Folklore and Superstitions in Appalachia

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  • čas přidán 13. 01. 2021
  • I'm sharing folklore and superstitions in this video. Some I grew up hearing others I've only read or heard about.
    Please subscribe to this channel and help me Celebrate Appalachia!
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    #Appalachia #Superstitions #Folklore

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @evermore4487
    @evermore4487 Před 3 lety +423

    I was always taught to pull over for a funeral procession and turn the radio off too.
    They used to teach that in driver's education in high school, but no more.
    When my Mother passed, the electric workers on the side of the road stopped working and placed their hard hats over their 💕... I'll never forget that moment of great kindness.

    • @Tropicalpisces
      @Tropicalpisces Před 3 lety +17

      You always let the funeral procession pass. 👏👏
      Also hold your breath as you pass a graveyard.

    • @Ruth78620
      @Ruth78620 Před 2 lety +27

      I'm live in Scotland and people mostly pull over for a funeral procession. If we're walking and see a funeral procession coming we stop and bow our heads until it's passed.

    • @jennil7797
      @jennil7797 Před 2 lety +17

      @@Ruth78620 I grew up in Yorkshire and we were taught to do the same. When I moved to London, people seemed so rude in the way they failed to show respect to the dead and for their grieving family. Now, I live in mid Wales and the police will stop the traffic in small towns to allow a funeral procession to stay in convoy.

    • @Ruth78620
      @Ruth78620 Před 2 lety +19

      @@jennil7797 just as the way it should be. It takes 2 minutes out your day to show someone and their family respect.

    • @susannahkreher7270
      @susannahkreher7270 Před 2 lety +3

      😔

  • @oldgoat1890
    @oldgoat1890 Před 3 lety +136

    When hunting: If you get something always leave the "Woods" something in return. An apple, some of your lunch on a log, tobacco, salt something the forest creatures will eat. If not the "Woods" will become angry because you do nothing but take and your luck will turn bad when hunting. Foolish, but I still do it.

    • @mrs.martin3158
      @mrs.martin3158 Před 2 lety +18

      That makes sense. When we go berry picking, I've taught my girls to only pick every 3rd one. (2 for the forest animals to eat, 1 for us.)

    • @gabrielwatson7721
      @gabrielwatson7721 Před 2 lety +11

      Old Goat, I don't think that's foolish at all. It's good to give back to nature. If more folks had that mindset, this old world would be so much better off.

    • @williambell3893
      @williambell3893 Před 2 lety +10

      it's most certainly not foolish at all. the woods are to be respected to the fullest. if you pay attention to it, it'll let you know if it wants you there or not.

    • @Blueyes512
      @Blueyes512 Před 2 lety +2

      Feed the Sasquatch…but be careful. If you stop, that makes ‘em mad.

    • @vigbjorncaleb5438
      @vigbjorncaleb5438 Před rokem +1

      Not foolish at all when nature gifts you something always give back there’s a lot of spirits in these old mountains

  • @Wainwright-db7iz
    @Wainwright-db7iz Před 2 lety +101

    A superstition that my Granny always abided by was this: When you are waving goodbye to a loved one that is departing from your home via their car or just walking away...never watch them go completely out of your sight, avert your eyes, or you'll never see that loved one again. I am not superstitious at all, but I do this in remembrance of my beloved Granny.

    • @highlandergunn9240
      @highlandergunn9240 Před rokem +4

      I'm from north west Alabama and I've heard this but it didn't have to be a vehicle, just if a loved one was departing in any way. Never watch them disappear. I believe that this is a Scottish/Irish superstition.
      I still do it too ☺ I even told my son, just to keep the belief alive ☺

    • @smc130
      @smc130 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Yes, I have heard that one!

    • @madonnafortin7757
      @madonnafortin7757 Před 5 měsíci

      As a child I grew up doing this in my family too. I’m a flight attendant now and I’m always away from home. After visiting with friends or family, I make sure to never look back at them when we part ways in hopes that I’ll get to see them again. 🥹

  • @lesliebrickey8357
    @lesliebrickey8357 Před rokem +29

    My father's side of the family is from Coolidge Georgia. When my grandmother's casket was brought back to Coolidge for burial everyone on that road pulled over and got out of their cars. The men took off their hats and folks also placed their hands over their hearts. How sweet is that!

    • @GeorgiaPeach2024
      @GeorgiaPeach2024 Před rokem +1

      I live in south Georgia and, yes, we are taught (even now) to pull off the road when a funeral procession passes. You say a prayer for the loved ones while you sit and wait. We also were taught, when a firetruck or ambulance passes with lights and sirens, to say a prayer for the person and family they are going to help and also for the safety of the firefighters and EMTs.

  • @dixiebullman7747
    @dixiebullman7747 Před 3 lety +246

    I forgot about the pulling over for a funeral!! Yes we do that tooo!! When my sister passed..as we passed the co-op the men working stopped and took off their caps..such a show of Respect Love living in the South

    • @grannymary6210
      @grannymary6210 Před 3 lety +12

      My mom and Dad were originally from Ireland,god rest them,if they seen a funeral and if it was safe to do so,they'd pull in and bless them selves. If not, drive real slow past the hearse and again bless themselves. I do that now...but here in the UK it doesn't happen that much...
      We were also taught if we passed a church to bless our selves 🙏 which I do. And as a young girl growing up in Manchester up north,if an ambulance passed we'd all say,touch your collar, touch your knee,pray to God it's never for me....I don't say that as much now but it does come to my head every now and then if I hear or see an ambulance...it's strange how things from your childhood still come back to you....thanks for all the little sayings.

    • @sunflowerlady1810
      @sunflowerlady1810 Před 3 lety +11

      Still do that in South East KY

    • @WhispersFromTheDark
      @WhispersFromTheDark Před 3 lety +17

      In north Texas we've always pulled over to the side of the road. And occasionally, I've seen people actually get out and stand at attention with their hats in their hands. This actual scene brought me to tears once, when a dear old Friend died. We were leaving the funeral and enroute to the cemetery and there were several cars who pulled off to the side of the road and a few were standing beside their cars at attention, showing their respect. One of them was a semi truck and the driver was standing beside his cab. I broke into tears because my friend had been a truck driver for many years, and there was no way that dear sweet driver could have known that.

    • @mlk4kna
      @mlk4kna Před 3 lety +10

      Still done in the Arkansas Ozarks.

    • @dwightvol473
      @dwightvol473 Před 3 lety +12

      It wasn't for a long time, but that's a law here in Tennessee now.

  • @warrenspeace7453
    @warrenspeace7453 Před 3 lety +132

    If you spill salt, you’re supposed to sprinkle a little over your left shoulder to keep the devil away.

    • @kennethhacker1341
      @kennethhacker1341 Před 2 lety +2

      My mom would say....if your outta salt your outta money...lol

    • @mircat28
      @mircat28 Před 2 lety +3

      My mom said you threw salt over your left shoulder to stop bad luck if you spill salt.

    • @PrettySweetPea
      @PrettySweetPea Před 2 lety +4

      @@kennethhacker1341 the only reason I KEEP my uniodized salt. I bought by accident one time and pushed it to the back. That's my $$ salt lol

    • @sue3119
      @sue3119 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mircat28 yep my mum does that as well lol

    • @kem1691
      @kem1691 Před 2 lety +2

      I was just searching the comments to see if anyone mentioned this one!

