Thursday, April 28th

Red and gold or silver Blingees Challenge

Thursday, April 28th

 
Thursday is the day of the planet Jupiter, dedicated to Thunor (Thor) god of thunder and agricultural work. His parallels in various European traditions are Zeus, Taranis, Perun, Perkunas, and St. Olaf. The faith of the Northern Tradition holds Thursday sacred, just as Islam reveres Friday. Judaism the Sabbath (calculated from sunset on Friday to sunrise on Saturday), and Christianity, Sunday. This is why almost all adages about Thursday are positive. Thursday rules controlled optimism, energetic growth, physical well=being and material success.

 
Deity: Thor

 
Zodiac Sign: Sagittarius

 
Planet: Jupiter

 
Tree: Oak

 
Herb: Henbane

 
Stone: Topaz

 
Animal: Fish

 
Element: Fire

 
Color: White

 
Number: 3

 
Rune: Thorn (TH)

 
Celtic Tree Month of Saille (Willow) – April 15th thru May 12. The Willow tree is associated with healing and growth. During this phase, work on rituals, involving healing, growth of knowledge, nurturing, and women’s mysteries.

 
Runic Half Month of Man (human being) April 14 thru 28

 
Runic Half Month of Lagu (flowing water) begins April 29 and run thru May 13

 
Goddess of the Month of Maia April 18 thru May 15

 

Source

The Pagan Book of Days
Nigel Pennick

The Wicca Book of Days for Thursday, April 28th

you are the light of my life
The Wicca Book of Days for Thursday, April 28th

 

Frolicking for Flora

 
The ancient Romans venerated Flora, the goddess of all that blossoms, by the means of a riotous festival called the Floralia, which began on April 28 and ended on May 3. Throwing pease, lupines, and bans at one another and watching plays may have been a lot of fun, but a serious purpose underlay the frolics, namely to encourage the Goddess to nurture the spring blooms that would bear fruit later in the year. Indeed, it was as a result of some disastrous harvests and consequent famines that it was decided, in 173 BC, to hold the Ludi Florales (Games of Flora) each year.

 

Springtime Promise

 
If you are growing flowers, give Flora a helping hand and check that your plants are free of pests, well fed and if necessary, well watered too. You could also cut a few stems or twigs on which buds have formed to arrange in a vase for your altar or home.

 
The Wicca Book of Days
Selena Eilidh Ash

Pagan Book of Days for Thursday, April 28th

Rosy Heart
Pagan Book of Days for Thursday, April 28th

 

Floralia

 
The three-day Roman festival of Floralia commemorates the Goddess Flora, deity of flowers and the pleasures of youth. Her feast day was noted for its license, and medallions showing various positions of sexual enjoyment were distributed to the revelers. Beans and other seeds were thrown into the crowds, denoting fertility and fecundity.

 

Source

The Pagan Book of Days
Nigel Pennick

The Sky This Week: April 28 – May 1

roses

The Sky This Week: April 28 – May 1

 

Thursday, April 28
While the Lyrid meteor shower winds down this week, the Eta Aquariid shower ramps up. And the dwindling Moon casts less light into the morning sky by this weekend, which makes observing conditions far better. The best views will come in the hour or two before morning twilight commences, when you might see 5 to 10 meteors per hour from a dark site. The Eta Aquariids will peak May 5, when Northern Hemisphere observers could see up to 20 meteors per hour under dark skies.

 

Friday, April 29
Last Quarter Moon occurs at 11:29 p.m. EDT. The half-lit orb doesn’t rise until after 2 a.m. local daylight time tomorrow morning, however, when you can see it climbing in the southeast among the background stars of northern Capricornus.

 

Saturday, April 30
Asteroid 6 Hebe currently lies among the background stars of eastern Leo the Lion, just a stone’s throw from 2nd-magnitude Denebola. The region reaches its peak in the southern sky shortly after darkness falls. This evening, 10th-magnitude Hebe lies some 4° northwest of Denebola.

 

Sunday, May 1
One of the spring sky’s finest deep-sky objects, the Beehive star cluster (M44) in the constellation Cancer the Crab, lies high in the west once evening twilight fades away. The 3rd-magnitude cluster lies approximately 40 percent of the way from 1st-magnitude Pollux in Gemini to the similarly bright star Regulus in Leo. With naked eyes under a dark sky, you should be able to spot the Beehive as a faint cloud. But this star group explodes into dozens of stars through binoculars or a small telescope at low power.

