Wild Mountain Thyme -
The scent of the thyme—sharp, earthy, and sweet—seemed to clear the fog of worry from the villagers' minds. Inspired by the herb’s tenacity, the village stopped complaining and started collaborating. They built a stone trough to bring water from a distant hidden spring Callum had seen near the peak, a task they had previously thought too difficult to attempt.
One year, a fierce, early drought struck the valley. The streams slowed to a trickle, and the usually vibrant purple hills turned a brittle, dusty brown. The villagers grew anxious, fearing their crops would fail and their spirits would wither with the grass. Wild Mountain Thyme
By the time the autumn rains finally arrived, the village hadn't just survived; they were stronger and more connected than ever. Callum went back to his loom, but he always kept a dried bunch of mountain thyme hanging by his window. It served as a permanent reminder that the most beautiful things often grow in the toughest places, and that hope, like the thyme, is always worth "pu'ing" (pulling) if you're willing to climb for it. The "Wild Mountain Thyme" is also a famous folk song— The scent of the thyme—sharp, earthy, and sweet—seemed
To the villagers, the thyme was just a herb for stews or a remedy for a winter cough. But to Callum, it was the rhythm of the seasons. He lived by a simple philosophy: "If the thyme is blooming, there is still time to begin." One year, a fierce, early drought struck the valley
Callum, however, didn't despair. He knew that wild mountain thyme was a survivor; it grew in the harshest cracks of the rocks where nothing else dared to take root. He climbed higher than he ever had before, reaching the "Eagle’s Peak," a jagged crown of stone that stayed cool even in the heat. There, tucked away in the shadows of the boulders, he found a carpet of resilient, fragrant thyme, still blooming in defiance of the sun.