  • @dgrubb67526
    @dgrubb67526 Před 2 lety +12

    In our family. Our great grandmother was hanging clothes when a hugh flock of turtle doves flew down stream along the path the river took. Taking this as a omen, she gathered up her kids (3) and headed for higher ground when she tired out she turned around just in time to see a wall of water take the house. Only thing they found was a trunk. TO THIS DAY no member of our family (now four generations) are allowed to hunt doves. Nervious as a snake in a hog pen.

  • @blondeleviathan4649
    @blondeleviathan4649 Před 2 lety +27

    My great grandmother was such a strong woman , who birthed 18 children. Lived to see most of them pass. She was a granny witch, is what she was always called . Great granny witch of Appalachia. She was a healer and was able to make warts disappear by rubbing them , and among many other miraculous things she could do. Wish I could have got to know her longer than 6 years of my life .

    • @Jencifer13
      @Jencifer13 Před rokem +3

      My granny had a cure for warts: Cut a cross (+) in the wart; cut a super-ripe white onion in half and cut a cross in one of the halves; drip the juice of the cut onion onto the wart; then bury the onion half under a downspout; after the next rain, the wart will begin to disappear. This always worked for my cousin who got warts on his fingers.

  • @lanamoler1082
    @lanamoler1082 Před 3 lety +28

    In Kansas we pull over to the right side of the road and turn on our lights as soon as we see the beginning of a funeral procession!

  • @mattmoose1
    @mattmoose1 Před 3 lety +131

    Gramps would blow pipe smoke in your ear for earaches

    • @cynthiaarrowsmith5709
      @cynthiaarrowsmith5709 Před 3 lety +3

      Yess

    • @yvonnemariane2265
      @yvonnemariane2265 Před 3 lety +7

      now even doctors recommend warm olive oil drops --- the warmth!

    • @MissMarie1377
      @MissMarie1377 Před 3 lety +5

      I had an aunt do that to me one year at Christmas (my dads older sister). it was one of those brown cigarette things this was in the early/mid 80’s and my mom was livid. My ear hurt so bad, I was willing to do anything. She was so angry but I didn’t mind. Now I think it’s pretty neat after watching this

    • @naomitracy5684
      @naomitracy5684 Před 3 lety +2

      my gramps poured beer and salt on the leaches i got in the lake 😂 worked like a charm 👍

    • @winnie8592
      @winnie8592 Před 3 lety +2

      Candles

  • @jochildress5003
    @jochildress5003 Před 2 lety +10

    My mom always made people leave by the same door. She also wouldn’t let anyone open an umbrella indoors. She took these very seriously. She was born in 1930 in Chicago, but her mother came up in Appalachia (West Virginia). She also wouldn’t let me tell my dreams before breakfast. I always thought that was just a way to get me to eat my breakfast.

  • @bradm.3775
    @bradm.3775 Před rokem +6

    I believe that Folklore is Sacred,and should be preserved and honored....I have visited Appalachia it is very Magical

  • @carrienicholas6868
    @carrienicholas6868 Před 3 lety +211

    I always heard If the good lord willing and the creek don't rise

    • @friedhelmvandal1960
      @friedhelmvandal1960 Před 3 lety +24

      The original person to say that one was Col. Benjamin Hawkins of North Carolina, a Continental Congress senator and general superintendent of Indian Affairs. He said it to someone and people started using it like that. He was originally referring to the Creek Tribe of indians, but even I use it to refer to an actual creek haha

    • @carrienicholas6868
      @carrienicholas6868 Před 3 lety +5

      @@friedhelmvandal1960 awesome thank you for that info..

    • @grannymary6210
      @grannymary6210 Před 3 lety +5

      @@carrienicholas6868 I did hear growing up about death comes in 3, well that happened to our family last year 🙏. My dear dad past away on 19 April 2020 divine mercy Sunday,on 27 june2020 my nephew passed away and on the 15 September 2020 my other nephew's wife passed away. It was a terrible year and god forbid we have another one like it.

    • @carrienicholas6868
      @carrienicholas6868 Před 3 lety +1

      @@grannymary6210 OH NO that is horrible.. I have never had it happen in my family but with friends it always does...

    • @rhondabutler4172
      @rhondabutler4172 Před 3 lety +5

      Tipper...I love your channel!! Brings back so many memories of my grandparents that I adored in NE Oklahoma. I have a few sayings that I wonder if you’ve heard. Someone’s walking around with their “dobber down”. Meaning they’re feeling low or bad. Someone is worn “slap out”. They’re just tired. Someone is “faunching”. Meaning they are having a hissy fit. Thanks for the good times listening to you and your stories!!💕

  • @sameoldmphymel
    @sameoldmphymel Před 3 lety +220

    The other similarity between Cajun and Appalachian folk is we both existed in isolation longer than the rest of the country. Both resilient and resourceful and value our histories. We both even have our own style of music

    • @lindamaemullins5151
      @lindamaemullins5151 Před 3 lety +4

      Yep ❤️

    • @rosebudwilson8200
      @rosebudwilson8200 Před 3 lety +11

      My Cajun grandma said never take a flower from a funeral or a grave, that is stealing from the dead and you will forever have bad luck

    • @delorestaylor8114
      @delorestaylor8114 Před 3 lety +2

      Mostly stringed instrument 🎻

    • @pattytheseeker8902
      @pattytheseeker8902 Před 3 lety +3

      My grandmother on my my mama's side was Cajun, everybody else was came from Appalachia.

    • @sameoldmphymel
      @sameoldmphymel Před 3 lety +5

      @@pattytheseeker8902 then you definitely came from good stock!

  • @caroleboren1963
    @caroleboren1963 Před rokem +9

    My grandma always said if dogs howled it meant bad luck or someone was going to die. The night she died, we heard dogs howling and she had a weird look on her face and said someone is going to die in town tonight...gave me goosebumps and I've never forgotten that. Shortly before my Dad died about 6 months ago, a bird repeatedly flew into my bedroom window like it was trying to get in. He died less than 48 hours later. I somehow knew it was a warning. I have heard death comes in 3's or 5's. I have heard so many of these.

  • @theGothicTopic
    @theGothicTopic Před 2 lety +10

    Beautiful video.. as a child in Newfoundland Canada we heard many of these as well.. Appalachia, like Newfoundland, was where a lot of people from Europe settled and they brought a lot of their folk remedies and sayings with them when they came.. a hint of magic in every one

  • @CMgal2001
    @CMgal2001 Před 3 lety +218

    Never close a pocket knife someone else has opened. Bad luck.

    • @Moonshinedave1
      @Moonshinedave1 Před 3 lety +19

      I will refuse to accept my knife back unless it's in the same condition as I gave it to the person ( open or closed)

    • @iersejounge
      @iersejounge Před 3 lety +16

      Or never accept a present of a knife or you'll cit the relationship (ireland)

    • @LZH13067
      @LZH13067 Před 3 lety +17

      @@iersejounge you include a penny with the gift of a knife is what I always heard.

    • @nomdeplume2213
      @nomdeplume2213 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes!!

    • @nomdeplume2213
      @nomdeplume2213 Před 3 lety +6

      @@iersejounge rly?? Thats amazing! Ive never heard it but i like it

  • @rtk3543
    @rtk3543 Před 3 lety +141

    I like this woman she has a good heart.

