Origin: All over the place. From Germany to Denmark,
from Holland to Poland, from England to Russia. See, all over the freaking place.
Description: They are small and live in the ground. They avoid the sun. I bet they think the world is better with
sunglasses on like I do.
Disposition: These faeries are very gentle. They are good
at stuff like spinning and weaving and blacksmithing. But don’t ever cross one. They will make your life a living hell and
you’ll get sick and/or go crazy. Just
don’t do it. Okay?
Oh, hell...what if I'm digging a hole to plant a tree and crush one of their tiny little looms? I'm never gonna dig a hole again!
ReplyDeleteOh, no! A gardening casualty!
DeleteI'm with Laura. How far deep am I allowed to dig in my own garden before I hit one? I mean, there should be a rule, right? Humans can dig 2 feet (except in cemeteries, where the customary 6 feet is ok) before the quiet folk turn us mad. It only seems fair!
ReplyDeleteLOL! I know what you mean. I have a front garden full of foxglove and bluebells and no faeries. My guess is I'm not infested with any. I'm pretty sure that is a good thing!
DeleteI'm loving your A-Z challenge posts! Your blog is completely unique from any other I've found this month. Brilliant.
ReplyDeleteKrissy
www.krissyranae.com
Thanks! I'm glad you are enjoying them. Laura Eno and Sarah Makela are doing something similiar. You should check them out if you get a chance.
DeleteOh I love this one, underground, weavers. I'm so going to use quiet folk in one of my stories! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteSangita
http://skaypisms.blogspot.com/
Great! I'd love to read that.
DeleteCool! I'd love to have some quiet folk spun yarn...bet it would be gorgeous. :)
ReplyDeleteNothing from the fae, though, comes without a price. But I agree, it would be something!
DeleteHmm. Quiet Folk? How does one attract them to one's own backyard? :)
ReplyDelete