Known as: Bright Moon, Budding Moon, Dyad Moon, Egg Laying Moon, Frog Moon, Hare Moon, Leaf Budding Moon, Merry Moon, Moon of the Shedding Ponies, Planting Moon, Sproutkale, Thrimilcmonath & Winnemanoth
Nature spirits: Elves & Faeries
Deities: Aphrodite, Artemis, Bast, Cernunnos, Diana, Frigga, Flora, Horned God, Kali, Maia, Pan, Priapus & Venus
Animals: Cat, leopard & lynx
Birds: Dove, Swallow & Swan
Herbs: Cinnamon, dittany of Crete, Elder, mint, mugwort & thyme
Flowers: Foxglove, lily of the valley & rose
Scents: Rose & sandalwood
Stones: Amber, Apache tear, carnelian, emerald, garnet, malachite, rose quartz, ruby, tourmaline & tsavorite
Colors: Brown, green, orange, pink & yellow
Energy:Ā Abundance, creative energy, faerie & spirit contact, fertility, intuition, love, marriage, material gains, money, propagation, prosperity, real-estate dealings, relationships & tenacity
Mayās Flower Moon name should beĀ noĀ surprise; flowers spring forth across North America in abundanceĀ thisĀ month!
⢠āFlower Moonā has been attributed toĀ Algonquin peoples, as confirmed by Christina Ruddy ofĀ The Algonquin Way Cultural Centre in Pikwakanagan,Ā Ontario.
Mayās Moon was also referred to as theĀ āMonth of Flowersā by Jonathan Carver in his 1798 publication,Ā Travels Through the Interior Parts of North America: 1766, 1767, 1768Ā (pp. 250-252), as a likelyĀ Dakota name. Carver stayed with the Naudowessie (Dakota)Ā over a period of time; his expedition covered the Great Lakes region, including the Wisconsin and MinnesotaĀ areas.
Known as: Beltaine, May day, Roodmas & Cethsamhain
Symbols: Eggs, faeries, fire, flowers & maypoles
Colors: Blue, dark yellow, green, light pink, orange, red, white yellow & rainbow spectrum
Oils/Incense: Frankincense, lilac, passion flower, rose, tuberose & vanilla
Animals: Bee, cattle, goat & rabbit
Stones: Bloodstone, emerald, lapis lazuli, orange carnelian, rose quartz & sapphire
Food: Beltane cakes, cherries, dairy foods, farls, green herbal salads, honey, meade, nuts, oat cakes, oats, strawberries & sweets
Herbs/Plants: Almond, ash tree, birch, bramble, cinquefoil, damiana, frankincense, hawthorn, ivy, meadowsweet, mushroom, rosemary, saffron, satyrion root, St.John's wort & woodruff
Flowers: Angelica, bluebell, daisy, hibiscus, honeysuckle, lilac, marigold, primrose, rose, rose hips & yellow cowslips
Trees: Ash, cedar, elder, fir, hawthorn, juniper, linden, mesquite, oak, pine, poplar, rowan & willow
Goddesses: Aphrodite, Areil, Artemis, Cybele, Danu, Diana, DƓn, Eiru, Elen, Eostre, Fand, Flidais, Flora, Freya, Frigga, Maia, Niwalen, Rhea, Rhiannon, Var, Venus & Xochiquetzal
Gods: Baal, Bacchnalia, Balder, Belanos, Belenus, Beli, Beltene, Cernunnos, Cupid, Faunus, Freyr, Grannus, The Green Man, Lares, Lugh, Manawyddan, Odin, Pan, Puck & Taranis
Issues, Intentions & Powers: Agriculture, creativity, fertility, lust, marriage, the otherworld/Underworld, pleasure, psychic ability, purification, sensuality, sex/uality, visions, warmth & youth
Spellwork: Birth, Earth magick, healing, health & pregnancy
⢠Create a daisy chain or floral decorations
⢠Decorate & dance around a Maypole
⢠Set up an outdoor altar & leave offerings to faeries
⢠Prepare a ritual bath with fresh flowers
⢠Light a bonfire or candles & dance around them
⢠Set aside time for self care
⢠Gather flowers & use them to decorate your home or altar
⢠Prepare a feast to celebrate with friends/family
⢠Bake bannocks, oat cakes or cookies
⢠Hang wreaths decorated with ribbons & flowers
⢠Plant flowers in your garden
⢠Start a wish book/box/journal
⢠Go on a walk & gice thanks to natureāø
⢠Cast fertility or a bunch spells
⢠Fill small baskets of flowers & small goodies, then leave them on your friends/neighbors doorstep as a gesture of goodwill & friendship
Beltane is mentioned in the earliest Irish literature and is associated with important events in Irish mythology. Also known as Cétshamhain ('first of summer'), it marked the beginning of summer & was when cattle were driven out to the summer pastures. Rituals were performed to protect cattle, people & crops, and to encourage growth. (Today, Witches who observe the Wheel of the Year celebrate Beltane as the height of Spring.)