  • @frankmills1149
    @frankmills1149 Před 9 měsíci +2

    So fascinated by Appalachian culture. Love how you tell the stories of these old sayings. So charming.

  • @thesmokedeck
    @thesmokedeck Před 2 lety +12

    I can’t call my parents without being asked “ were your ears burning “. Which means they were talking about me or the wife and kids. Found your channel today and I am glad I did ma’am.

  • @wendibernhardt9190
    @wendibernhardt9190 Před 3 lety +14

    My aunt always told me to be sure to go back out the same door you came in when you go into any building. I always believe what she told me. She lived to be 90 years old had a stroke and could still remember all her nieces and nephews birthdays. I really miss her calling me on my birthday. RIP

  • @jenniferstomberger3920
    @jenniferstomberger3920 Před 3 lety +113

    When my Nanny 💗 passed we had a bit of a drive from the funeral home to her burial site. My husband had never seen traffic pull over for a funeral procession. His mind was blown when all of the oncoming and approached traffic did so, even on a divided 4 lane highway.
    Maybe, some of the vehicles recognized who's procession it was, but most would not have. Respect is a demonstration. We ALL have a journey here which begins and ends.
    Thank you for sharing. You always spark memories!

    • @Cong471
      @Cong471 Před 3 lety +10

      I know what you are talking about. People where I grew p still do that for funeral processions. It is just what you do. Dennis Morgan

    • @jenniferstomberger3920
      @jenniferstomberger3920 Před 3 lety +4

      @@georgelegault3985 Thank you for this insight!

    • @Catmom404
      @Catmom404 Před 3 lety +11

      I’m always blown away when people DON’T pull over…

    • @comestayawhilewithl5696
      @comestayawhilewithl5696 Před 2 lety +3

      @@georgelegault3985 maybe in your state. But not in mine. It's a show of respect where I live.

    • @mrs.martin3158
      @mrs.martin3158 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Catmom404 So am I.

  • @camille9253
    @camille9253 Před 2 lety +22

    I wish people did that for funeral processions up here. People will literally get into the procession or cut them off because they are so impatient. People in the South are so much nicer! I love visiting the South and greatly respect their culture.

  • @ethanhunter1521
    @ethanhunter1521 Před rokem +3

    I have a carving by the late John Heatwole, heard him give a lecture on Appalachian witches. He recounted a spooky story about a young woman hiking through the forest, hearing her name being called by a disembodied voice. Creepy stuff. Whooeee! Still gives me the shivers!

  • @brianmcdaid3178
    @brianmcdaid3178 Před 3 lety +33

    "If your feet itch you're going to walk on strange ground." I think I can see where the term "Itchy feet" for one who likes to travel may have come from.

  • @Octavia2016
    @Octavia2016 Před 3 lety +89

    I'm Canadian & my parents are from Austria. My mom used to say that if a bird flew into your house it meant death. She also said that if all cows were laying down in the field it meant it would rain soon.

  • @beautifulthornbirds
    @beautifulthornbirds Před 3 lety +19

    I was born and raised in eastern Virginia and have heard many of these sayings. One I remember was that if a snapping turtle got ahold of you it wouldnt let go until a thunderstorm came. My granddaddy got bit once by the pantsleg and my grandma had to finally cut the pantsleg off. I watched this happen right in our yard (we lived close to a creek). I dont remember what happened to the turtle but knowing grandaddy he most likely took it back to the creek and let it go. I think about that often. All my grandparents and parents are gone on and I miss them and glad to have memories and pictures to keep me company. Thanks so much for all the work you do and share to keep the Appalachian ways alive.💖

  • @Genevathistime
    @Genevathistime Před rokem +12

    This channel is spectacular! Y'all put so much work into these videos and we deeply appreciate it! I was born in NC but left soon after birth. So, it's really interesting to see all of this. Thank you!

  • @kathymclain2632
    @kathymclain2632 Před 3 lety +154

    I’ve seen and heard death comes in three’s for all my adult life. As a nurse, it really has happened and it’s a saying with nurses.

    • @sunflowerlady1810
      @sunflowerlady1810 Před 3 lety +8

      That has always, always happened in our family.

    • @blaze3884
      @blaze3884 Před 3 lety +7

      Kathy, I also have known death to come in three's. After the first one, I start dreading what I know will come.

    • @daisydriver5877
      @daisydriver5877 Před 3 lety +4

      Forever true...wish it tw'ern't but t'is true!
      (just another ol' nurse)

    • @donnapoolejackofalltrades7827
      @donnapoolejackofalltrades7827 Před 3 lety +8

      Seem like babies come in three too .

    • @sirricwebb8287
      @sirricwebb8287 Před 3 lety +8

      My mommy was one of those folks. Nurses have a gift.

  • @sherimcneil3079
    @sherimcneil3079 Před 3 lety +75

    My Granny, born in 1902 or 1903 - she never knew for sure, had a saying for everything. The one that always made us laugh was if your nose itches, somebody's coming with a hole in their britches. If I had an easier keyboard I could list a big mess of her sayings. I loved her so much and my kids and grand kids know most of her songs, stories, rhymes and sayings! Thank you for sharing these videos and give your Granny a hug for me.

    • @imgoldenspyder9409
      @imgoldenspyder9409 Před 3 lety +6

      My gramma used to say, If your nose itches, you're going to kiss a fool. If your ear is ringing, pinch that ear hard, someone's gossiping about you & they'll bite their tongue. If your right hand itches, you're going to shake hands with a stranger. If your left hand itches, you're going to receive money. My gramma always said knock on wood--in Roman times they said, Touch wood--so it's an old saying.

    • @wiseelf
      @wiseelf Před 3 lety +1

      My father was born in 1902 ,his father was born 50 yrs earlier and I was born in 1955 in my family history is very clear .word of mouth so to say. And no I wasn't on Alfred's wiseelf council.

    • @stacey3637
      @stacey3637 Před 3 lety +5

      My Great Grandma was born around 1905 & she also used the "hole in their britches" saying😄😁 Texas Panhandle.

    • @charmainetate6274
      @charmainetate6274 Před 2 lety +2

      My grandma said if you scratched your nose, it means you are gonna kiss a fool!

    • @glendagrant9042
      @glendagrant9042 Před 2 lety +2

      My granny said nose itches someone coming with a hole in their britches. My Ganny often said when trying to think of something Let me see see see said the blindman, not PC now but this was 60 years ago.. Rather than just saying let me see.. I can hear it now. I catch myself saying it in my mind when thinking. I am 71 and I miss her everyday. We stop for funerals. Always have since I can remember. I love that mustard color on the wall. My 1930s kitchen is that color.

  • @will2472
    @will2472 Před 2 lety +20

    This was awesome! I grew up in Alabama, but many of my ancestors settled in Appalachia at one time or another. I have heard most of these before. My paternal Grandmother (born in 1906), used to have a few of her own that I am sure were passed down. You never wash on New Years day, or someone will die. Sprinkle salt in front of the doorway and whoever is against you cannot enter the house. There are so many. Her grandmother was 1/2 Cherokee from the North Georgia mountains. I am superstitious myself, although I don't believe all of them. I heard one time that seeing an owl during the day is a sign of death... I saw one sitting on the railroad tracks one time, the first time I had ever seen this. My Dad died 3 days later. My back yard was also filled with crows. About a week after he passed, I looked out my window to see red cardinals everywhere. It was amazing and shocking at the same time. That's why I believe.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you for sharing those and your experiences!!

