Beltane

May 1

This time of year marks when the spring rains have finally passed and the flowers, which first started to bud at Ostara are now in full bloom. Quite simply, summer has returned; the Earth Goddess has returned and her fertility is abundant for all to see. May Day has always been a national holiday, not just in the British Isles and Germany but also further abroad, as it was traditionally a holiday for farm laborers, as there was now little for them to do but celebrate their work in establishing the growing crops.

This institutionalized holiday spread into the industrial workplace in the 19th Century, and was later to become associated with workers’ rights and even socialism; even in the old Soviet Union this once religious day of rest was established as a national holiday. This is a testament to the power this season festival has in the psyche of the peoples of Europe.

The translation of the Gaelic word Bel-tane (also Bel-tine, Beal-taine, Bealltainne etc) is the Fire of Bel. Next to Samhain it is one of the most elebrated of the old celtic fire festivals; when fires were lit to celebrate the change in the year. It is titled after the old Gaelic god Bel, also known as Belenius or Belenos. Some have suggested his title actually means ‘the shining one’, making him possibly a deity of the sun or the moon. What is certain is that he was an ithy-phallic fertilty god. The May Pole which is seen on May Day may in fact be a memory of his worship and adoration as the consort of the now fertile Earth Mother. It was not only a gaelic festival but also existed among the German and Anglo-Saxon peoples with many of its symbols originating in these cultures. In Austria and Germany May Poles are to be seen in many of the small country towns and villages. Apart from being a phallic symbol they are also said to represent a memory of the old Norse Yggdrassil or World Tree and the Anglo-Saxon Irminsul or World Pillar; the axis mundi or centre of the world. In Austria these are poles are elaborately carved by the villagers who make them and erect them a week before Walpurgis Nacht or the night of St. Walpurga, the Christian title given to May Eve. Like Samhain, it was believed that this was a time when witches were abroad; a memory of the festivals pagan origins. It is traditional also at these times for bands of youths from neighboring villages to try and cut down their neighbors May Pole. This is all done as fun and sport, but it is a matter of pride in these hamlets that your pole should still be standing on May Day. In England May Day is firmly associated with the May Pole as well, but the customs around it are more sedate. It is traditional for the first of many church fetes (or fair) to be held on this day, where children from local schools holding colored ribbons dance around the May Pole in the local churchyard.

These festivities culminate in the crowning of a young woman as the Queen of the May; the symbolic representative of the fertile Earth Mother. But there are also numerous traditional folk festivals in Britain where other May traditions play a part. In Hastings, Kent, the Jack-in-the-Green Festival is held every May Day Bank Holiday Weekend. Jack; a man disguised in a frame covered in leaves with a crown and the face of King Charles II placed on it, bobs and frolicks his way through the town accompanied by colorfully dressed Morris dancers, mummers and drummers. It is said to commemorate the restoration of the monarchy in England, but the parade existed well before Cromwell and his puritans banned it in the 17th Century, having its origins in the English tradition of the sacrificial king. Further west in Cornwall Beltane is celebrated at Padstow with the traditional Obby Oss. Again a man in disguise parades around the town, but this time he is more sinister in his dress. His costume is more than just a Hobby Horse, which is often seen on village greens on this day, but that of the Oss; the ferocious head of a dragon who attempts to ‘devour’ the local girls by lifting up and dropping his black skirt over them, as he is tempted by the teaser; a young lady who carries the phallic teasing wand. All of this is done with laughter as the Oss, the teaser and the accompanying revelers all dressed in white with their red sashes, wind their way through the lanes of the small fishing village surrounded by the hundreds of spectators who come to watch every year. All are there to celebrate the coming of summer, and the lanes are filled with the singing of the traditional song associated with this festival:

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Bringing you closer to the Seasons

Flower Moon

MAY 12, 2025

May is most notable for being the turning point in the year where temperatures rise and a vast variety of flowers come into full bloom, letting the world break out into a riot of color. As such, May’s full moon has come to be known as the Full Flower Moon. The Anishnaabe tribe also called it the Blossom Moon. In Northern America, you can expect to see flowers such as bluebells, sundrops, violets, and so on, as well as lush greenery to go with the blossoms. The Apache and Lakota peoples named May’s full moon the Green Leaves Moon, while the Mohawk tribe called it the Big Leaf Moon. But there is one specific plant that’s very important during the May season - and it is, in fact, not a flower.

This plant is corn, an important staple food for Northern American peoples. According to the Algonquin tribes, May’s full moon is the Corn Planting Moon. For Native American tribes, this is the perfect time for them to start preparing the fields for farming and sowing the seeds saved up from last year. Appropriately, the Abenaki culture refers to May’s full moon as the Field Maker Moon, while the Haida tribe calls it the Food Gathering Moon. Apart from corn, other foods such as beans, squash, and potatoes are planted during this time. The Cherokee tribe called May’s full moon the Anisguti Moon, or the Planting Moon, and would traditionally perform a Corn Dance during this period to encourage a fruitful corn harvest.

Due to the rising temperatures, the Full Flower Moon is also a time of heightened fertility. This is a good time for women to bear children in a warm, safe environment that would increase the chance of their survival. That’s why May’s full moon is also named Mother’s Moon, or Milk Moon, which could refer to breastfeeding or to the milking of cows. The latter interpretation is based off the Old English name Rimilcemona, or the Month of Three Milkings, referring to how this was a period where cows could be milked up to three times daily.

In other parts of the world, the Full Flower Moon is better known as Vesak or Buddha Day, the most significant celebration for Buddhists all around the world. On the first full moon of May, Buddhists commemorate the birth, enlightenment, and passing of the Buddha. Devout practioners are encouraged to renew their intention to adhere to sacred Buddhist principles, as well as refrain from all forms of killing and violence, including eating meat. Celebrations include giving charity to the poor, disabled, and otherwise marginalized groups in society. Depending on your location, you may witness the spectacular practice of releasing thousands of caged birds into the air as a symbolic gesture of liberation, though this tradition is illegal in countries such as Singapore because it may cause harm to local ecosystems.

Pagans, on the other hand, associate the Full Flower Moon with the element of fire, and thus often celebrate it by lighting bonfires and engaging in other magical fire rituals to bring prosperity. Powerful colors for the Full Flower Moon include fiery colors like red, yellow, and orange. This is a good time to tend your garden and let the seeds you’ve planted blossom - both literally and metaphorically. Cultivate your passions and desires, encourage them to burst forth into bloom, and you will be rewarded with abundance in various forms in your life.

 

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