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Danu Forest - The Magic of the Spring Equinox: Seasonal celebrations to honour natures ever-turning wheel

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Danu Forest The Magic of the Spring Equinox: Seasonal celebrations to honour natures ever-turning wheel
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A modern-day exploration of Celtic spirituality, folklore and traditions interwoven with practical crafts, recipes, spells, ceremonies, guided visualizations and meditations in a soulful, seasonal celebration of the Spring Equinox.

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In this the fourth in a series of e-books on the solstices and equinoxes of - photo 1

In this, the fourth in a series of e-books on the solstices and equinoxes of the years sacred cycle, Danu Forest reveals the secrets of the Spring Equinox, when the sun is gaining power and the days and nights are briefly of equal length. This is a festival of balance; a time for gestating new plans and ideas, within and without; a time of joy, exuberance and fertility. Throughout the text, Danu skilfully revives ancient traditions, encouraging us to reconnect with nature, and so with ourselves, through a host of practical ideas and rituals. Create a beautiful spring altar to manifest sacred space in your home. Meditate on the changing heavens with Celtic star lore. Make eostre cookies to give as gifts, nettle tisane to promote self-healing, or incense to evoke the spirit and scents of spring. Theres even a magical guided journey to meet the goddess of spring, so she may bless the new beginnings in your life.

The Magic of the Spring Equinox

Danu Forest

For my family and for that most mysterious woman the ever-radiant - photo 2

For my family, and for that most mysterious woman, the ever-radiant, ever-changing Mother Nature, into whose arms we must always surrender.

This edition published in the UK and USA 2016 by

Watkins, an imprint of Watkins Media Limited

19 Cecil Court, London WC2N 4EZ

Text Copyright Danu Forest 2016Illustrations Dan Goodfellow 2016

Illustrations by Dan Goodfellow

Danu Forest has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without prior permission in writing from the Publishers.

ISBN: 978-1-78028-863-5

www.watkinspublishing.com

Publishers note: The information in this book is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice and treatment. If you are pregnant or breastfeeding or have any special dietary requirements or medical conditions, it is recommended that you consult a medical professional before following any of the information or recipes contained in this book. Watkins Media Limited, or any other persons who have been involved in working on this publication, cannot accept responsibility for any errors or omissions, inadvertent or not, that may be found in the recipes or text, nor for any problems that may arise as a result of preparing one of these recipes or following the advice contained in this work.

When working in the natural world, using the ceremonies and ideas in this book, remember to plan ahead and be safe. Follow any signs and local bylaws. Be considerate of plants, animals and other people, and always take your litter home.

Contents

About the author

Danu Forest has practised Celtic witchcraft, Druidry and Celtic shamanism for more than 25 years, and is a respected wisewoman and spiritual teacher. Born with the second sight, she is an experienced seer, or Awenydd, and has helped others to walk the green road, developing and healing their relationship with the spirits of nature and their ancestors for many years. She is a Druid-grade member of OBOD (the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids) and an Ard banDrui (Arch Druidess) of the Druid clan of Dana. She leads a Druid grove in Glastonbury in the UK, and has held public seasonal celebrations for over a decade. Danu is the author of several books on Celtic spirituality. For more information on her work and courses, visit www.danuforest.co.uk.

Introduction

At the Spring Equinox day and night are of equal length and light and dark are held in balance. During the Spring and Autumn Equinoxes, the sun rises and sets at the midpoint between its furthest northern and southern positions, marking a seasonal shift between these two extremes. The weather gradually grows warmer as the days lengthen, and new life seems to be springing up everywhere. Birds are nesting in the hedgerows and there is blossom on the bough. Winter has finally receded and its time to open the windows wide and seek some fresh air. Spring rains wash the world clean, and the sap is rising in the trees and in our own spirits all around life seems to be transforming into brightness and beauty. In the northern hemisphere, the Spring Equinox takes place on a day between 2023 March; in the southern hemisphere it falls between 2023 September. However, the suggestions for celebration that this book contains can be carried out at any time between the end of winter and the middle of spring, as the whole of this period is considered to be the magical season of the Spring Equinox.

Celtic spirituality

Iron Age Celtic culture spanned much of northern Europe and the Atlantic coast, and was highly sophisticated for its time. Long-distance trade routes allowed the exchange of ideas, helped by a common language and shared values and spiritual outlook. The Celts relationship with nature and their environment was all encompassing; they understood that their very lives were dependent upon nature, its seasons and its patterns. The heavens above, their agricultural life below, and the wilderness that surrounded them were all infused with spiritual significance. In the Celtic worldview, the gods were immanent in nature; they were present in tree and rock, wind and rain, river and soil, sun and moon, together with a whole host of spirits and the ever-guiding ancestors.

The Druids, the Celts religious caste, were fabled for their extensive knowledge of nature, philosophy and the sciences, which included detailed starlore. This mastery allowed them to mark the passage of time and seasonal shifts with a startling accuracy that was beyond even the astronomical capabilities of the Roman Empire at the time. The wonderful Celtic calendar found in Coligny, France, in 1897 demonstrates the Druids significant mathematical and astronomical knowledge, and is based on the moons 19-year cycle an astounding feat for the time. Each of the months recorded in the Coligny calendar runs from full moon to full moon, charting the fall and rise and fall again of the lunar rhythm. This method of tracking time placed importance upon the inner life, on the emotional and the spiritual, as well as on the ebb and flow of the tides both of the sea and of womens fertility balancing the solar pattern of the seasons to create a rich and deeply soulful way for the Celts to relate to the world and to themselves. Its clear the stars and seasons were observed not only for practical reasons, but also for their spiritual lessons: a pattern of increase, then decay, followed by rebirth and renewal.

Celtic culture waned in the centuries following the expansion of the Roman Empire, but lingered on in what is commonly called the Celtic fringe notably Brittany, Cornwall, Wales, Scotland, the Isle of Man and Ireland. When Christianity came, many Celtic gods were forgotten or turned into saints or faery figures remembered only in folklore, yet traditions that celebrated the turn of the seasons with ceremony and magic have spanned the millennia.

The Wheel of the Year

The turning of nature through the deep rest and renewal of winter, the bursting forth of green shoots in spring, the fiery exuberance of summer and the wholesome harvest of autumn (fall) is an endless cycle of growth and completion that can be mirrored in our own lives spiritually, psychologically and practically. Every one of the eight special seasonal festivals listed below has a history of observance going back to the very earliest times, surviving until the modern era in various forms across the Celtic fringe. In the last few decades these ancient celebrations have seen a passionate revival, as many people feel the call to relate spiritually to their environment once again and seek to rediscover their heritage. Woven together, these festivals make a consistent whole: the Wheel of the Year. This cycle of conscious celebration helps us, year on year, to align with natures rhythms with feelings of wonder and insight.

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