    • @BJH862
      @BJH862 Před 2 lety +4

      In my area a much loved teenager was lost in an auto accident. Her funeral and visitation was in our high school gym. People were lined up waiting to get in to visitation a one person reported a Cardinal flew over the line, threw the outside doors and threw the gym doors and went toward the casket. It sort of gave me chills.

    • @dickymiller7196
      @dickymiller7196 Před 2 lety

      If you iron on New Year days means your iron someone in, plus I always heard if your see a Cardinal in your yard it’s supposed to mean a loved one who passed away is stopping by to check on you!

    • @billblaydes6061
      @billblaydes6061 Před rokem

      My great aunt said " Mammie always said green grass at Christmas will mean the cemetery will be full in January" and change of seasons bring on "pneumonie"

  • @GromMolotok
    @GromMolotok Před rokem +2

    We just moved to Appalachia. Though I did have family in the area in the 1800s, I'm from a branch that didn't stay. What a joy to find these videos. Thank you!

  • @califtom
    @califtom Před 3 lety +67

    What makes this folklore so fascinating is there are deep philosophical and literal truths embedded within almost all of these superstitions. That's why they have withstood the test of time. Please don't ever let them go.

    • @roddmatsui3554
      @roddmatsui3554 Před 3 lety +3

      Itself, a very thought-provoking statement. Thank you.

    • @Catmom404
      @Catmom404 Před 3 lety +3

      Some are to keep kids in line. ❤️

    • @agirlisnoone5953
      @agirlisnoone5953 Před 2 lety +1

      Mmmm I don't know abou some of them having truths embedded but some do for sure. I wouldn't reccomend someone to actually believe in them or follow the remedies though. Some are dangerous and others are just silly.

  • @og4409
    @og4409 Před 3 lety +63

    Every New Year’s Day we would have black eyed peas, cabbage (usually sauerkraut) and pork. My parents said it would bring you a good year. Still have it every year.

    • @Vonrak
      @Vonrak Před 2 lety +8

      Black eyed peas and collard greens😋

    • @dentedcokecan
      @dentedcokecan Před 2 lety +8

      In Wva we always had cabbage. Whwn i married my husband and moved to South Alabama I HAD to make black eye peas and put a dime in it. So its been Blk eye peas and cabbage every yr for my family

    • @whoopsydaisy6389
      @whoopsydaisy6389 Před 2 lety +5

      We call it Hoppin John but it's rice instead of cabbage and some kind of pork.

    • @lceec7012
      @lceec7012 Před 2 lety +2

      We do black eyed peas and collard greens as well. The collard green symbolize cash money and the peas are coins. So eat this meal and supposed to have wealth for the year. We never got rich but always had food on the table.

  • @disizbilly
    @disizbilly Před 2 lety +2

    Billy from east TN here and I'd say I've heard and/or done about 75% of the superstitions you talk about in this video. Not sure if this is a superstition or what but in my family we never leave another without saying "I love you". Thanks for keeping the folk lore alive, God Bless Y'all

  • @carolynjw1955
    @carolynjw1955 Před 2 lety +8

    Love these. I've heard a few.
    Broom falls, company is coming, if right hand itches, you're going to meet someone new, left hand itches, You're coming into some money. Ears burning, someone is talking about you. Death comes in 3's. I've actually experienced that one. / I enjoy your channel, thank you for sharing all that you do. ❤

  • @naomitracy5684
    @naomitracy5684 Před 3 lety +32

    we crossed the windshield for black cats and Uncle Gibby said if your palms itch you will be getting money soon if your ears was burning someone was talking bout ya and if we crossed our eyes he would say our faces would stick like that forever so we better quit ! 😂😂❤️

    • @J.gwenhwyfar
      @J.gwenhwyfar Před 3 lety +3

      Interesting that so, so, so many of these are also popular in the Anglophone Caribbean. I’ve heard many of these from my folks there. Thanks for sharing.

    • @roserollins9800
      @roserollins9800 Před 3 lety +1

      When your nose itches someone is coming to see you with holes in their britches

    • @camillastacey4674
      @camillastacey4674 Před 2 lety +1

      I know the palm itching one- I'm in the uk

  • @iscovidoveryet7828
    @iscovidoveryet7828 Před 3 lety +41

    6:22 "For a sore throat" I can remember, as kids, my Mum asking us to collect dried pine sap to boil down later for whenever one of us came down with sore itchy throats.
    She'd boil the sap to the point where all the "floaters" came to the top the the skim off, and set the rest to cool. Once warm/cool enough to drink, it tasted bad, and it worked.
    Sorry, that may not be Appalachian Folklore, but it proved to be good medicine passed down among by Native Inu elders or (the Montagnais) through to my Mum in the
    Northern Appalachians of Quebec.

  • @das3841
    @das3841 Před 2 lety +11

    All the way from South Africa, I love your series. Would love to visit one day. I had a Scots Grandmother and I must say that many Appalachian says are very familiar to me. In SA when its sunny and you see rain its called a "monkey's wedding", I think its unique to SA never heard it from others.

    • @johnnabuzby6103
      @johnnabuzby6103 Před 2 lety

      We say "the Devil's beating his wife" here in eastern North Carolina when it's sunny outside and raining as well.

  • @donnaj9964
    @donnaj9964 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Around here in Utah people always said that if a spider came indoors it was going to rain. For years, this one has helped me tell when the first big fall weather change was going to happen--I suppose they feel the changes in barometric pressure.

  • @ruby_in_the_sky_of_diamond9469

    “Never leave a rocking chair rocking” was one that I grew up with...because if you get up and leave it rocking, someone will die.
    That was a for real rule in my family and now that I’m married I get anxiety when my husband and his family leaves a rocking chair rocking when they get up from the chair. Haha

    • @deedebdoo
      @deedebdoo Před 2 lety

      Yep. And never look into a mirror in the dark. I truly believe that these are based on universal human experiences with the spirit world.

  • @sindywilson9830
    @sindywilson9830 Před 3 lety +71

    When I was little, most women couldn’t drive, so my mom and great aunt would walk to a neighbors house to have dinner and visit sometimes. The always ended up getting a cutting off of some house plant or yard flower. The two of them would tell the neighbor, “Well, we ain’t gonna thank you for these pretty flowers. “ Of course I asked my mom why they never said thank you. She said if you thank the person for the flowers that the flower would die.

    • @donnamays24
      @donnamays24 Před 3 lety +12

      I grew up hearing this from my Gram and my Mom...I find myself saying the same when someone gives me a plant or cutting. Blessings🙏🏻💖

    • @325aliceI
      @325aliceI Před 3 lety +17

      Well THAT explains it!!
      Note to self... Stop thanking people for flowers and cuttings.

    • @Chichilovee
      @Chichilovee Před 3 lety +6

      Yep! Forgot about this one

    • @bmphil3400
      @bmphil3400 Před 3 lety +6

      My grandmother never did learn to drive. My grandpa drove her everywhere.....

    • @Cong471
      @Cong471 Před 3 lety +4

      I have heard that also. If someone gives me a plant I never thank them and they understand why. Dennis Morgan

  • @ChadWoodNC-PiedmontSkyCams

    Dad always said to get rid of a wart, get 5 small stones from your back yard, rub each on the wart 5 times, place the stones in a dirty kitchen wash cloth and throw it in a Y in the road the wart will go away. Has worked for me so far!