 

Source

Astronomy Magazine

 

Your Sun & Moon Data for Thursday, April 28th

red heart roses

Your Sun & Moon Data for Thursday, April 28th

Sun
Sun Direction: ↑ 99.59° E
Sun Altitude: 36.20°
Sun Distance: 93.604 million mi
Next Solstice: Jun 20, 2016 5:34 PM (Summer)
Sunrise Today: 6:03 AM↑ 71° East
Sunset Today: 7:41 PM↑ 289° West
Length of Day: 13 hours, 38 minutes

 

Moon
Moon Direction: ↑ 230.52° SW
Moon Altitude: 16.77°
Moon Distance: 242374 mi
Next New Moon: May 6, 20162:29 PM
Next Full Moon: May 21, 20164:14 PM
Next Moonset: Today10:59 AM
Current Moon Phase: Waning Gibbous
Illumination: 66.1%

 

Source

timeanddate.com

 

Good Morning WOTC! Wishing You & Yours A Very Beautiful & Blessed Thursday!

the lady in red
The Gift

Bewildered and amazed,
I stand before thee;
Receiving thy wisdom
As thou cast thy light upon me.
The overwhelming knowledge given
Seems way too much to bear.
With thy blessings of inner strength
I find it easy, with others, to share!
I know my path in the incarnation,
To serve thee well and true;
I thank thee for thy gift thou hast given,
For this gift has given me life anew!

By The Light Of The Crystal Moon
Elizabeth Gardiepy

Herbal Medicinal Syrups

Ever been not a fan of the taste of some medicines?  Well, nature has a reply to that!

Medicinal syrups, herbal style~

Follow below for a step-by-step guide to making herbal medicinal syrups you can enjoy and heal yourself with.  For more information on this, visit Eupterra Foundation!

Herbal syrups are a great way to administer not so pleasant tasting herbs to young ones and bothered adults alike, or a great way to let your favorite herbs come to life in beverages and food dishes. Finding a nice combination of herbs can leave you with a tasty concoction perfect for many occasions and recipes! Herbal syrups make great additions to teas, desserts, bubbly beverages and cocktails, or all on their own by the spoonful.

Syrups can be prepared with sugar or honey. If prepared with honey, my preferred method, herbal syrup can be soothing and coating to the digestive tract membranes it comes into contact with, such as the throat. Besides being absolutely great for you, who doesn’t love a good honey coat when it’s cold outside? For proper preservation and a shelf stable syrup, it is recommended to use a ratio of 1:1 (tea to honey). However, you can cut back to 2:1 or 3:1. If you use less sweetener to tea parts, you will need to keep your syrup refrigerated and use quickly. You can also add some tincture to help preserve your syrup longer, as well as give an extra boost.

The best thing about syrups is that like tea or tinctures, you can formulate with any combination of herbs to create a preparation for your needs. While elderberry syrup is the most popular, I also love to have individual or combinations of ginger, thyme, elecampane, chamomile, peppermint, marshmallow root, schisandra berry, echinacea root, elder flower, hawthorn berry, holy basil, and hop flower syrups around!

How to Make Herbal Syrups

Ingredients

These two ingredients are good for helping with the mild mood changes we all experience from time to time. This syrup goes great drizzled on top of dessert, spooned into tea or hot toddies, or taken by the spoonful throughout the day.

  • Ashwagandha
  • Damiana
  • Honey
  • Water

Directions

  • First make a very strong decoction, using 1 oz of herb per 16 oz of water. Warm over low heat, bring to a simmer, cover partially, and reduce the liquid down to half the original volume.
  • When you have 8 oz of liquid, add 8 oz of honey.
  • Warm the mixture over low heat, stirring well. *Do not heat above 110 degrees.*
  • Optional: Add 1 part tincture or brandy to 3 parts syrup for a boost and longer shelf life.
  • Pour syrup into bottles and label. Store in the refrigerator, where it will last for up to six months.

Deity of the Day for April 26th is Ceres, Goddess of Agriculture

Deity of the Day

Ceres

Goddess of Agriculture

 

Areas of Influence: Ceres was the Roman Goddess of agriculture and grain. The word cereal is derived from her name. She is accredited with the discovery of spelt, an ancient strain of wheat and the knowledge of how to grow, fertilize and harvest cereal crops.

After a terrible famine in 496 B.C. the Sibylline books were consulted and a recommendation made that Rome adopt of the Greek Deities Demeter, Dionyisus and Persephone. Their identities were changed to Ceres, Liber and Libera. Together they formed the Avertine triad.

This Goddess also adopted Demeter’s mythology as she also lost her daughter to the God of the underworld, for six months of the year.

Her early Italian cult was similar to that of Tellus the Earth Goddess. She was aided in her agricultural duties by twelve minor Gods and Goddesses.

