUSTRALIAN FLOWERING TREES
http://everything2.com/title/bad+luck

[…] always seems to get a lot of traffic. It must be pretty popular with other people. It is called “Superstition-Unlucky Plants”. I wrote it last spring when I was admiring all the blossoms on the trees. It started me thinking […]
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[…] I ended up doing some reading about plant related superstitions and wrote a post about it entitled “Superstition – Unlucky Plants” . […]
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Did we have yhe same mother!!! Ive just chuckled all the way through this as my mother was exactly the same
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Well I can say we definitely didn’t 🙂 but I think those beliefs were very common in mum’s generation, she was born in 1921 but if you asked why you could never get a better explanation that “It’s bad luck.”
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[…] state and want everyone to know how beautiful it is. The all-time favourite post for readers is “Superstition: Unlucky Plants” which still gets views. I rerun it every year or so. I don’t know what it is about that […]
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Oh my goodness – those mothers were all the same lol I enjoyed reading this so much – I had forgotten about some of those superstitions!
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I think it must have been our entire generation’s mothers who were like this.
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Black cats are not unlucky unless they cross your path. Mum said that white cats were unlucky and that was why she never wanted one. They did have one once but I forget where they were living. Was it Julianna? Some of these superstitions are just common sense things. If you break the mirror you will cut your hand on the glass. The cat can trip you over. You will get a pot of paint on your head, opening an umbrella will knock stuff over and break it or you could damage the umbrella. Mum used to go mad at me for doing any of these things so matchsticks had to be broken and thrown over the left shoulder. I don’t think it was salt. Waste of a matchstick. She went crook when I put a box containing my new shoes on the table when I was ten. I honestly was just glad to put them down after a bloody long walk from the Elizabeth Town Shopping Centre. It was a bloody long way when you had shopping to carry. Mum broke three mirrors on the ship coming over giving us 21 years bad luck according to her and then the big hall mirror got broken adding the the tally. The worst bit of luck about that was we had bugger all mirrors left and the big one was in a beautiful wooden frame and got chucked out.
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I was sure it was salt you were supposed to throw over your shoulder, maybe that was for something else but I know that breaking a match was also supposed to counteract bad luck.
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[…] luck and that we should never walk under a ladder or bring blossoms into the house. I have written posts about superstitions in the past which have received a lot of views so I know we’re not alone in growing up with […]
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