  • @emjay594
    @emjay594 Před 2 lety +1

    I live in the northern part of Appalachia. I'm in Butler county, Pennsylvania. I'm smiling as I listen to you. I've been counting the fogs in August for long as I can remember. Red sky in the morning a sailors warning, red sky at night a sailor's delight was a family favorite too. Picture falling off the wall means death and bird flying in the house, and death comes in three's....all sayings I'm familiar with. I love your channel. Thank you for all the great videos!!!

  • @donnamays24
    @donnamays24 Před 3 lety +54

    As a child I remember that my grandmother would put a bible under my pillow when I had a bad dreams...she said it would make them go away. And it did...every time. Many of these tales and superstitions I have heard over the years. Blessings Tipper🙏🏻💖

    • @ahmoseh3718
      @ahmoseh3718 Před 3 lety +13

      I am going to try this, I've been plagued by bad & weird dreams for most of my life! 😣 I wake up like every 15 mins or so, and never feel rested. If it works I'll post an update 🙏

    • @donnamays24
      @donnamays24 Před 3 lety +10

      @@ahmoseh3718 as an adult I still do this if I have nightmares.... It always works for me. I pray it works for you too! Let me know if it helps next time you experience a bad dream...my Gram was always right. Blessings🙏🏻💖

    • @stacey3637
      @stacey3637 Před 3 lety +1

      My great grandma always told me not to fall asleep on my back because it would cause me to have nightmares and it almost always did. I remember as a young teenager asking my friends if they had nightmares when they slept on their back and they looked at me funny and laughed.

    • @minnieg.4835
      @minnieg.4835 Před 3 lety +4

      @@stacey3637 its true, I would always have suffocating or being strangled dreams if I slept on my back. These stopped when I did fasting and praying for a week.

    • @minnieg.4835
      @minnieg.4835 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ahmoseh3718 try fasting and praying as well.

  • @sandip.7968
    @sandip.7968 Před 3 lety +104

    My younger brother and I were afraid of loud thunder when we were children. But our mother cured us of that fear by telling us it was just the sound of angels bowling up in Heaven!

    • @Tropicalpisces
      @Tropicalpisces Před 3 lety +7

      My mom said it was God bowling as well. Steeerrrriiiiike!! 🎳

    • @melissaruiz7311
      @melissaruiz7311 Před 2 lety +8

      My grandma would say God was moving his furniture.

    • @jacquelynejohnson9127
      @jacquelynejohnson9127 Před 2 lety +7

      Mom did the same for us

    • @dentedcokecan
      @dentedcokecan Před 2 lety +4

      Yes ..i still think of that when it is a bad storm. And when it lightning they made a strike..someone told me it was angel's pulling a potato wagon..

    • @phyllissalcido1846
      @phyllissalcido1846 Před 2 lety +4

      I remember when there was thunder it bowling up in heaven.

  • @aprilteesdale3146
    @aprilteesdale3146 Před 2 lety +1

    We were always told to rub a silver nickel over the sty to cure it. We always clear the road when there is a funeral procession. We were also taught to paint your porch ceiling haint blue, so spirits won't be able to cross the threshold into your house. Lots of these are familiar to my area. I'm from Robeson County NC. Great video, I love your channel.

  • @rosanabeyer2272
    @rosanabeyer2272 Před 2 lety +8

    I was raised by my grandparents in Wilkes County, NC on their farm. I heard and learned almost everyone of the sayings you said, plus a few more colorful ones!! And, I especially taught my children about pull over for a funeral.pricession. We turned the radio off and made the sign if the cross for the person who had "passed on".

  • @lauriedavidson4953
    @lauriedavidson4953 Před 3 lety +77

    This woman and her beautiful, loving heart SUMS UP ALLLLL that is Appalachia. She reminds me so very much of my Mama and Granny, who are both from there, but have left this world to be with The Lord. Finding and subscribing to this channel has been a blessing to me.

  • @timforbes3524
    @timforbes3524 Před 3 lety +35

    My mother’s father was the caretaker at one of our cemeteries in Savannah, Ga. They lived in the cemetery in the caretakers house. My mother was conceived and born in that very house. She shared stories to us children from time to time. That saying about death comes in threes is so very true. Her daddy would say after they prepared a grave for a death but get ready for two more busy days. They dig graves with shovels back then. Even today death comes in threes.

  • @AnMuiren
    @AnMuiren Před 2 lety +2

    Hearing you share just pulls up these childhood memories inside me. Thank you much.

  • @sallystanley4526
    @sallystanley4526 Před 2 lety +1

    My dad always carried a buckeye in his pocket and a four leaf clover in his wallet, he also had a rabbit's foot. 🙂

  • @squeezie_b8895
    @squeezie_b8895 Před 3 lety +55

    Red birds are either our deceased loved ones returning to us, or a sign from our deceased loved ones

    • @kathybentley4190
      @kathybentley4190 Před 3 lety +6

      @Squeezie B, I think that might be Native American.

    • @wandastevens3183
      @wandastevens3183 Před 3 lety +5

      Red birds are our deceased loved ones paying us a visit...

    • @gnostic268
      @gnostic268 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kathybentley4190 Yes. I've heard that from my stepson. His mother is Cherokee from Oklahoma although they were originally from North Carolina. She's always said that whenever she sees a cardinal it's the spirit of her late brother paying her a visit. I'm Lakota from South Dakota and I've never heard that so it's probably regional

    • @kathybentley4190
      @kathybentley4190 Před 3 lety +2

      @Cedar, Sweet grass, and Sage, thanks for having my back.on that. I am very in tune with what goes on in nature, so I choose to believe this about the red bird. We can learn a lot from Creator from the Earth and its animal and plant helpers. By the way, I am Muskogee 4 times removed on my Dad's side, as well as Cherokee 3 times removed on his side. Although not raised with any knowledge of this, I have always been able to connect to Creator thru nature. Blessings and peace to you and your family!

    • @bemdederwin1554
      @bemdederwin1554 Před 2 lety

      Worrisome as I have bunches of red birds that live in my yard, have for years. But my family communicates with the dead in dreams so...

  • @logue444
    @logue444 Před 3 lety +45

    "When the hoot owl hoots in the sweet gum tree, a death in three days there will be." Interesting aside: I was at a party years ago and it was daylight, in Nashville. An owl flew up into a tree overlooking the patio that we were partying on. We all thought that was really weird and unusual. Anyway, three days later, a guy at the party fell down an elevator shaft and died. True story.

    • @goodmeasure777
      @goodmeasure777 Před 2 lety +2

      @logue444 Very interesting. I'll have to research, when is the most likely time, owls would be up in the trees. I mean like, during what season. I've noticed probably within the last 2 years, the sound of owls, in the backyard, past the dividing fence. Now that I think about it, the family has had at least 3 people pass away within months of each other... But guess what? When I was younger, I heard if you dream that you are spitting out teeth, that was a sign of death. For someone. Now when I was younger, I dreamt spitting out teeth, and sure enough deaths occurred, but since becoming older, this owl situation I'm giving thought to, since I no longer dream of spitting teeth!

    • @kristinamullen4066
      @kristinamullen4066 Před 2 lety

      That's spooky! I heard that if 13 people eat at a table together that one of them will die within a yr.It came true after my family had a dinner and I happened to count the people at the table.There were 13.I don't know why I remembered that, but within a yr my dad passed away.I heard this superstition a few yrs later.

