Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts

Friday, 11 August 2023

Simple Magick: Power Flow for August

View of the fields over the English Countryside through the branches of a tree

Each month of the year has a different energy and focus.

August is all about enjoying the sun and the vitality of good health. Enjoying friendships and relationships. Reaping and harvesting the fruits of your labour, and just rewards - whether good or bad.

What do you associate August with?

Remember that magickal associations are forged through the connections we make with our magickal tools/relationships- your correspondences may look quite different to mine.

NEXT - Intention: I Call Back My Power
NEXT - Lughnasadh Blessings: Welcoming The Harvest 

Monday, 31 July 2023

Lughnasadh Blessings: Welcoming the Harvest

Wheat-sheaf shaped loaf lying next to a bunch of wheat with a red ribbon

Wishing you all a beautiful Lughnasadh tomorrow, however you may celebrate it.

I find this Sabbat incredibly bittersweet. We are well beyond the Summer Solstice now and we are heading towards the darker part of the year. I’m not looking forward to the damp and cold, which start in September in our old stone house. It means there are only two seasons here; winter and summer, and summer has (nearly) gone all too quickly. I’m actually quite nervous of what’s to come as last winter was so difficult.

What are you doing to celebrate this turn of the Wheel?

What is the harvest you gather this year?

I am proud of my ability to keep going, even though this year has been very challenging and the challenges are not over yet. 

However you celebrate I hope it’s a good one. Love and blessings,
Wren. X

Saturday, 24 June 2023

Strawberry Magick: 20 Fruity Correspondences

Hand holding a green basket of strawberries in a field

Apart from their antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties, strawberries are commonly used in magick for their association with abundance, fertility, love and luck.

They have been used as a love food and in love spells for centuries. The leaves have been carried in sachets and charms for luck, and pregnant women can carry them to prevent and ease pains. 

Strawberry infused water can be used to create potions or for rituals baths. Infuse strawberries under the moon to create strawberry moon water! 

Strawberry Magickal Associations: 
Abundance
Attraction 
Beauty 
Commitment 
Dedication
Desire
Faithfulness 
Fertility 
Fruitfulness 
Glamour spells
Healing
Health
The Heart 
Joy 
Kindness 
Love 
Loyalty 
Luck 
Success 
Sweetening

Remember that magickal associations are forged through the connections we make with our magickal tools/relationships- your correspondences may look quite different to mine.

Have you ever used strawberries in magick? If so, what do you use them for? 

Friday, 23 June 2023

A History: Midsummer Day (24th June)

Roaring fire in a fire bowl with flames reaching out

Midsummer Day (June 24th) is a celebration of summer, enjoyed throughout Europe. It is close to the Summer Solstice and has pre-Christian, Pagan roots. It celebrates the midpoint of the growing season; it is half-way between planting and harvesting.

It is also the feast of St. John the Baptist within the Christian Church, and celebrations begin the night before on the 23rd June, which is known as St. John’s Eve (and Midsummer Eve). Saint John was born six months before Jesus in the calendar year, and predicted the birth of Christ, later baptising him in the Jordan River. Saint John is seen by many Christians as someone who prepared the way for Jesus.

It is believed that the custom of lighting of fires in honour of St. John first happened in England in the 13th Century. One particular monk in Gloucestershire details how the bonfires drove away dragons. The bonfires did more than this - they united communities; bringing people together in celebration to eat, drink and be merry.

Alongside the bonfire celebrations doors were decorated with greenery and flower garlands, interspersed with pretty glass lamps. Bathing in water (to represent Jesus’ baptism) and watching the sunrise were all traditional activities.

Midsummer and St. John’s Day celebrations happen all around the world and are particularly important in Scandinavia and some parts of the U.K. although the date has been changed in some countries, and falls somewhere between the 19th and 26th of June.

Sending love and blessings to you,
Wren. X 

Thursday, 22 June 2023

Happy Summer Solstice!

Setting sun at the beach with words honouring the Summer Solstice sun overlaying the image

Happy Summer Solstice for yesterday, everyone! Wishing you the most beautiful week ahead!

Also, Winter Solstice blessings to our friends in the Southern Hemisphere. Sending all my love and blessings, Wren. X

Monday, 29 August 2022

Recipe: Elderberry Vinegar

A jar of Elderberry Vinegar sat next to a vase of dried wheat and pink carnations

The elderberries are out! At least they are in my part of the Midlands.

‼️ Please be aware that elderberries should NEVER be eaten raw or undercooked, so please avoid the common advice to put them in muffins or apple pies. They must be cooked thoroughly at heat to handle the cyanide-inducing glycosides. Failure to do so can result in nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea.

Here is a gorgeous recipe using elderberries that we love at home - I like to put this stuff on my chips!

