

With a staff of dedicated nature-lovers (and friends!), we grew and learned.

His mining, dealing, and lapidary skills now advise our mineral inventory. Here, Janet met Mark, who also ran a retail rock shop for many years. In 2005, the store moved to Main Street in Edmonds, Washington. Store owner Janet is a graduate gemologist and former instructor with a lifelong appreciation for natural wonders and oddities of all kinds.įounded in 2001, The Wishing Stone began as a little seaside boutique in Mukilteo, Washington.
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Wander more through Northern Ireland in my other stories - Singing in the Irish Mist and Cosseted at Crom Castle.The Wishing Stone is a nature discovery store! From our carefully selected sterling silver and gemstone jewelry selection to our alphabetized apothecary of healing stones, from our lit showcases full of collectible mineral specimens to the tactile playground of stacked shelves and rock bins at the back of the shop - we've worked hard to make our brick and mortar storefront an adventure for our customers! We are art collectors, students, and teachers. This story has been published in Exotic Life: Travel Tales of an Adventurous Woman. When I share my surprise results and daily visits with Noel, he exclaims, “By gosh, I’ll have to build a hut over the stone so youse won’t get soaked in the mist.” This instant response inspires a daily pilgrimage to the wishing stone for the rest of my visit. An email arrives for me that announces I’m going to receive a tidy sum of money from an unexpected source! It is a doozy of conjuring that solves a major financial problem in my life.

Less than twenty-four hours after my sitting session, my wish is answered in a way I never expected. In silence, with eyes closed, hawthorn branches pricking my head like a crown of thorns, I wish mightily. I take a turn, folding myself on top of the foot-square dome of lichen-pocked granite. He responds, “Oh yes, indeed, many a time, and the wishes always come true.” I hustle right over there with Noel in the mid-summer twilight.Īs he cautiously holds down the electric wire fence for me to step over, I query Noel, “Have you sat on the wishing stone and made wishes?” Well, I don’t feel that way, ambitious American alpha female that I am. “Violet, have you ever made a wish on the stone?” Ye need to sit on the stone without touching the earth around it-every part of yer body. She says, “Ye must go to the wishing stone right here on the castle grounds by the lake. Ireland is a bastion of superstition and magical lore. One blustery night at dinner, I ask Violet about sacred sites. During the famine they’d walk for days reaching the shore, where the boats were sailing to America only to die right there on the beach of hunger.” Her dense brogue unfurls the story of Ireland’s tragic past as she lays down plates piled high with her special boiled potatoes, roast lamb and aromatic mint sauce on the well-polished trestle table for our dinner at Crom Castle.

Bodies of bones still jagging out of the rocky beaches at County Donegal which, Violette (our cook at Crom Castle) shares is, “just a wee drive to the West. All blended in with the mysteries and legends of their history. It wraps around the stories they love to lavish on visitors, stories and stories and stories piled up like strawberries on trifle. The Irish people’s thick accents slather around their words as rich as the dairy cream they pour on top of the delectable Irish coffees-as smooth and blankety as the dense foam on the head of a pint of Guinness. “Forty Shades of Green” it is, this land of ancient stone cairns.