    • @aj529
      @aj529 Před 2 lety +1

      My girl friend had a barred owl roosting in broad daylight on her trash can one morning. Her son drowned in the lake the next week.

    • @charmainetate6274
      @charmainetate6274 Před 2 lety +3

      California Native Americans believe the same about owls

    • @hollyhinkel2418
      @hollyhinkel2418 Před 2 lety +1

      It happens!

  • @smc130
    @smc130 Před 9 měsíci

    Tipper I just love your videos. They bring back so many of my childhood memories. I never realized how much Appalachia guided my life. If only I could have lived there I believe I would have had been so much happier. Big cities in the South aren’t as nice, everyone is in a hurry and chasing the dollar. I should have been sewing and gardening like I was supposed to do.
    Thank you for these happy memories of when I visited with my maternal grandmother.

  • @susanwynne4781
    @susanwynne4781 Před 2 lety

    If your palm itches your going to get free money. I love watching you. Thank you for sharing your life and home with us

  • @diannefadal9848
    @diannefadal9848 Před 3 lety +16

    Born & Raised In West Virginia. Left When I Was 44...
    I Think About My Granny’s Many Many Sayings, Remedies & Predictions & WISH WISH WISH I Had Listened Closer & Could Recall MORE Of Her Wisdom.....

  • @juliejoyner3016
    @juliejoyner3016 Před 3 lety +14

    An old saying we always heard was, "if it thunders in winter, 9 days later it will snow". I have found this to be true most of the time.

  • @robdavis5504
    @robdavis5504 Před 2 lety +1

    My maternal Grandmother was from Ashe county North Carolina. She had many of these. One that she always said was if you leave the house and forget something and have to go right back in, you need to sit down inside for a second or it’s bad luck.

  • @beth3471
    @beth3471 Před 2 lety +4

    Our family had a magic cloth. It was red flannel. When we were getting a sore throat my grandmother would wrap it around our throat and secure it with a safety pin. Thank you for these posts. You are a gem.

  • @CMgal2001
    @CMgal2001 Před 3 lety +23

    If you're single, don't let someone sweep under your feet. You'll never get married.

  • @psleep4255
    @psleep4255 Před 3 lety +21

    I’ve heard many of these as both grandparents were from Appalachia. My great-aunt wrote a five volume set of stories about life there because she was afraid that way of life was going away. That was in 1978. It was called Quare Do's in Appalachia: East Kentucky Legends and Memorats. It wasn’t a bestseller but I was proud of her. The one saying I remember most is if your right palm itches you’ll owe money and your left you’ll get money. And I can’t walk under a ladder to this day, open an umbrella indoors or break a mirror. 😊. Love your channel!❤️🤗

  • @susanpumphrey354
    @susanpumphrey354 Před 2 lety +5

    This was lots of fun to listen to! I'm from Arkansas and my family has always lived here so some of these I'm only familiar with from reading the book Christy (set in early 1900's Appalachia) so many times. But we had our own superstitions. My uncle one time told me that if I shook salt on a bird's tail I could catch the bird. He about fell out of the chair laughing when he looked out the window a few minutes later and saw me running around in the field with Grandma's salt shaker trying to catch me a bird! I was about four years old and he never let me live that one down, LOL.

  • @billhoots4515
    @billhoots4515 Před 2 lety +3

    This is one of my favorite channels. Your content reminds me of my childhood and family growing up in WNC. Congratulations

  • @laoisem316
    @laoisem316 Před 3 lety +15

    When I was 7 yrs old we visited my grandmother in Ohio. I had gotten ill the day I got there with a respiratory bug. All I remember is grandma putting vick's on my chest, wrapping one of my grandpa's dirty socks around my neck, and giving me a hot toddy to make me sleep. I felt wonderful the next morning!!!

    • @Tropicalpisces
      @Tropicalpisces Před 3 lety +3

      My mom did the same. Her toddys were of tea, lemon, honey and black berry brandy. She believes in "sweating out a cold" or any sickness for that matter. Put me in a wool blanket on the beach in summer... 😰

  • @dmbdana
    @dmbdana Před 3 lety +14

    I love your channel. My Cherokee ancestors were from East Tennessee, before they were made to live in Oklahoma. My grandfather was born in Texas, like the rest of us. However, I am drawn to Appalachia in a way I can’t quite comprehend. My (genius) son told me it was genetic memory. Interesting.
    I was raised by my grandparents and taught the ways of the generation of the Great Depression. Many years later, I realized that so many of those Appalachian ways were passed down to me, even though my grandfather was two generations removed from the mountains. Your channel makes me so happy and at peace. I feel as though my beloved grandparents are still here with me and I’m just a curious kid again, soaking it all in. Thank you and please don’t stop making videos.

  • @VoodooAngel63
    @VoodooAngel63 Před 2 lety +4

    My grandmother wasn't from Appalachia, she was from rural Missouri but to her dying day she would always leave by the same door she came in.
    The same grandmother also had the strangest saying I've ever heard. Whenever something surprised her she would say, "I'll be a suck egg mule!"
    The other grandmother always planted potatoes on Good Friday.

    • @fly_speck_cafe
      @fly_speck_cafe Před 11 měsíci +2

      My dad used to say the egg mule thing. Also, 'Well I'll swan!' Missouri Ozarks.

  • @kateverett7869
    @kateverett7869 Před 2 lety +2

    My family has been in Texas for 4 generations now, but they came (on both sides) from Appalachia (Tennessee, South Carolina, and Virginia), probably 4 or 5 generations there - since 1700's. And, so much of the speech, sayings, and even the cooking that I learned is almost identical to what you are showing us. Probably the main thing added to our food staple is the use of hot chili peppers in just about everything. But my parents and grandparents would have been right at home with the language and the traditions. It is so interesting how the traditions have been passed down. Thank you for sharing with us!

  • @clayhastings2179
    @clayhastings2179 Před 3 lety +82

    My great-grandfather could "talk the far (fire)" out of a burn. He would draw circles above the burn on one's skin, and whisper something under his breath, and it would remove the pain from the burn. Many family members attest to this, though I never experienced it myself. If my memory serves me correct, he could only tell another person this ability within the family, but the person had to be of the opposite sex.
    Planting by the signs were another bit of folklore that my great-grandparents observed and lived by. They seemed to always have the best gardens. Folks before us were much wiser and smarter than we give them credit for!

    • @lu5914
      @lu5914 Před 3 lety +12

      my mom would draw the fire out. with breathing on the burn some how. ~LuAnn

    • @donnamays24
      @donnamays24 Před 3 lety +12

      I always plant my garden by the signs...I find it to be unbelievably accurate! I agree the folks before us were much wiser and savvy than they get credit for...they had to be living in such isolated and difficult regions in Appalachia- although some of the superstitions were far fetched lol - Blessings💖🙏🏻

    • @dianedildine5669
      @dianedildine5669 Před 3 lety +10

      I had two aunts that could talk the fire out of people but of course they couldn’t tell me how because we were related. (SC)

    • @homeinspectionpro5935
      @homeinspectionpro5935 Před 3 lety +11

      When I was growing up there was a man in town that could talk fire out of a burn. Also, the owner of the funeral home could talk warts off. There was a chalk board in the funeral home that they would write names of people that called asking for him to talk their warts off on. I was told that it is a gift that is passed down from father to daughter and mother to son. And, my grandmother planted by the moon sign- I still do. (SC)

    • @Caintuckiee
      @Caintuckiee Před 3 lety +13

      I always heard that people that could do that were said to be healers, or that they could shine.. and that is only passed down every other generation, to the opposite sex.. as in grandpa to granddaughter, or grandmother to grandson.. It was said that my great grandmother could shine, and I know my dad can, I’ve seen him do it firsthand..

