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Samhain

Ancestor Night, Celtic New Year

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The chilled breeze that flutters the red, orange and yellow leaves, nibbles at the skin, raising goose-bumps. Samhain is upon us. Expect the unexpected if you celebrate this holiday -the Celtic New Year- on All Hallows Eve.
Pronounced SOW-in, SAH-vin, or SAM-hayne – means “End of Summer”, and is the third and final Harvest. The dark winter half of the year commences on this Sabbat.
It is generally celebrated on October 31st, but some traditions prefer November 1st or at the cross-quarter. It is one of the two “spirit-nights” of the year, the other being Beltane.
It is a magical interval when the mundane laws of time and space are temporarily suspended, and the “thin veil” between the worlds is lifted. It is the time of the year when traveling between the physical and the spirit world is made easier, and communicating with ancestors and departed loved ones is easy at this time, as well as them contacting us; for they journey through this world on their way to the Summerlands. Look for psychic dreams on the astrological Samhain (date of the cross-quarter); your intuition will be in top form should you do readings at ritual. This power gets stronger with the passing of each year.
It is a time to study the Dark Mysteries and honor the Dark Mother and the Dark Father, symbolized by the Crone and her aged Consort. This is the sabbat for wearing your witchy black. Clean the house, including the hearth, from top to bottom; the garden also needs to be prepared for the winter by this date. Lay new fires. Cleanse divination tools (cards, crystals, runes, pendulums) and rededicate them to the Goddess. For the last of the Harvest Festivals, put apples, nuts, acorns, and squashes on the altar, and add pictures of the family members you are missing. Using freshly harvested hazel nuts, make wreaths with nine nuts (three times three) to protect your house from fire and lightning. Offer thanks to the river gods or the god of the sea, and remember to honor the goddess Hecate.
Originally the “Feast of the Dead” was celebrated in Celtic countries by leaving food offerings on altars and doorsteps for the “wandering dead”. Today a lot of practitioners still carry out that tradition. Single candles were lit and left in a window to help guide the spirits of ancestors and loved ones home. Extra chairs were set to the table and around the hearth for the unseen guests. Apples were buried along roadsides and paths for spirits who were lost or had no descendants to provide for them. Turnips and pumpkins were hollowed out and carved to look like protective spirits, and pumpkin lanterns were placed upon tables, tree stumps, boulders, and wooden fence posts, watching over and marking the boundaries, for this was a night of magic and chaos. The glowing faces will float in the darkness, scaring away all malintent. Traveling after dark was not advised, as it was believed that the Wee Folke became very active, pulling pranks on unsuspecting humans. People dressed in white (like ghosts), wore disguises made of straw, or dressed as the opposite gender in order to fool the Nature spirits.
This was the time that the cattle and other livestock were slaughtered for eating in the ensuing winter months. The cauldron, a symbol of life, was sometimes used as a serving platter. It contained a limitless supply of food for all those with a righteous heart. Any persons placing themselves or their personal desires before that of the natural world would not only find an empty cauldron, but the cauldron would reflect back to them the pain and suffering of all humanity.
When cut on bias, apples display the pentagram they hold inside. The apple trees in the world of the Goddess are said to bear fruit all year long. Apples hang on strings from branches for a game much like bobbing for apples. Retrieving an apple from a low hanging branch by suing only one’s mouth foretold of an exceptional year of wisdom and spiritual growth.
Bonfires were built. Firewood from nine downed trees are previously selected, cut, split, seasoned, and stacked in a bonfire heap waiting to be set ablaze. They were originally called bone-fires, for after feasting, the bones were thrown in the fire as offerings for healthy and plentiful livestock in the New Year and stones were marked with peoples names. Then they were thrown into the fire, to be retrieved in the morning. The condition of the retrieved stone foretold of that person’s fortune in the coming year. Hearth fires were also lit from the village bonfire to ensure unity, and the ashes were spread over the harvested fields to protect and bless the land.
Some say that the roots that remained from the final harvest represented that which was manifested over the past year, the earthly attachment from which everything grew. All good and ill grows from the seeds of action sown by our deeds. To produce new growth and avoid repeating the past, the roots must be dug up and burned in the ritual bonfire. The flames would consume any negativity, and the smoke would carry prayers to the Goddess. But others believed that any crops still in the field on Samhain were considered taboo, and left as offerings to the Nature spirits.
As darkness descends, each Witch in their own time makes their way to the altar of the ancestors, lights a white votive candle, and says a prayer for their recent and long departed. Ancestore can be anyone the heart is drawn to, blood-related or not. Their wisdom is ours to sample and learn from. Wisdom is stored in a Jungian collective, a spiritual cauldron of consciousness, where each generation may access the wisdom of the ages. Rebirth is the transfer of that wisdom to the newly born.
Soon, everyone gathers in a circle. They chant and walk the circumference of the meadow three times sunwise. The entire festival community participates in the circle-casting ritual. If a single individual was left out for any reason, the circle was not properly cast.
The bonfire is lit. Flames rush from the bottom to the top, each one trying to be the first and extend the highest into the darkness above. Knotted cords are tossed into the fire and named aloud by their bearer for the malady of deficiency they magically contain- “lack of money, joblessness, back pain”, and so on. Loose herbs and sachets specifically mixed for this moment are also burned with a prayer for something better to come. The death rattle is passed from person to person with prayers for the elimination and cessation of all negativity. A burning torch, representing fires of change and prayers for new beginnings, follows after the death rattle.
The priestess and priest who organized the gathering, and who conduct the ritual, have fasted for several days preceding the ritual. They assemble an offering plate and serve it with a blessing at the seat left empty to honor the dead. They fill their own plates, the remaining folks fill theirs, and the feast is held in silence.
Divination will be practiced around the fire. People will use scrying mirrors, tarot cards, and stones tossed in circles of ash. The music will start, the games will begin, and the festival will celebrate the New Year until dawn.
Various other names for this Greater Sabbat are Third Harvest, Samana, Day of the Dead, Old Hallowmas (Scottish/Celtic), Vigil of Saman, Shadowfest (Strega), and Samhuinn. Also known as All Hallow’s Eve, and Martinmas (that is celebrated November 11th), Samhain is now generally considered the Witch’s New Year.

