The Yule log feller
The Yule log is specialized to satisfy the demand of cooking in Medieval Christmas. However, to fall the pine is never an easy job to take.
Medieval Christmas was a weird mixture of Christianity and Pagan customs. Along with the boar's head no Christmas feast was complete without the giant Yule Log. If you've ever enjoyed a slice of chocolate Yule Log, you may be surprised that it was originally a fertility symbol from the old Viking feast of Yula.
The Yule Log had to burn throughout 12 days of feasting, so they needed the biggest tree in the forest. This meant there was a worst job attached. The Yule Log feller had to set off in the harshest mid-winter weather to take on his toughest challenge of the year.
"Which one’s out, Andy? "
"I think this one here. What, we drop it that way, (Yeah.)that it'll be easy…easy to drag out. One ax, one tree."
"Me?"
"Yeah."
"Oh, there're about 7 of these guys."
"Yeah, but we...we've all done it before, so... here you go."
This is hard work with 9th century technology.
"Andy(yeah?), I manage to get a lot bark off."
"It's a start, I suppose."
After half an hour, my initial enthusiasm had melted away in a large pool of sweat. And this was pine. With oak or ash, your Yule Log could be twice as thick as this weighing several tons.
"Yes, oh, look at that. Excellent, oh what a satisfying feeling!"
Even once the tree's down, there's more hard slog trimming scores of branches. Fortunately this time my fellow Vikings joined in. Then the entire bulk of the Yule Log has to be dragged slowly home.
At Yula time, it was the death of the old year, and a new year was going to be born and that's the reason you need fertility, so you went out into forest and you found the largest log you could see, the largest tree, and you cut it down.
So the log itself is a fertility symbol.
Yeah, yes a fertility symbol , yeah, and it needed to be green, because it should contain the juice of nature. During Yula time, you needed to drink. You drank to Odin(v), you drank to Vrai(v) and you drank to Nyor(v) which also was a fertility guardian, and you were dependent upon these gods to get a good harvest for the next year.
Andy, what do you think the blokes were doing?
These guys have been up since first light, they've worked all day, they have probably not eaten, hardly anything. So now it's just, it's food and beer and warm.
It's just like X‘mas(Christmas) nowadays, isn't it?
Yeah, it's exactly the same, I mean, it's just, this is the place to be. It's as simple as that, especially after the day they would be out of it...
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Yula n.=Yule 圣誕節(jié),或圣誕季節(jié)
For modern Witches, Yule (from the Anglo-Saxon (盎格魯-撒克遜) 'Yula', meaning 'wheel' of the year) is usually celebrated on the actual Winter Solstice (冬至), which may vary by a few days, though it usually occurs on or around December 21st. It is a Lesser Sabbat(Sabbath 安息日)or Lower Holiday in the modern Pagan calendar, one of the four quarter-days of the year, but a very important one.
drag out v 把…拖出來(lái)
Odinn. (北歐神話)奧丁神(司藝術(shù)、文化、戰(zhàn)爭(zhēng)、死者等之神)
Vrai adj & n(法語(yǔ))真實(shí)的,此處也應(yīng)指保佑豐產(chǎn)的神
warm n. 保暖物