  • @wandamoser7909
    @wandamoser7909 Před 3 lety +35

    Hi Have you ever heard "pretty is as pretty does"? My grandma always used to say thay.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  Před 3 lety +4

      Wanda-I have heard that one-its a good one 😀

    • @infamousElle
      @infamousElle Před 3 lety +3

      I heard that EXCESSIVELY. Manners was huge with my grandmother ( who was the home person, raising me, while my mother worked)

    • @lanathomas1998
      @lanathomas1998 Před 3 lety +4

      My mommy still says that

    • @jcrefasi1
      @jcrefasi1 Před 3 lety +3

      My granny always said that if my cousin and I were being "ugly" (meaning we were acting less than perfectly mannered little ladies), which was quite often. 😂

    • @stacey3637
      @stacey3637 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jcrefasi1 my Great Grandma would say " be still!" When she wanted my buddy & I to be quiet. We would then act like statues & try not to giggle, in retaliation...

  • @lisaray9404
    @lisaray9404 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for the video and sharing the folklore stories. My Mom (we are from Arkansas) always said "hurts come in threes." So, if you cut yourself, or got a bruise, you'd get two more injuries or something bad would happen two more times. Another superstition she had was that she never let us take pictures with our vehicles in it because that car/truck would get in an accident. Thanks for letting me share. And thank you for the great videos! 🙏🏻😊💖

  • @dianemac3768
    @dianemac3768 Před 2 lety +3

    I loved this video.... I am nearly 80 and grew up with alot of these sayings... and I live in Canada. I smiled at some and there are so many more brought to mind they brought back alot of memories............ thanks for them all.

  • @donnarohdy2881
    @donnarohdy2881 Před 3 lety +22

    My mother-“Good lord, I’m not superstitious, I’m a Baptist.”Don’t open that umbrella inside. Don’t eat any food you’ve canned that summer until the snow flies. Aspirin on your tooth. Really enjoy. We live in Ohio now, no work down home. We all pull over for a funeral, but every family down home has a few members in our town. I think the whole town of Grundy, Virginia now lives here. One family has their reunion up here. As a nurse, we believe death comes in threes.Daddy-always plant your leaf lettuce and spring onions on St. Patrick’s Day, even if you have to take an axe to break up the frozen ground. I remember mother talking about sittin up with the dead. I’m really enjoying your videos, brings back memories of those summers with Mamaw and my aunts in north East Tennessee and southwest Virginia.

    • @MommaLousKitchen
      @MommaLousKitchen Před 2 lety

      I was told females on Thier cycles couldn't be near the canning process or they wouldn't seal/and or spoil

    • @jenniferszendi9519
      @jenniferszendi9519 Před 2 lety

      Aspirin on your tooth: when I was a little girl I developed a gum boil. When I went to bed that night Mom put an aspirin on my tooth. When I woke up the next morning the entire smooth lining of my mouth was gone! lol. Don’t use the aspirin! 😝 😂

    • @garywhitt98
      @garywhitt98 Před 2 lety +1

      Grundy misses you. The coldest summer day I ever spent was in the shadow of that mountain (before they hauled it away). God bless.

    • @BJH862
      @BJH862 Před 2 lety

      Does anyone remember why folks would sit up with a dead body?

    • @patriciabishop4918
      @patriciabishop4918 Před 2 lety

      I dont know why people sat up all night with the dead, but I remember doing this as a child before the funeral home started closing, maybe respect to the family.

  • @jimkeller8449
    @jimkeller8449 Před 3 lety +58

    "Death in 3's" is one I believe, the bird in the house was heard often growing up. Stopping the car and removing your hat if afoot is still done in the smaller towns here in East Tenn for funerals passing by. Great topic tonight

  • @kimberlyknepp6634
    @kimberlyknepp6634 Před rokem +1

    My family lives in central Pennsylvania and I’ve heard many of these from my Mom and grandmother, and great grandmother. My great grandmother also believed in omens. Tipper also reminds me of my grandmother when she was younger. Love your videos.

  • @patricianorton3908
    @patricianorton3908 Před 2 lety +7

    I grew up (in Boston) hearing "things" happens in threes. (Births,deaths,engagements, graduations etc.) I’m a retired nurse (OB primarily, but worked in many disciplines) and the "in threes"saying abounded. The weird thing is sometimes it was scary true!!

  • @temperhollow7716
    @temperhollow7716 Před 3 lety +15

    As a small child my mother told me that thunder was the sound of angels bowling.

    • @nutzatwerk
      @nutzatwerk Před 3 lety +3

      my step mother always said it was Rip Van Winkle bowling. LOL

  • @FrenchTwist
    @FrenchTwist Před 3 lety +13

    The French Canadian Grandmother who raised me NEVER would wash her hands in the kitchen sink. She's always go to the bathroom to wash her hands, no matter how inconvenient.

    • @pkmcnett5649
      @pkmcnett5649 Před 2 lety +2

      That isn't superstition, that is hygiene.

  • @Jockeylotforfun
    @Jockeylotforfun Před 2 lety +1

    "Thunder in December means snow to remember"...a heavy snow will follow in the same December, especially true in the southeastern USA 🌩

  • @ABlackCountryWoman
    @ABlackCountryWoman Před rokem

    God Bless mountain and holler folk - the heart and soul of America. I love snow, too! xoxo Donnie Laws did a similar list, recently. There are many of the same on your list, but a few new ones, too! I love this!! Thank you for sharing.💕☺🙏

  • @oldgrizz8720
    @oldgrizz8720 Před 3 lety +29

    If you gift someone a new knife or a sharpened knife, the person has to give you a penny, so they wont cut themselves.

    • @scallopohare9431
      @scallopohare9431 Před 2 lety +2

      Or put a pebble in the box.

    • @tiarewilliams9186
      @tiarewilliams9186 Před 2 lety +6

      Ours was you cant gift anyone a knife or it'll cut your friendship. You give them a penny with it and they have to pay you for it.

    • @cde1968
      @cde1968 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tiarewilliams9186 That's interesting - my great aunt used to say it would cut someone out of the family

    • @agirly1503
      @agirly1503 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tiarewilliams9186 yes

  • @kentuckysassstitches8729
    @kentuckysassstitches8729 Před 3 lety +9

    I’m from Vicco KY. I do put my left shoe on first and totally believe death comes in 3’s. Thank you for sharing and celebrating Appalachia

  • @jenniferdecker2084
    @jenniferdecker2084 Před 2 lety +15

    My grandmother always said that if you saw the white underside of tree leaves when the wind would blow it meant rain was coming. My great grandmother said to wash your face in rainwater collected from an oak tree stump to treat acne. Thank you for your post! I love hearing about the old ways.