Symbolism of Samhain: Third Harvest, the Dark Mysteries, Rebirth through Death.

Symbols of Samhain: Gourds, Apples, Black Cats, Jack-O-Lanterns, Besoms, Corn, Straw dolls.

Herbs of Samhain: Mugwort, Allspice, Broom, Catnip, Deadly Nightshade, Mandrake, Oak leaves, Sage and Straw.

Foods of Samhain: Traditionally, pork was the most sacred of Celtic food, which was served on a platter holding center place. A cauldron of vegetable stew stands nearby. Cobs of corn, lettuce, nuts, warm bread, colorful fruits, beans, potatoes, peas, squash, tomatoes and melon are appropriate for this feast. Also turnips, apples, mulled wines.

Incense of Samhain: Heliotrope, Mint, Nutmeg.

Colors of Samhain: Black, Orange, White, Silver, Gold.

Stones of Samhain: All Black Stones, preferably jet or obsidian.

For a Samhain ritual go to Divine Muse’s Samhain Ritual

Samhain Recipes

Eye-Opening Fried Cornmeal Mush Perfect for breakfast!

1 cup cornmeal
1 cup cold water
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. sugar
2 3/4 cups water in a pan

Bring the 2 3/4 cups of water to a boil. In bowl, combine the cornmeal, 1 cup water, salt, and sugar. Gradually add this mixture to the boiling water, stirring constantly. Cover and cook over low heat for 10-15 minutes. Pour into a shallow loaf pan. Chill in refrigerator overnight. In the morning, turn out of pan onto a platter or flat countertop. Cut into 1/2 inch slices. Fry slowly in a very small amount of vegetable oil. Turn once. When browned, serve warm with butter and syrup or fresh fruit.
Makes 6 servings.

BeWitchy Vegan Apple Pancakes

2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
2 cups soy milk
2 tbs. veg. oil or butter, melted
1 cup finely chopped apples, peeled and cored
1 cup fresh made applesauce
1 cup walnuts

In a large bowl sift flour, baking powder, baking soda together. Add the soy milk and the oil or butter. slightly mix. Add in extras as preferred: apple chunks, apple sauce, nuts, etc. Lightly oil skillet and heat over medium heat. Drop 2-3 spoonfulls of batter into skillet and cover. When the center begins to bubble, flip and cover.
For the pancakes to stay warm until all pancakes are made keep them in the oven at 200 degrees. When serving dot with butter, top with applesauce, apple chunks, syrup, and a dash of cinnamon. Can also roll them up into logs.
Makes 4 servings.

Gramms’ Baked Apples

6 Apples
1 cup brown sugar
Honey
Granola, walnuts (optional)

Cap off apples cutting above half line. Core and slightly scrape inside and save in a small bowl. Set apples on a baking pan and sprinkle brown sugar and honey inside, cover each one with their top and sprinkle rub brown sugar and honey over them. As much as desired. Place in oven at 300 degrees for 25 minutes or until apples are soft and juicy. To serve top with granola and or walnuts, if desired.
Makes 6 servings.

