New Natural Perfume Review: A Wing & Prayer Perfumes Pan’s Flute (Jane Cate )2017 +Lake Tahoe in Spring Draw

Pan and his flute wikipedia

Silent stand the forest and the wooded height,

Silent are the small streams dripping down the rock,

Hushed are the busy murmur of the noonday bright,

Hushed the mingled bleating of the wandering flock.

Pan himself makes music on the pipe he loves,

See his soft lips gliding o'er the close-ranked reeds!

Nymphs that range the mountains,

Nymphs that haunt the groves,

Weave the dance around him in the grassy meads.” -Attributed to Plato (4th century B.C.E.)

Nymph On Pan's Shoulders, 1874 – by Arnold Böcklin

The Greek god Pan is widely considered to be the original “Good-time Goat Guy” within the pantheon of the Mount Olympus gods. This party animal god was a half human and half goat hybrid who embodied the spirit of the wild places, forests and woodlands, and ecstatic music and dance, shepherds and their flocks. Pan is a feral god, never meant to be domesticated and a bit of a conundrum, being the most uncivilized god in a civilized world. He is not a god of love, but rather a god of sex and lust, loving wine and music and using both to create a frenzy (PAN-ic) amongst his followers. The music that floated from the reed pipes held to his lips was said to entrance women and men alike (think PAN-sexual), remove inhibitions and ultimately lead his followers to make love in nature, often under the light of the moon, and often all night long until the break of dawn.

Jane Cate

Perfumer Jane Cate has racked up quite a few awards since opening A Wing & A Prayer Perfumes in 2008 including from Cafleurebon: Rising Star award (2011), Best Fragrance Wild Rose (2011), Best Fragrance Epione (2011), Best Fragrance Haight & Ashbury (2011), Best Fall Fragrance Autumn Breeze (2012), the 2015 Silver Award for best packaging, Taste TV Fragrance Salon, and the 2015 Gold Award  for Summer Afternoon Perfume from the Coeur d'Espirt Natural Perfume competition.

 

 lacma Thomas Hill Emerald Bay Lake Tahoe.

The new perfume Pan’s Flute is based on a morning walk through the woods at California’s Lake Tahoe, the largest alpine lake in the country and for many generations considered California’s four season playground. The woods around Tahoe are filled with summer wildflowers, tall grass meadows, and conifers of every shape and size.

Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe by Bela Bodo

Pan’s Flute captures the scent of a summer woodland walk near the lake. Opening with a breezy, airy lavender set amongst a feeling of warm greenery from the violet leaf, it moves quickly into a glorious floral heart of geranium, rose, and heliotrope, all the while encompassed by strong base of fir, amber, and other woods. It brings to mind the scent of warm freshly washed sheets hanging on a line to dry in the sun, and long, lazy, warm weekends that were all about sleeping in, getting tan, and swimming in ice cold cerulean lakes, so clear and still you could look down into the enchanted depths forever. A scent as light and delightful as a merengue, or the soft melodic notes emanating from the reeds of a pan pipe.

Notes:  violet leaf, lavender absolute, lavender tincture, rose, geranium, linden blossom, mimosa, bergamot, heliotrope, amber,  fir absolute

Disclosure: Many thanks to A Wing & A Prayer for the sample and my opinions are mine alone.            

-Robert Herrmann, Contributor

Art Direction: Michelyn Camen, Editor-in-Chief

Thanks to A Wing & A Prayer Perfumes and Jane Cate, we have a ¼ oz spray bottle of Pan’s Flute Perfume for a registered reader in the USA. Please be sure to register with Cafleurebon  if you have not done so. You must be registered and you must use your user name or your entry is invalid. To be eligible please let us know  what you thought of Robert’s review  and  your favorite wildflower or Greek mythological god or goddess. Draw closes 3/28/2017

We announce the winners only on site and on our Facebook page, so Like Cafleurebon  and use our RSS feed…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

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8 comments

  • Angela cox says:

    I was born near lake Tahoe in N.Z. I love bluebells though as I live in England.Thank you fot this competition.

  • ntabassum92 says:

    Lovely review – hearkens back to innocent times of peaceful exploration and appreciation of serene nature. This review took me to those times, even though I have never lived them. My favorite wildflower…perhaps daffodils at the moment as they are popping up everywhere giving me joy as spring is here!

  • The review reminds me of the endless summer days of childhood, grown up to maturity, with the same feelings of timelessness and the wonder of endless exploration and discovery. My favorite wildflowers are trillium, or the rare beauty of the lady’s slipper. Thanks so much for the generous offer.

  • Nice review. I didn’t know that Plato was such a poet! I love the name Pan’s Flute. It brings to mind fairies in a wildflower dell. My favorite wildflower is the Texas bluebonnet which are lining many of the highways right now. I especially like them mixed with the red Indian paintbrush flower. USA

  • Athena is my favorite in Greek mythology.

    This perfume review really resonates with me. I do play the flute and do lots of hiking in the wild. Are you sure it was not made for me 🙂

    I will love to get a chance to try it to see if it can be a FB for me.

    In WA,USA.

  • doveskylark says:

    I love this review because it celebrates a beautiful place in the USA. I feel the USA is hurting in these troubled times. It’s wonderful to be reminded of the blessings found here.
    I love long-spurred violets.
    i live in the USA.

  • Anna Egeria says:

    I’d like to believe that Pan roams all of the wild woods. I love violets and bluebells,that create a carpet in the woods. Thank you for another great draw.

  • I thought Robert’s review was very descriptive and I can almost experience what Pan’s Flute smells like “Opening with a breezy, airy lavender set amongst a feeling of warm greenery from the violet leaf, it moves quickly into a glorious floral heart of geranium, rose, and heliotrope, all the while encompassed by strong base of fir, amber, and other wood.” My favorite wildflower is the Desert Marigold, a common flower in the saguaro forests of the my Sonoran Desert.
    I live in the US