SEASONAL WHEEL
THE OLD CALENDAR STILL TURNS. FOLLOW THE YEAR AS THE OLD WORLD KEPT IT.
Follow the turning of the year through old festivals, forgotten customs, seasonal folklore, and ritual practice. From first frost to firelit spring, each season carries its own magic—and its own ghosts.
Lugh, Skill & Sacred Craft: The God of Everything and the Festival of Excellence
Why is the harvest festival named for a god of skill? Lugh is not a grain deity or a weather deity — he is the master of all crafts simultaneously, the god who embodies excellence in every domain. The Tailteann Games, the harvest knot, the spear that cannot miss: all of them carry the same teaching. At Lughnasadh, skill developed fully and offered completely is itself an act of devotion.
Lughnasadh: First Harvest, Sacred Grain, and the Cost of Abundance
The harvest does not arrive for free. Someone worked the field, someone cut the grain, and long before that — in the oldest mythology of Ireland — someone gave her life to clear the forest so the field could exist at all. Lughnasadh is the Celtic festival that refuses to let abundance be taken for granted. It is a feast, a funeral, and a reckoning — all held in the weight of a single loaf of bread.
“The old calendar still turns beneath the modern world.”
— Ancient Proverb
ADVENTURE AWAITS ELSEWHERE
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