Ceres was also Goddess of law and order. At first this may appear a strange area of influence for this grain goddess however, she was accredited with the founding of agriculture and a move away from a nomadic hunter gatherer society. This necessitated a need for new laws to divide the land and protect property ownership as settlements grew into villages, towns and cities.

This Goddess was also Goddess of transitions, protecting woman at the vulnerable points in their lives: between girlhood and womanhood and the time of change between unmarried life, marriage and motherhood.

Her main temple is situated on Aventine Hill, one of seven hill tops that surrounded ancient Rome.

Origins and Genealogy: In Roman mythology she was the daughter of Saturn and Ops. She had several brothers and sisters: Juno, Jupiter, Neptune, Pluto and Vesta. She married her brother Jupiter and together they had a daughter named Proserpina.

Strengths: Fertility, abundance and endurance.

Weaknesses: Lived her life through her daughter.

Greek Equivalent: Demeter, other Harvest Goddesses

 Symbolism

Pictured carrying a scepter or a farming tool in one hand and a basket of fruit or grain in the other.

Sacred Animal: Pigs. Ants were used in her temples to predict the weather and the future.

Sacred Plants: The chaste trees, corn and pumpkins. She was also offered the first fruits of the harvest. Poppies were her emblem as the grow in cornfields. All other flowers were banned as she had lost her daughter to the underworld when she was out picking flowers.

Festivals: Her festivals marked the different stages of the agricultural calendar. At the Paganalia festival when the seeds were sown,  a pregnant sow was sacrificed to her and the earth goddess Tellus to ensure an abundant crop yield. Her main festival, the Cerealia was celebrated over seven days in late April. This encouraged the ripening of the crops and prevented pests and diseases. This Goddess was also celebrated both by communities and households in the Ambarvalia which was held each May.

Ceres Archetypes

The Mother:

The Mother Archetype is a life-giver and the source of nurturing, devotion, patience and unconditional love. The ability to forgive and provide for her children and put them before herself is the essence of a good mother.

In its shadow aspect the Mother can be devouring, abusive and abandoning. The shadow Mother can also make her children feel guilty about becoming independent and leaving her.

Ceres is a grain Goddess who teaches people how to nurture and harvest her crops. Later she also takes on the Mother role of her Greek counterpart Demeter.

Rescuer:

The Rescuer provides strength and support to others in crisis. They act out of love with no expectation of a reward.

The shadow Rescuer expects the rescued party to be grateful and will often try to keep that person needy.

Ceres is distraught when her daughter goes missing and does not rest until she has found her. She is frustrated as she is unable to save her daughter and is forced to compromise.

 

How To Work With These Archetypes

The Mother:

It is not necessary to be a biological mother to have this Archetype. It can refer to anyone who has a lifelong pattern of nurturing and devotion to living things.

You are exhibiting the features of the shadow Mother if you smother your children and are over protective. Encourage independence and allow children to make mistakes but be available to give care and advice when it’s needed.

The other shadow Mother is the one that abandons her children, or is so busy that she has no time for nurturing her young.

Rescuer:

The Rescuer is one of your Archetypes if you are always trying to save and help people.

What you need to ask yourself is what motivates you to act this way? Are you expecting a reward for your trouble or do you love helping others?

 

Source:

Goddess-Guide.com

A Little Humor for Your Day – “It’s a New Age After All”

It’s a New Age After All

Tune: “It’s a Small World After All”

 

It’s a world of Tarot and of Zodiac
You’ll see Wiccan rituals and I’Chings back
You’ll see Shirley McLaine
She’s been born yet again
It’s a new age after all
It’s a new age after all
Reading runes age after all
I’ll use my Feng Shui after all
It’s a new age after all

You have Herbology and kabalistic math
You have Palmistry and the shining path
You will never really know
The truth of Miss Cleo
It’s a new age after all
It’s a new age after all
Psychadelics age after all
I’ll try shrooms age after all
It’s a new age after all

You have blood moons and rainbows and wise old toads
You have Lovecraftian horrors and Celtic wode
You’ll go skyclad and dance
And they’ll come for a glance
It’s a new age after all
It’s a new age after all
Calling Quarters for us all
The Goddess is here after all
It’s a new age after all

You’ll drum at the bonfire in alpha state
In a world free of guilt, it feels really great
With a crystal wand in hand
You’ll feel the spirits of the land
It’s a new age after all
It’s a new age after all
Esoterics hear the call
It’s all come back just like before
It’s a new age after all

— Azhrarn “Runs with Scissors” and Verlaine the Wize-guy

Find more great humor at Turok’s Cabana