
Originally posted on ecogreenlove: According to a BBC poll, 47% of people report having arguments about what types of plastic can be recycled. The …
Recycling Labels Explained

Originally posted on ecogreenlove: According to a BBC poll, 47% of people report having arguments about what types of plastic can be recycled. The …
Recycling Labels Explained

“Our task must be to free ourselves by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and its beauty.” ~ Albert Einstein via Thought for the Week — Lady Dyanna
Thought for the Week — Lady Dyanna — ravenhawks’ magazine

Acorn ink, derived from the mighty oak tree, can be a wonderful addition to your druid practice or art studio. Inks can be used for all manner of useful things, from drawing and artwork to the creation of sigils, writing in a druid’s journal, or engaging in other magical work. In this post, I’ll share […]
Making Acorn Ink – Instructions and Recipes — The Druid’s Garden — ravenhawks’ magazine — Life & Soul Magazine

Having the option to work from home should make you smile and bring you satisfaction. There are just so many perks to enjoy when you work from home. 1. No Commute This means you save time, money, and gas. You don’t have to wake up early to get ready to sit in traffic to eventually… via […]
10 Benefits of Working From Home — Society19 — ravenhawks’ magazine

The word Beltane corresponds to the modern Irish Gaelic word Bealtaine, the name of the month of May, and to the Scottish Gaelic word Bealtuinn meaning May Day.
Other names For the Day and the celebrations are:
May 1: Rudemas/Roodmas, Rood Day (the Christian term for Rood Day), St. Walburga’s Day; Beltane, May Day, Cetsamhain (opposite Samhain), Cershamain, Fairy Day, Sacred Thorn Day, Old Beltane, Beltaine, Beltain, Baltane, Walpurgis Night, Floriala (Roman feast of flowers from April 29 to May 1), Walpurgisnacht (Germanic-feast of St. Walpurga), Thrimilce (Anglo-Saxon), Bloumaand (Old Dutch) This holiday like many of the sabbats start on the eve and is celebrated thru the following Day.
There is no consensus on how the name was derived at but it is agreed that this Sabbat honors fertility and creation.
This was also a time when many cultures light Balefires. In some places that is still an honored tradition.

Beltane is mentioned in some of the earliest Irish literature, and it is associated with important events in Irish mythology. It marked the beginning of summer and was when cattle were driven out to the summer pastures. Rituals were performed to protect the cattle, crops, and people, and to encourage growth.



“Where there is a woman there is magic.” ~ Ntozake Shange
International Women’s Day — Ravenhawks’ Magickal Mystical Places

“The Winter Solstice or Yule It begins on “Mother Night” and ends twelve days later, on “Yule Night”, hence the “Twelve Days of Christmas” tradition.
Yule is a time of the Goddess of the Cold Darkness and the birth of the Divine Child, the reborn Sun God. It is a time of renewal and rebirth during Winter, and the turning of the Earth force tides.The Winter Solstice had been associated with the birth of a “Divine King” long before the rise of Christianity. Yule is about renewal, re-birth, returning hope and life.”- Ravenhawks Magazine
Link: https://ravenhawksmagazine.net/2018/12/14/yule-winter-solstice/