Thought-Seed Crackers

1 box family-favorite crackers
Butter/Margarine
melted Onion or garlic powder
Caraway, celery, poppy, and sesame seeds
Dillweed

Brush the crackers lightly with butter/margarine. Sprinkle lightly with onion or garlic powder and ever so sparingly with dillweed. Top with combination seed mix. Bake on an un-greased cookie sheet at 350 degrees for 5 minutes or until crisp and hot.

Legendary Potato-Fries

3 average size potatoes, any kind
vegetable oil
salt, pepper and garlic powder (optional)

Wash potatoes, cut in half and slice 1/4 to 1/8 inch thick slices. In a medium saucepan heat oil on medium-high heat. When hot add potato slices, 3 to 4 slices at a time -depend on size of pan. When start to brown on sides and lightly on top, flip. Remove from heat when top lightly browns. Place on tray with paper-towels to absorb extra oil. When potatoes are done, sprinkle salt, pepper and garlic powder.
Makes 3 servings

Pumpkin Mush Cups

2 medium size pumpkins
butter
salt, pepper, nutmeg, garlic, basil, oregano, corn kernels, red or green diced peppers

Cut the pumpkins in half. Prick the skin a few times with a fork, apply some butter all over them and place on a cookie sheet, cut-side up. Bake in 350 degrees for approx. 30 minutes or until the meat is soft but the shell still holds. Let the pumpkin cool a bit, then scoop out the seeds with a spoon. Scoop out the pumpkin meat into a bowl and mash it, as if making mash-potatoes. Add salt, pepper, nutmeg, garlic, basil, oregano, or other preferred extra. Re-fill pumpkin halves and bake for approx. another 20 minutes. To serve, top with hot yummy corn kernels and/or peppers -if desired. You may sprinkle a pinch of cinnamon. Garnish with basil leaf.
Makes 4 servings.

Candied Squash Ring

2 acorn squashes
2/3 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup soft butter

Cut acorn squashes crosswise in 1 inch slices. Discard seeds and ends. Arrange in a single layer in a shallow baking dish. Cover and bake at 350 degrees for 30-35 minutes. Combine brown sugar and butter, spread over squash. Bake, uncovered for another 15-20 minutes, basting occasionally.
Makes 6 servings.

Delicious Vegan Pumpkin Pie

CRUST:
1/2 cup unbleached flour
7 tbsp whole wheat flour
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp vegan sugar or granulated cane syrup
1/2 tsp baking powder
3 tbsp canola oil
3 tbsp soy milk
1/2 tsp lemon juice
3-4 tbsp water

FILLING:
2 cups pumpkin (canned or fresh) If fresh, pre-cook and cool for preparation
1 cup rice milk
3/4 cu[ granulated cane syrup
1/4 cup cornstarch
1/2 tbsp dark molasses (to taste)
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp cloves
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1/4 tsp ground allspice

rolling pin
9 inch pie pan

CRUST PREPARATION:
In a medium bowl combine flours, salt, sugar and baking powder. In a small bowl mix oil and soy milk. Pour liquid mixture into dry ingredients, mix with fork until the dough holds together forming a ball. Add some water if it gets too dry, gradually, until dough is ready to roll. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate 1 hour. Lightly sprinkle flour over counter or table top and roll out dough with floured rolling pin. Form an 11 inch circle. Line the 9 inch pan with the dough and crimp the edges with your fingers, or a fork. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate while filling is being prepared.
Pre-heat oven to 425 degrees.

FILLING PREPARATION:
In a large bowl mix all ingredients until it is smooth and blunted. Pour mix into crust and smooth the top. Bake for 10 minutes \, then reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake for 45-50 minutes, until filling sets.

**For better results make 1 day ahead to allow the ingredients in the filling to set

Source: Celtic Connection, Llewellyn Worldwide, and a touch of me

original post: Jun 22, 2007

The Moon

The Earth’s Moon is a great teacher and aid when time for spell work. Depending on the spell to cast, be sure to aim it in harmony with the cycles of the moon to achieve the most effective results. The Moon has three aspects: the Waxing, New or Growing Moon, Full Moon, Waning, Old or Dying Moon.

New Moon / Waxing Moon
The Moon is waxing and growing. This is known to be a time to plan spells that introduce new beginnings or projects. A new career, house move, job, relationship, any new venture in life. Bring all the newness you want into your life with the powers of the New Moon.

Full Moon
This is a time when the Moon is at its most powerful, and the magic most potent. Performing any positive spell at this time will achieve good results. This is the ideal time for healing, guidance, and completion spells.

Old Moon / Waning Moon
The casting out of the old ways, banishing old habits, smoking, eating habits, the removal of troubles and worries.

