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lunaesteria · 6 months
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Hunter's Moon - October 28, 2023
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Grab your masks and candy buckets and trim the twigs on your best besom, witches! It's time for the Hunter's Moon!
Hunter's Moon
The Hunter's Moon is the name usually given to the full moon which appears in October, provided that the Harvest Moon has occurred in September. Remember - the Harvest Moon is the full moon closest to the autumnal equinox and that can mean September OR October! The Hunter's Moon is next full moon to follow it, so it may occur in October OR November. The Harvest and Hunter's moons are the only two moons in the calendar which are tied to a specific event in this way, while the others reflect signs of seasonal growth or animal behavior.
Like the Harvest Moon, the Hunter's Moon rises big, bright, and early, and it may appear to be full for two or three nights in a row. The celestial peak of illumination is at 4:24pm EST on October 28th, but the moon may also appear full on the 27th and 29th. This year's Harvest Moon will also be sporting a partial lunar eclipse - check here to see if it will be visible in your area!
The name Hunter's Moon is taken from the traditional timing for the fall hunting season, as the name implies. The fields cleared in previous months and the gradually cooling weather meant that animals fattened up from summer foraging would be roaming in open ground, making prime targets for anyone looking to put some meat in the pantry for winter. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, this may also be the origin of the other common October moniker, the Blood Moon, which has been in use in the British Isles since at least the Middle Ages.
North American indigenous names for the October moon include Falling Leaves Moon (Anishinaabe), Freezing Moon (Ojibwe), Migrating Moon (Cree), and Big Wind Moon (Zuni). In several modern pagan traditions, the October moon is called the Sanguine or Blood Moon due to its' with the association with the hunt and with alleged sacrifices made ahead of the coming winter. (Keep in mind that any claims about What The Druids Did should be taken with a grain of salt, as they did not keep written records of their ceremonies.)
What Does It Mean For Witches?
October is a time to finish our harvests. We gather in the last of what we sowed earlier in the year and reflect on what our work has wrought and what our labor has produced. It is also a time of transition as the weather begins to shift more noticeably toward the chill of winter. Shore up whatever provisions you need for the immediate future and complete whatever preparations you've been making for the cold season, both magical and practical. A little weatherproofing goes a long way!
This is also the month when numerous Western cultures remember their honored dead and a time when some believe that contact with various unseen realms is more easily accomplished. If you're seeking advice or reassurance from the greater beyond, or looking to do some planning or forecasting for the coming year, now might be the optimal time to do it.
What Witchy Things Can We Do?
Celebrate the end of the harvest season with your favorite recipes! Bust out that hearty stew or delicious pie you've been dying to make but kept putting off during the hot months. Use local produce to make something special and gather in the last fruits of your garden.
Get your divination game on! Many October party games include fortune-telling aspects for love or marriage or professional prospects. Choose your favorite method and see what it has to tell you about the coming year and where your current path may lead. Remember that the choices we make change the path and therefore the outcome, so try to regard the results as written in sand rather than stone.
Participate in the hunt yourself! Whether it's an actual seasonal hunt for game (safely and responsibly done, of course) or a bit of foraging or a personal search for something you've been needing, this is the perfect time to connect with that drive to seek and gather. Make one more trip for wildcrafted plants before everything turns brown and brittle. Stalk the aisles of your favorite local shops for craft supplies, new decorations, or perhaps that fancy hat you've been dreaming of for the upcoming holiday.
Prepare for the cold months! Switch out your wardrobe, heap those blankets on the bed, change the decor to something autumnal, and make sure your home and vehicle are ready for winter. If you do any seasonal crafts or fibre arts, start pulling out your accoutrements.
Shed your metaphorical skin one more time. Examine what you carry in your heart and where your priorities lie. If there is anything left that weighs you down or no longer serves you or disrupts your life unnecessarily, prune it away and let it go. This process is not always comfortable and may leave you feeling raw, but sometimes hard decisions must be made. You are not meant to be in perpetual motion or constant production. Give yourself permission to rest.
Consider also the parts of yourself that you don't always like. Is there value in the struggle to deny them and push them away? Is there anything that might serve you better if it was embraced rather than denied? So often we speak of letting things go and laying down burdens in order to progress. But there is also power in remembrance, in anger, in spite, in grief, in ambition. Remember that while you should forgive yourself for past mistakes and learn from them, you are not required to do the same for others. Remember also that setting boundaries is healthy and that if they are not respected, you are within your rights to remind others than actions have consequences. Protecting yourself is not always pretty and it is not always polite. And it doesn't have to be.
Happy Hunter's Moon, witches! 🌕🏹
Further Reading:
Additional Lunar Calendar posts
Secular Celebrations - Samhain
Hunter's Moon, The Old Farmer's Almanac.
Hunter's Moon 2023: The Spiritual Meaning of October's Full Moon, The Peculiar Brunette.