SpecialĀ bonfiresĀ were kindled, whose flames, smoke & ashes were deemed to have protective powers. The people and their cattle would walk around or between bonfires & sometimes leap over the flames or embers. All household fires would be doused & then re-lit from the Beltane bonfire.
These gatherings would be accompanied by a feast, and some of the food and drink would be offered to theĀ aos sĆ. Doors, windows, byres and livestock would be decorated with yellow May flowers, perhaps because they evoked fire.
In parts of Ireland, people would make a May Bush: typically a thorn bush or branch decorated with flowers, ribbons, bright shells & rushlights.Ā Holy wellsĀ were also visited, while BeltaneĀ dewĀ was thought to bring beauty & maintain youthfulness.
⢠TheĀ aos sĆĀ (often referred to as spirits or fairies) were thought to be especially active at Beltane.Ā LikeĀ Samhain, which lies directly opposite from Beltane on the Wheel of the Year, this was seen as a time when the veil between worlds was at its thinnest. At Samhain the veil between the worlds of the living & the dead is thin enough that we can connect & convene with our beloved dead, here at Beltane itāsĀ the veil between the human world, and the world of faeries & nature spirits that has grown thin.Ā Offerings would be left at the ancient faerie forts, the wells and in other sacred places in an effort to appease these nature spirits to ensure a successful growing season.
Some believe this is when The Goddess is now the Mother & the God is seen as the Green Man or the wild stag. It celebrates the symbolic union, mating or marriage of the Goddess & God & heralds in the coming summer months. It represents life rather than Samhain on the opposite side of the Wheel of the Year.
RosaliaĀ orĀ RosariaĀ was a festival ofĀ rosesĀ celebrated on various dates, primarily inĀ May, but scattered through mid-July. The observance is sometimes called aĀ rosatioĀ ("rose-adornment") or theĀ dies rosationis, "day of rose-adornment," & could be celebrated also withĀ violets.Ā As a commemoration of the dead, theĀ rosatioĀ developed from the custom of placing flowers at burial sites. It was among the extensive private religious practices by means of which theĀ RomansĀ cared for their dead, reflecting the value placed on traditionĀ (mos maiorum, "the way of the ancestors"),Ā family lineage & memorials ranging from simple inscriptions to grand public works. Several dates on theĀ Roman calendarĀ were set aside as public holidays or memorial days devoted to the dead.
Roses had funerary significance in Greece, but were particularly associated with death & entombment among the Romans. In Greece, roses appear on funeraryĀ stelesĀ & in epitaphs most often of girls. Flowers were traditional symbols of rejuvenation, rebirth &memory, with the red & purple of roses & violets felt to evoke the color of blood as a form of propitiation
Llewellyn's Complete Book of Correspondences by Sandra Kines
A Witch's Book of Correspondences by Viktorija Briggs
Llewellyn 2024 magical almanac Practical magic for everyday living