(Click image to enlarge.)
FULL MOON

Full moon is a lunar phase that occurs when the Moon is on the opposite side of the Earth from the Sun. More precisely, a full moon occurs when the geocentric apparent longitudes of the Sun and Moon differ by 180 degrees; the Moon is then in opposition with the Sun. At this time, as seen by viewers on Earth, the hemisphere of the Moon that is facing the earth (the near side) is almost fully illuminated by the Sun and appears round. Only during a full moon is the opposite hemisphere of the Moon, which is not visible from Earth (the far side), completely unilluminated.

The average lunar month is about 29.531 days long, so that the full moon falls on either the 14th or 15th of the lunar month in those calendars that start the month on the new moon. In any event, as lunar months are counted in discrete numbers of days, lunar months are said to be either 29 or 30 days long.

Characteristics

Although it takes only 27.322 days on average for the Moon to complete one orbit around the Earth (the sidereal month), as a result of the Earth’s orbital motion around the Sun it requires about two additional days for the Earth, Moon, and Sun to acquire the same relative geometry. So on average the number of days between two similar phases (e.g., between one full moon and the next full moon) is about 29.531 days. This period is referred to as a lunation, lunar month, or synodic month. The actual number of days in a lunation can vary from about 29.272 to 29.833 because the velocities of the Moon and of the Earth are not constant in their elliptic orbits, and because of gravitational interactions with other bodies in the solar system.

Because the month of February has only 28 days (or 29 in a leap year), there have been a few occasions during which this month has been without a full moon. In particular, there was no full moon in February of 1866, 1885, 1915, 1934, 1961 or 1999. There will be no full moon during February of 2018. In these years, there were instead either two full moons in January, March, or both (as in 1999). In the leap year of 1972, there was a full moon on February 29. The previous February 29 full moon occurred in 1820 and before that in 1752.

A full moon is often thought of as an event of a full night’s duration. This is somewhat misleading, as the Moon seen from Earth is continuously becoming larger or smaller (though much too slowly to notice with the naked eye). Its absolute maximum size occurs at the moment expansion has stopped, and when graphed, its tangent slope is zero. For any given location, about half of these absolute maximum full moons will be potentially visible, as the other half occur during the day, when the full moon is below the horizon. Many almanacs list full moons not just by date, but by their exact time as well (usually in GMT). Typical monthly calendars which include phases of the moon may be off by one day if intended for use in a different time zone.

The date and time of a specific full moon (assuming a circular orbit) can be calculated from the equation:

where D is the number of days since 1 January 2000 00:00:00 UTC, and N is an integer number of full moons, starting with 0 for the first full moon of the year 2000. The true time of a full moon may differ from this approximation by up to about 14.5 hours as a result of the non-circularity of the moon’s orbit. The age and apparent size of the full moon vary in a cycle of just under 14 synodic months, which has been referred to as a full moon cycle.

Full moons are generally a poor time to conduct astronomical observations, since the bright reflected sunlight from the moon overwhelms the dimmer light from stars.

FolkLore

Full Moons are traditionally associated with temporal insomnia, insanity (hence the terms lunacy and lunatic) and various “magical phenomena” such as lycanthropy.

Many neopagans hold a monthly ritual called an Esbat at each full moon, while some people practicing traditional Chinese religions prepare their ritual offerings to their ancestors and deities on every full and new moon.

Calendars

The Hindu, Thai, Hebrew, Islamic, Tibetan, Mayan, Neo-pagan, Celtic, and the traditional Chinese calendars are all based on the phases of the Moon. None of these calendars, however, begin their months with the full moon. In the Chinese, Jewish, Thai and some Hindu calendars, the full moon always occurs in the middle of a month.

In the Gregorian calendar, the date of Easter is the first Sunday after the ecclesiastical full moon which occurs after the ecclesiastical vernal equinox. In this context, the date of the full moon (together with the date of the vernal equinox) is calculated not according to actual astronomical phenomena, but according to a calendrical approximation of these phenomena.

In the Chinese calendar, the Mid-Autumn Festival falls on the full moon of the eighth month, whereas the Lantern Festival falls on the first full moon of the year.

Full Moon Names

It is traditional to assign special names to each full moon of the year, although the rule for determining which name will be assigned has changed over time (see article at blue moon). An ancient method of assigning names is based upon seasons and quarters of the year. For instance, the Egg Moon (the full moon before Easter) would be the first moon after March 21st, and the Lenten Moon would be the last moon on or before March 21st. Modern practice, however, is to assign the traditional names based on the Gregorian calendar month in which the full moon falls. This method frequently results in the same name as the older method would, and is far more convenient to use.

The following table gives the traditional English names for each month’s full moon, the names given by Native Americans in the northern and eastern United States, other common names, and Hindu names. Note that purnima or pornima is Hindi for full moon, which has also become the Malay word for full moon purnama.


(Click image to enlarge.)