Partial Lunar Eclipse on October 28-29, 2023 - Where and When To See, Time and Date.
Everyday Moon Magic: Spells & Rituals for Abundant Living, Dorothy Morrison, Llewellyn Publications, 2004.
Image Credit - Darkfoxelixir on Shutterstock.
(If you’re enjoying my content, please feel free to drop a little something in the tip jar or check out my published works on Amazon or in the Willow Wings Witch Shop. 😊)
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lunaesteria · 6 months
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Secular Celebrations - Samhain
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And then we come to the best holiday of them all - October 31st, good old Samhain. Seriously, if you don’t like Samhain or Halloween, I’m just not sure we can be friends. We all know how it’s celebrated - ghost stories and guising and good times. And lots of witchcraft. So much. All the witchcraft. -cackle-
Samhain is the third and final harvest festival, the harvest of flesh. This is when animals would be slaughtered, and sacrifices would be made, and the dead would be remembered. This is the night that the veil between the mortal world and the spirit realm is rumored to be at its’ thinnest. I mean, it’s always pretty thin, it’s a VEIL, after all, not a theatre curtain, although that’s another good analogy. But around Samhain, the dead travel more freely. They’re moving toward their final rest, if they haven’t found it yet, or perhaps they’re coming back for a visit. Día de Muertos is another holiday that celebrates this, with feasts and marigold garlands and family altars called ofrendas.
So first and foremost, Samhain is a time to remember those who came before. I think this is going to be sadder and more poignant in the next few years than it might have been before. We’ve all lost so much. It’s nice to have one night in the year when we’re encouraged to remember the dead fondly and laugh about the good times, even though it might be hard at other times. Honor your deceased loved ones with a cemetery visit or a gift of food or flowers. Commune with the dead, if you wish to do so. Just remember to hang up and cleanse the house after, so no uninvited guests stick around.
And it’s not just your immediate family you can call on, but your more distant ancestors too. Remember that ancestors aren’t just your blood relatives, but also people who inspire you or bring you insight. Honor the witches who came before as well, and the ones who were called witches but weren’t and suffered for it.
Put out some fruit offerings - I usually use apples - or a few shots of alcohol or a dish of salt. Another tradition calls for carving the names of the deceased into apples or potatoes and tossing them into water as an offering. I think this one might be an offshoot of the old “bobbing for apples” party time, but it’s not a precursor.
Bobbing for apples is a throwback to older traditions where partygoers would use apples and other party food to perform simple divinations. An apple peel taken off in one strip would be tossed over the shoulder and the shape it formed when it landed was supposed to show the initial of your future spouse. Dishes like barm brack and colcannon would have little charms hidden inside that were supposed to tell the fortune of the person whose portion contained them for the coming year. So if you’ve got divinations to do, especially for love or fortune, this is the time. Cast your predictions for the coming year.
Carve pumpkins and make baked pumpkin seeds. Tell the tale of Jack O’ Lantern and his glowing turnip. Learn about the history of Halloween and Samhain and where they intersect.
Samhain is a holiday that pretty much demands bonfires. Between burning leaves and the symbolic sacrificial pyre, a towering pile of flaming branches is something that’s pretty ubiquitous in cooler climes. When I lived in Pennsylvania, there was always a farm somewhere that would host one, usually alongside other spooky seasonal festivities.
If you have the opportunity to visit another harvest festival or a Halloween fair or a haunted attraction, go and have some fun! It’s a time of year for celebrating the spooky side of life, the scary things that remind us just how alive we are. So put on those scary movies, decorate your home, and scare your friends and neighbors. Tell your favorite ghost stories and bump Spooky Scary Skeletons loud enough to disturb folks in the next county. However you celebrate your spooky side, indulge it as far as you’re able.
On Samhain, we let our witch flags fly. It’s the one time of year that even those of us still witching in secret are sometimes able to get away with living in the open, or at least, a little less in hiding. Celebrate your life as a witch, even if you must do so in private. Revel in the pop culture visibility that’s giving us more of a foothold in the “normal” world.
On a personal note, this is the time of year that I do my annual home warding. Part of it has to do with the need to refresh them because of the increased spirit traffic, and part of it has to do with Samhain being an easily-markable holiday. I perform a full altar cleaning, an offering with fire and whiskey to honor my ancestors and my patrons, plus whatever spells I need to do for divination or immediate needs. Then, I do a full ritual to unravel the old wards, clean the place out, and weave new protections that will last until the following year. I do patch them in the interim sometimes, if they need it.
If you have something big to do with your craft, Samhain is a good time for it. Or, if you need a break, it’s a fine time for that too. You’ll know what’s best for you at the time.
This is a season of remembrance. In addition to honoring those who came before, study the history of your chosen craft and of witches in general. Think about what brought you to the craft in the first places, and what keeps you going. If you feel like your inspiration is waning, it’s a good time to find ways of reinvigorating yourself.
