| Lammas
Lughnassadh
Lammas: Lughnassadh (pronounced Loo-NAHS-ah) (Celtic), Cornucopia
(Strega), Thingtide (Teutonic). Lughnassadh, the Celtic festival in honor of the Sun God,
is held on the 7th.
August 1 Northern Hemisphere / February 1 Southern Hemisphere.
This is the celebration of the first fruits of the harvest.
The Sun King, now Dark Lord, gives his energy to the crops to ensure life while the Mother
prepares to give way to her aspect as the Crone.
Now is the time to teach what you have learned, to share the
fruits of your achievements with the world. It is considered a time of Thanksgiving and
the first of three Pagan Harvest Festivals, when the plants of Spring wither and drop
their fruits or seeds for our use as well as to ensure future crops. Also, first grains
and fruits of the Earth are cut and stored for the dark Winter months.
Key actions associated with Lammas are receiving and
harvesting, honoring the Parent Deities, honoring the Sun Gods and celebrating the First
Harvest.Wheat weaving, such as the making of corn dollies, is traditional. You can create
a Solar Wheel or a Corn Man Wheel using a wire coat hanger, cardboard, and several ears of
Indian corn complete with the husks.
Here is how:
Bend the wire hanger into a circle keeping the hook to hang it by. Cut
out a small cardboard circle to glue the tips of the ears of corn onto. You may want to
create your Corn Man Wheel as a pentagram using five ears, or a Solar Wheel using eight
ears to represent one ear for each Sabbat. Attach the ears of Indian corn around the
perimeter of the wire circle. Wrap the husks around and glue where necessary, leave some
of the husks hanging loose to fray out from the edges and make it more decorative. Where
the ears of corn meet in the center, glue them together. This is where the cardboard
circle comes in to use.
Bread is baked and the altar is decorated with fruits and
vegetables of the harvest. It is also appropriate to plant the seeds from the fruit
consumed in ritual. If the seeds sprout, grow the plant with love and as a symbol of your
connection to the Divine. A cake is sometimes baked, and cider is used in place of wine.
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