ELDERBERRY VINEGAR

Ingredients:
200g Elderberries
500ml Red Wine Vinegar
50g Sugar (optional)

Method:
1. Wash the berries.
2. Remove from the stalks into a pan using a fork. Mash slightly. Add the Red Wine Vinegar.
3. Bring to the boil, turn the heat down a little, simmering on a high heat for 10 minutes.
4. Decant into a sterilised jar and leave to cool before closing the lid.
5. Store in a cool dark place for 1 month.

ONE MONTH LATER...
1. Strain. Use the berries in stews, soups, salads, or discard.
2. Decant the vinegar into a sterilised bottle
- or -
add back to the pan with the sugar, heat until the sugar has dissolved, and bottle.

Don’t forget to Save this post for later. You can actually create folders of Saved items to find them easier later. This one is good for “Autumn Recipes”.

The elder is associated with the Faerie lands and is sacred to many goddess traditions, especially to the goddesses Venus and Holle. 

Saturday, 27 August 2022

Journaling: Harvest Reflections for Lughnasadh

Beautiful fields of golden grain framed by a moody sky

The beautiful fields of golden grain that carpet my local landscape have all been brought in now. We celebrated Lughnasadh earlier on in August, but the harvest energy is still current.

I think Lughnasadh, and the weeks that follow up to the Autumn Equinox, are the best time in the year for reflection and goal setting, so I spent some time thinking about Grimoire journaling prompts for this time. It’s important to think about our own personal harvests and the direction we want to move in over the coming months.

Journal prompts:
  • What are you harvesting in your life right now?
  • What has been the highlight of the last twelve months?
  • What achievement are you particularly proud of?
  • Where is there room for improvement?
  • What would you like to achieve in the next twelve month?
  • Why is this important to you?

What have you achieved over the last twelve months? Is there something you have achieved that you are particularly proud of? 

Tuesday, 21 June 2022

Summer Solstice Blessings

The summer solstice Sun going down and meeting the horizon over the sea

Litha Blessings to you all!

The summer is a special time for me. From Beltane to Midsummer I have a lot more energy, my bones hurt a lot less and I’m not struggling with the cold in quite the same way. I am filled with optimism, hope and enthusiasm.

The land ~ the world ~ feels different. There is a different vibration; an intensity. I feel very connected to the land in a way that I don’t even know how to explain. I can feel the magick coursing through the air; everything feels very alive and interconnected. Spirits and entities feel close at hand. When I walk the land it feels like someone is walking beside me.

But it is bittersweet, too. The longer days and shorter nights are drawing to a close. It seems like we’ve only just moved away from the winter, and yet after this period of standstill (the Solstice) it’s time to swing back the other way. I know the darkness is a long way off, and I try to put the sadness to the back of my mind; but it’s there…

But for now, celebration! The Sun has reached its peak; its energy at full power. This is a last chance for reflection before we harvest what we have sown the previous year. I didn’t plan to get up for sunrise this morning, but woke up ten minutes before meaning I got outside and enjoyed the Sun.

Enjoy the long, warm day; and if you’re in the Southern Hemisphere have a happy Winter Solstice. The Wheel turns once more. 

Tuesday, 27 July 2021

Fabulous Folklore: Wolfsbane

Stalks of purple-blue wolfsbane flowering in the sunlight

Wolfsbane, also known as aconite, monkshood, mousebane, pops, Cupid’s cap, flapdock, women’s bane, queen of poisons, devil’s helmet and blue rocket, belongs to the plant genus Aconitum; a group of plants which are all poisonous, with wolfsbane being one of the most toxic plants in the UK.

I haven’t managed to spot Aconitum napellus in the wild yet, but I did spy this Chinese aconite (Aconitum carmichaelii) at our local gardens, which I was really surprised to see! Isn’t she beautiful?

Serious poisoning by plants is rare in the UK, but the toxins of wolfsbane can enter the blood if protective clothing is not worn when handling. In 2014, a gardener in Hampshire, UK, died after brushing against it, which is extremely unusual, but shows the amount of care needed when handling these plants.

Aconite, along with other baneful herbs, is said to be a constituent of flying ointment, which is said to have been used by witches from the Late Middle Ages. This hallucinogenic ointment allowed the witches to astrally project; the witch’s consciousness “flying” off rather than their physical body.

Francis Bacon listed the ingredients of flying ointment as wolfsbane, “the fat of children digged out of their graves”, smallage (celery), cinquefoil (potentilla), and fine wheat (wheat flour).

Poisonous ingredients listed in flying ointments, past and present, include belladonna, henbane, mandrake, and hemlock.

Whilst I have a good general plant knowledge, I’m still learning about the baneful aspects of certain plants, and their history. One thing is for certain: baneful plants are absolutely beautiful.