Meditate on the year so far. What knowledge have you gained? What do you want to learn next? What do you wish you’d done differently? What has passed out of your life that you’ll miss? What do you remember most fondly?
Meditate on the nature of disguise. What metaphorical masks do you wear? When and where do you feel most like yourself? Is there some part of yourself that you feel compelled to hide, and if so, why? What face would you like to be able to show to the world? Is it maybe time to find ways of living more in the open, or is it safer to keep your mask on for now?
- Hex Positive, Ep. 011, "Secular Celebrations" (November 1, 2020)
Other Posts In This Series:
Imbolc
Spring Equinox
Beltane
Midsummer
Lughnasadh
Autumn Equinox
Samhain
Yule
If you’re enjoying my content, please feel free to drop a little something in the tip jar or check out my published works on Amazon or in the Willow Wings Witch Shop.
The Hex Positive podcast is a proud member of the Nerd and Tie Podcast Network.😊
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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alright witchblr
whats the significance of a blood spot on an egg yolk? an egg im cooking with not one being used for a cleanse
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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Rabbit rabbit
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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I've been so caught up in this cosplay I'm making that I forgot I was gonna do something with this blog 🤣
Stay tuned I guess 💜✨️
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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happy fall!!!!!!
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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This week's Friendly Reminder is that witchy writers will not always tell you the exact purpose or reasoning behind every component in a spell or recipe and this is not an indicator of poor writing or a bad book.
Component purposes and correspondences should be obvious or at least presumable from the description of the spell. It's usually a pretty safe bet that whatever is included is aligned with the intended purpose of the thing to be done. For example, if the spell is a luck spell, you can probably assume that included components have some association with luck, prosperity, abundance, or attraction. If a powder is meant to banish something, the components are likely to be ones that deflect, cleanse, repel, or protect.
While it can be helpful for the author of a spell or recipe to explain all this point-by-point, it is not commonly done unless the explanation is relevant to the casting process, the components or use thereof are unconventional, or the book is meant for readers who are completely unfamiliar with the use of the listed components.
Common knowledge isn't common to everyone, but there's only a certain amount of hand-holding that can be done. At some point, an author must assume that the reader will either understand the instructions, take things on faith, or take the initiative look up additional information themselves if they feel the need.
Source: A recent spate of reviews complaining that my books are hard to understand because I don't fully explain the purposes and correspondences of each component in my published spells and recipes.
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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I'm really annoyed that Tumblr is littered with ads like
Is there a different platform I should be posting on these days?
I like it here because I'm a sucker for customizing my blog and posts etc but if there is somewhere else I should be then let me know 😅
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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Hey Boo~ Glad you're here and I wanted to let you know that~♥
💜💜💜
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lunaesteria · 7 months
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any plans on re-posting the correspondences for the planets and the zodiac? (fingers crossed 🤞)
oh for sure! I need to see which ones I reblogged from my inactive account and which ones actually need to be remade but I totally plan on it 💜
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lunaesteria · 8 months
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okay but in other news i do think i'm going to be bringing back this blog sometime very soon.
a rebrand is much needed i think so i need to figure that out first so i don't have an identity crisis 2 days into it.
I haven't been on here regularly in close to probably 4 years at this point so I need to figure that out too.
i don't have a clue what i'm gonna post but i'll figure it out.
anyways, thanks to the ones who found me again when I remade this blog and hopefully I'll make some new friends and mutuals along the way. 💜
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lunaesteria · 8 months
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are yall still mad that i use florida water
asking for a friend
okie bye
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lunaesteria · 1 year
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First page of my new grimoire and of course it has to be about the moon! I’m so excited to do this, I’ve wanted to for so long and now that I feel confident in my religion and craft I am ready to do this. I won’t share every page as some will be highly personal (like my birth chart) but I will share some of my favorites.
Yes my handwriting is awful please ignore it
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lunaesteria · 2 years
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I had found your original blog when starting on my path 5 years ago, took a break and am now revamping my craft and was sad to see you had disappeared, I'm glad to see you're back!
that makes me happier than you’ll ever know ❤️
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lunaesteria · 2 years
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y’all why is there a sephiroth on my ceiling?
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lunaesteria · 2 years
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Luna’s Beginner Witch Masterpost
taken from an ask i received, which you can find here.
where do i start?
what’s next?
common magickal tools and their uses
witchy terminology
intent
visualization
tools of the trade
the best time for…
cleansing and charging items
daily witch things
how to enchant items
grimoire organization ideas
herbs/food/plants by purpose
a to z crystal meanings
quick grounding/centering
earth grounding and centering
luna’s guide to spellcasting
updated on 10-6-2018
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lunaesteria · 2 years
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Do eclipses mess with magic, even if the spell isn't focused on or using the planets??
yes - they’re great for shadow work and baneful magic but not so great for positive manifestations
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