The energy of the milkwood tree brings a deep sense of connection and belonging. This is a nurturing and supportive tree and this essence may balance feelings of insecurity and lack of grounding. Milkwood essence may be helpful for nightmares and fears of the unknown. This essence may be useful for adjusting to changes in the family structure brought about through loss or divorce. The energy of the milkwood tree can assist us with feeling at home in the world - it connects you with your personal power, and may remind us on a cellular level that we are all one family - each of us loved and needed and cared for.
Corresponding Chakra & Colour: Root Chakra at the base of the spine - the colour is red.
Use of Milkwood in Energetic Space Clearing: to introduce or to re-establish a sense of sanctity and to anchor the spiritual aspect. Steadies and firms up energy; embodies energy of the wood element; provides a "container" to anchor energy; clears away dross; connects different kingdoms.
Feed back on the Milkwood essence:
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The milkwood essence has been amazing - it has certainly helped me to shift a very important issue of grounding - to do mainly with trust - and it has allowed me to get in touch with a part of myself which has been incredible. A lot of fear came up which obviously was very deeply seated. | |
| Thank you so much and I must commend you on the amazing work that you are doing. - Gretha, Quantum Healer | ||
The milkwood essence is very helpful. I often wake in the early hours of the morning with a panicky, claustrophobic feeling. If I take the essence before I go to bed, I have found that I do not have this experience.
- Stanley, Psychologist
The Milkwood Essence cleared the pain in my hip that was referring to the lower groin area and down my leg. It was gone within a day.
- Monica, Domestic Worker
(Milkwood bark was traditionally used for broken bones - so the essence is helpful here - this essence is very much to do with underlying structure and form; stability and grounding.)
The Milkwood Tree in Nature
Milkwoods are hardy, slow-growing trees with deep-green, leathery leaves and rough grayish-brown bark. Rarely are they found with a straight trunk. Instead their gnarled, sprawling branches create sheltering thickets that are home to a variety of wild life. By creating dense, low-crowing stands, milkwoods are one of the few trees able to withstand the salt-laden winds that batter South Africa´s southern coastline. Although also occurring inland, milkwoods are found mainly along the coast from the Cape Peninsula to northern Zululand. In days gone by, the site of a farmyard was often determined by the presence of a milkwood. Their thick, umbrella-shaped crowns created a perfect ‘roof’ for the meat chests that pre-dated refrigerators. Amazingly, all the milkwood trees at Platbos are genetically the same tree. Here they do not propagate themselves by seed dispersal - instead, when a milkwood grows old and falls over, a "new" tree sprouts from the fallen trunk. It is as though one enormous, ancient tree is slowly walking through the forest!
The delicate, pale-golden flowers of the milkwood are borne in clusters along the ends of the branches and they have an unusual sour-smell. The flowers are followed by juicy, dark magenta-coloured fruit that are enjoyed by birds and baboons. Once peeled of their outer skin, they have a grape-like taste. The milky latex, which gives the tree its common name, makes the leaves and the bark unpalatable to grazing animals. A superficial scratch to the bark reveals a bright red under surface - the colour of fresh blood. The wood is very hard, heavy and strong. In the past, it was used for ship building, bridges, mills and ploughs. It is very durable even when wet and it shrinks little with drying.
Traditionally the milkwood has a number of medicinal uses: the roots have been used to aid the healing of fractured bones and an infusion of the bark is said to dispel nightmares.
At Platbos there is a great forest elder whose trunk is estimated to be over 1000 years of age.
There are four milkwood trees in South Africa that have been awarded National Monument status and these are their stories:
The Post Office Tree of Mossel Bay
In 1500 a letter describing the unfortunate drowning at sea of Bartholomew Diaz, the famous explorer, was placed in a shoe by Portuguese sailors and tied to this milkwood tree. It was found over a year later by the man to whom it was addressed, Commander Joao Nova.
The Treaty Tree, Woodstock, Cape Town
It was here, in 1806 that the commander of local defenses formally handed over the Cape to the British following the Battle of Blaauwberg.
The Fingo Milkwood Tree, near Peddie, Eastern Cape
The Fingo people pledged their loyalty to God and the British king under this tree in 1835.
Milkwood at Rhenosterfontein Farm, near Bredasdorp
This milkwood has been awarded National Monument status in recognition of its size and age: the trunk has a girth of over 3 meters and the crown a spread of over 20 meters.
Milkwoods are protected in South African and may not be cut without a permit.
African Tree Essences:
How to order:
Step 1:
Download and complete an order form. Note that this is not an invoice. An invoice is emailed to you for your approval.
Step 2:
Email (info@platbos.co.za) or fax (0865178149) the order form.
Step 3:
An invoice will be emailed to you for your approval.
Step 4:
Bank transfer: Banking details will be on the invoice. Use the invoice number as the reference and email or fax proof of payment to 0865178149.
Step 5:
On receipt of your payment goods will be posted by your chosen method and, if applicable, you will receive the parcel tracking number.