Wednesday, 7 July 2021

Fabulous Folklore: Bird’s Foot Trefoil

The cheery little yellow flower of bird's foot trefoil

Bird’s-foot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus)

This cheery little plant is one we have in abundance on the cemetery. It flowers in grassy areas between May and September. Native to Eurasia and North Africa, and found throughout mainland Europe, Asia, Africa, the US, and the tropics; it’s not difficult to see that it’s a member of the pea family.

The bird’s foot part of its name refers to the appearance of the seed pods. Five leaves are present, but three are held above the others, hence the “trefoil” part of the name.

It has an abundance of wonderful folk names: deervetch, lady’s slipper, lady’s shoes, granny’s toenails, butter and eggs, eggs and bacon, hen and chickens, cats claws, crow feet, crow toes, devil’s fingers, devil’s claws, king’s fingers, to name but a few.

In folklore the birds-foot trefoil was sometimes associated with evil. Its claw-like seed pods were compared to the Devil’s claws.

The theme of warning and protection comes up a lot with this plant. It has been suggested that bird’s-foot trefoil were woven into wreaths on Midsummer’s night, its three-lobed leaves reminiscent of the Holy Trinity and therefore offering protection; and U.K. schoolchildren used to pick these flowers to use as protective charms against their teachers’ anger.

“Here I dance in a dress like flames,
And laugh to think of my comical names.
Hoppetty hop, with nimble legs!
Some folks call me Bacon and Eggs!
While other people, it’s really true,
Tell me I’m Cuckoo’s Stockings too!
Over the hill I skip and prance;
I’m Lady’s Slipper, and so I dance,
Not like a lady, grand and proud,
But to the grasshoppers chirping loud.
My pods are shaped like dicky’s toes:
That is what Bird’s-Foot Trefoil shows;
This is the name which grown-ups use, but children may call me what they choose.”

~ Mary Cicely Barker, “The Song of the Bird’s-Foot Trefoil Fairy”

Friday, 2 July 2021

Recipe: Apple Cake

An apple cake with a yellow flower placed at the centre positioned on a witch's altar

A blessed July everyone!

This is a post from the Solstice which I am only sharing on the website today:

“Today marks the longest day of the year. We celebrate the peak energy available at this time, but it is a bittersweet moment. Despite the joy and abundance of this time, the energetic scales are tipped; and once again we will begin the descent into darkness."

Whilst there is a definite sense of making merry at this time ~ celebrating the abundance of summer and enjoying time outside with friends and family ~ it can be a time tinged with sadness for many, including myself. For those of us with chronic illness who are solar powered, and are only really just starting to feel healthy, well and energised, it’s frustrating to know that the days will start to draw in, in a few days’ time.

But let us put those thoughts aside for now, and revel in this peak moment of light and warmth!

Rather than a traditional Honey Cake, I made an Apple Cake this year. This will grace our table many times between now and Samhain. In many ways it’s more like a pudding than a cake. It is delicious served warm with custard. I have tried this recipe successfully with Gluten-free flour, but not vegan substitutes. I’m sure it would work well.

APPLE CAKE

Ingredients:
225g Self Raising Flour
110g Caster Sugar 
170g Bramley Apples, chopped 
85g Butter, melted 
150ml Milk
1 egg 
1 tsp Cinnamon

Method:
Line an 8 inch tin, preheat the oven to 200c 
Sift the flour into a bowl with the spice and sugar 
Beat the egg and add to the milk and melted butter 
Add the wet mixture to the flour mixture, mix well 
Add the apple, mix well 
Spoon into the tin, sprinkle some sugar on top 
Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until a knife inserted into the cake comes out clean 

Wednesday, 16 December 2020

The Return of the Sun

A classic British Telephone Box with tomato plants growing inside next to a brick wall

Earlier on in the week @autumncroneapothecary and I were talking about most witches having a strong relationship with the Moon (as it should be), but us feeling much closer to the Sun and solar energy.

As a Cancer I put this down to being born in the summer, I just feel so connected to it. There’s also no avoiding the fact that with several conditions related to my muscles and joints I’m relieved when the days get longer and warmer and my bones don’t hurt and click quite so much!

As we approach the Winter Solstice here in the Northern Hemisphere, I have been thinking about all the good things that happened in the warmer half of this year, and I’m really looking forward to what’s to come. A particular highlight this year was driving through a quirky little village near us and spotting this telephone box with tomatoes planted inside.

I’m looking forward to picnics and our annual Beltane celebration, time in the park with the kids, dinner in my parents’ garden, foraging, spending some time near water (typical Cancerian!) and warmth on my face.

What about you? What Sun sign are you? Does it relate to whether you prefer summer or winter? Do you think 2021 is going to be a good year for you?  What are you looking forward to most in 2021?