    • @scraggly65
      @scraggly65 Před rokem

      due to turgor pressure and low air pressure proceeding rain

  • @kjiuzovoodoo8439
    @kjiuzovoodoo8439 Před 3 lety +4

    My mother's family is from the mountains of western Virginia and I grew up hearing soooo many of these. To this day i always leave by the same door i entered. 😆 thanks for this, it was a walk down memory lane.

  • @SouthpawPatty
    @SouthpawPatty Před 3 lety +32

    Death does come in 3s. I was a caregiver in assisted living and that always holds true. It really is sad. My Mom's side of the family came from Ireland. I always thought that superstitions came from there. My Mom used to do a lot of them. Things like, never take a broom from your old house with you when you move to a different house. She always threw a pinch of salt over her shoulder if she spilled any of it while she was cooking. And I remember her telling my if your nose itches you're going to kiss a fool. She had quite a few of them that she told me.

    • @lindamaemullins5151
      @lindamaemullins5151 Před 3 lety +6

      Left shoulder and I still do😂😉🥰

    • @LilliansStory
      @LilliansStory Před 3 lety +2

      If your nose itches, somebodys comin' with a hole in their britches.

    • @mountainman4859
      @mountainman4859 Před 3 lety +1

      Everyone's nose itches. How many fools have you kissed?

    • @sheilaking9936
      @sheilaking9936 Před 3 lety +5

      If your foot itches,you're going to travel. If your hand itches, you're going to get money. Death comes in threes. If you sew or use scissors on Sunday, you'll pick the stitches out with your nose in Eternity.

  • @itiswhatitis7639
    @itiswhatitis7639 Před 3 lety +11

    My daddy and granny always said, "It's bad luck to hang or look at a the next years calendar before the new year"

  • @brianhudson7822
    @brianhudson7822 Před 2 lety

    We always drop our heads and say glory be when we were driving and went through a cemetery. We always cross the windshield three times if a black cat crossed our path in a car. Wonderful video.

  • @Roku97
    @Roku97 Před 10 měsíci +1

    If you live by a cemetery or graveyard of any kind, and the doors in your house open someone’s passing through… (usually only happens around Halloween)

  • @sammytheswitch
    @sammytheswitch Před 3 lety +16

    As a kid growing up in Eastern Tennessee, we played with box turtles. We were told if we got bit by one, they wouldn't let go till they heard thunder. Also when we killed a snake, we were told they wouldn't stop twisting till the sun went down.

    • @BJH862
      @BJH862 Před 2 lety

      I remember those two.

  • @diannehoffman7726
    @diannehoffman7726 Před 3 lety +12

    I enjoyed this very much! My grandmother always said if a bird hits your window it means someone's death

    • @sharihorting4560
      @sharihorting4560 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, I grew up hearing this also and if a bird is bold enough to sit on our windowsill I chase it as quick as I can 😆

  • @christymcpeters7384
    @christymcpeters7384 Před 2 lety +3

    This is great! So many of these my grandparents would tell us. Especially my great-grandfather, who coincidentally raised me and was alive until my youngest daughter was 12. Til this day Everytime she sees cows laying down she says it's gonna rain. I love that we are still passing these on. Thank you!

  • @chariot03
    @chariot03 Před 2 lety +1

    I enjoyed this very much. It brought back a bunch of memories. I was always taught that you can’t sew on Sundays, it would bring bad luck. never walk with one shoe on and one shoe off, bad luck. Never sweep after dark, bad luck. So many you mentioned, company coming if your nose itched. Always leave the same way you enter. It’s funny how these things stay with you your whole life! Wouldn’t change one thing my Mom taught me!

  • @DavidCJ
    @DavidCJ Před 3 lety +23

    My nanny was from Bell County here in Kentucky and she'd make up a concoction for bee stings and such and always called it "sodian lard". I heard that for 20+ years and then finally realized she was saying "baking soda (sodi) and (an) lard"!

    • @kathygarber9407
      @kathygarber9407 Před 3 lety +2

      Owsley County was my granny and she made it and other things too !

    • @carlajones4365
      @carlajones4365 Před 3 lety +8

      We would use wet tobacco on bee stings, still use it today and it has always worked well

    • @michealhyatt521
      @michealhyatt521 Před 3 lety +5

      I am a college graduate in it took me to get the the age 40 to realize that plow wood was plywood because of the layers. Yep, had the Epiphany at Home Depot. But to my credit, It didn’t take me quite as long to figure out what Sarah Ann wrap was.

    • @Caintuckiee
      @Caintuckiee Před 3 lety +1

      Got that baking soda mixture many times as a kid.

    • @norkyjune
      @norkyjune Před 3 lety +3

      I've used soda (a little soda in your hand and a couple drops of water to make a paste) on bee stings all my life and it really takes the sting out!

  • @mimiisme2728
    @mimiisme2728 Před 3 lety +34

    I remember hearing if you were pregnant you could mark your baby by looking at certain things.

    • @victimofheather
      @victimofheather Před 3 lety +2

      My mom had a birth mark on her back leg that was round and granny swore it was because when she was pregnant with her she slapped her back leg because a man they gave a ride to ate all of her bologna and that’s why it was round and brown, lol

    • @LilliansStory
      @LilliansStory Před 3 lety +6

      My granny would fuss at me when I was pregnant to not put my hands above my head. She said it would cause the cord to wrap around the baby's neck.

    • @StarrREVA
      @StarrREVA Před 3 lety +1

      My Aunt told the story of a patch of hair on her back that was "Pap's beard". When Grandma was pregnant, my grandfather tried to kiss but hadn't shaved, so she put her hand up and he kissed her hand, then she put her hand around her back. That is why there was a patch on my aunt's back.

  • @toekafrank6998
    @toekafrank6998 Před rokem

    I am from South Africa...Scottish-Irish descent...I grew up hearing "Knock on wood"...and I still say it. "As happy as a pig in Palestine"...

  • @lorigibson3447
    @lorigibson3447 Před 3 lety +4

    Hi! Love your channel...I'm pretty sure I was southern in a previous life!
    When it's raining and the sun is shining, a fox is getting married.
    Yes, I pull over for funeral processions, but it's not very customary up here.
    Waving hello from Niagara Falls Canada XO

  • @annie1875
    @annie1875 Před 3 lety +29

    If the top of your hand itches your gonna lose money. If the palm itches, your gonna come into money

    • @bronwyn3896
      @bronwyn3896 Před 3 lety +9

      I've heard that but it went like, left hand itches, money is coming in. Right hand itches, money goes out.

  • @papaking6830
    @papaking6830 Před 3 lety +19

    I absolutely love this channel my Wife and I love seeing the stories and the cooking and my favorite is the music Your girls are great and seems to been raised right.Thanks so much keep up the Good Fight of Faith and always stay close to the Lord and may God always bless y’all

  • @shannondelsol468
    @shannondelsol468 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for these - my family from the Pacific Northwest with a heritage from the pioneer days and before that Ireland and Scotland used many of them. I still throw spilled salt over my shoulder, turns mirrors toward the walls at night time. Ha ha. Two others: we say if your palm itches, it means unexpected money is coming! Also, if a butter knife falls on the floor, company’s coming. Oh! Shoes on the bed are terrible bad luck. We’d also dangle a needle from a thread over a pregnant belly to figure out the sex of the baby., or as girls over our palms to see how many babies we would have one day. Sweet memories.

  • @kschindle1
    @kschindle1 Před 2 lety

    A whole clove on my tooth helped me. Thank you for sharing your clove oil tooth relief story.