Have to comment re mass slaughter.. livestock were treated well, due to so much reliance on their produce & strength. To slaughter a herd- in Ritual, would take days & much would be wasted. Many of the more recent Biddy Early tales, tell of folk saying their crop or horse or cow has been cursed/old/ill.. & what will they do... I feel it was more like the First Nations- they would only take one. There was a huge Animism part of old Paganism, blood would not be spilled recklessly. Thx for ur vid. 🌻
That analogy you made of paganism resurgence in the Renaissance, The Enlightenment, and our current era is really beautiful and inspiring... Gratitude 🌞⛈️🌈🕊🌿🍄✨️
For me as a non-herder it is a planting moon and I spend a lot of time communing with the seedlings going into the ground. The birds and frogs are in full song and it’s truly magical.
When you live in western Alberta. You realize how far behind your growing season is. I still have some snow in my yard. Only flowers I will be getting is from the store unfortunately.
In the 50s when I was in grammar School in Austin Texas we used to have a May Day festival every year and we had maypoles and the students with different Maypole dances with ribbons make different patterns we practice for a couple of months before to get it right for the festival
You clip at THIS time of the year? Well I never, now there's a thing! Never 'eard owt s' queer in all me born days! Clipping on the first of May! Where are you... Bar-flipping-bados?!? Hell. Each to their own mind' I dare say, each to their own! If it works for you, who am I to say otherwise? ...You wait till I tell me ord man about that though, he'll be cackling ower t' gate about that all summer. Clipping on May day! Meheh!
@@JesseP.Watson Where I live, this is time, which is adjusted for Lambing and new weather. Whole big world of folk out there. Everyone has different times when it is healthy to sheer. Not everyone is just like you. Most of us are decent ;) Happy Beltane!
@@JesseP.Watson I'm Autistic, and unless I see someone indicate it's a joke, I read it as what is written, A Jab by someone who doesn't realize not everyone with sheep lives near them. So... Happy Beltane, I mean it.
@@CASTERSRABBITHOLE Ah, my apologies, then the joke is on me. Have a happy Beltane and I hope you have a good shearing season. By the way, that was dry Northern humour which many people don't understand (I'm from a sheep farm in the North of England, in Yorkshire). Up there we have a kind of straight-faced humour that makes a game of throwing light insults at each other. It is though a sign of affection, the old men up there do it, it kind of expresses something like: "I'll say things to you, because you're my friend, that someone else might think was an insult, so if I pretend to insult you, it means I know we're good enough friends for you not to take it seriously." Something like that. A similar to rap battles where they compete throwing insults but its just a game. So as a fellow shepherd, I saw you as a friend. All the best to you, enjoy the smell of lanolin - one of my favourite smells that is (not a joke).
This time of year has a strong awakening calling to me. That we’ve survived the winter and now seeing evidence that the winter is truly over. The grass is getting green and flowers are exploding everywhere and life in all its forms are rejoicing. Humans are particularly attracted to each other after the long winter confinement. Bird eggshells are seen on the lawns and its evidence that babies are being born. Insects are showing themselves after their hibernation. Bright vibrant colors are appearing after the drab winter scenery. I feel my body wanting to expand and flex and shake off the tightness of the winter months and get myself into working condition so I can produce food and then start storing it for the next winter preparation.
@@mnsu4820 The dancing with ribbons was an early 19th century theatrical entertainment that became popular across England supplanting the old style maypoles. There is no evidence that maypoles are phallic - whatever Freud believed. They were simply focal points for the community from which garlands and foliage could be hung.
Being bought up under Christian traditions. And rejecting those ways. It's fantastic to find out about more natural traditions that are more in tune with rhythm of the year. thanks for you videos
Beltaine blessings. I have my yellow flowers picked this morning, a bit of the morning dew, and violet tea for later. Gathering with friends at the local watering spot for games(Music Bingo) the 2 fire pits and a bit of libation. Not a bad May Day celebration.
I know that when the seasons start and end is a vary variable concept. I don’t think it makes sense to consider Beltane the start of summer. Beltane is within Taurus, a fixed sign. Before Taurus was Aries, the cardinal sign and cardinals initiate the season, fixed maintains the season, and then Gemini, the mutable, ends the season. Hence , astrologically Beltane is the middle of spring, and later Litha will begin summer.
Totally see what you’re saying, and astrology is not my strong suit. By some reckoning though, the year only has two seasons - summer and winter - no fall or spring. So Beltane is the beginning of the light half of the year, vs Samhain - the ‘beginning’ of the dark half. Other systems might put that on the equinoxes - but I didn’t make the rules 😂 Thanks for the comment 🙏
There's a lot of different ways that the Beltaine thing could go. It could have absorbed customs from older cultures, but the name is still what Celts called that holiday or the Irish could have borrowed the name too.
@seanfinlay6822 it's an anglicised version of an Irish word. Same as galtymore instead of galtee mór, or sleevebawn instead slieve bán, or knockroe instead of cnoc rua. It's everywhere in Ireland.
Just a thought, I learned from Egypt! Many of those big single standing stones would be used to tell time of day! Like a sundial on a large scale. Would have to be an open space obviously. Many smaller ones indicated a turn or split in the path when the area was forested but now trees are all gone. Remember everything was heavily forested?
Having been compelled by association to attend a rural conservative Lutheran church in Wisconsin (the parishioners are German farmers and their descendants,) My non-Christian self was amused when long sticks with colorful streaming ribbons were passed out to the children to wave at the end of church service on Easter Sunday. Not sure if it is a common Lutheran practice or not. Just saying.. Enjoy your frolic!
May pole symbolises the alignment of the energy with in man and man's efforts and the nature working in harmony think of it as in the chakras aligned in perfect harmony to ascend and brings forth fruits enlightenment and so on. That's what I reckon anyway
Predating Puritan writings you can find biblical versus on nature worship addressed in the word of God. I think it's pretty much all addressed as idolatry which is also advised to avoid within the ten commandments.
When he mentioned the phallic images in paganism it made me think of some of the stone in Ireland that had those images and were transformed into crosses with Christianity influence.
Truly, Europeans influence everything. That's why Asia is referred to as Euro- Asia. I think it's fascinating in food too, for instance like curry seasoning in Asia the original was more like garam masala before colonization or in Africa for instance a staple of fufu comes from Spaniard Europeans. Even the first African American slaves arrived to the first colonial settlements after the ship was diverted from South America slavery and they spoke Portuguese from East Africa. Portuguese. How languages in Africa have not survived the world or just etymology in general is really amazing.
I got confused with him saying possible origin of May Day being "pre- Christian thought"and then reference to the medieval period which would have started 500 yrs after the death of Christ Jesus. I just never heard " pre- Christian thought" before. Prophetic testament of the coming Messiah pre- dated Christ's birth even though there is some mention of the Lord's appearance prior to his own birth in the Old Testament, including a mention of Christ being with God from before the beginning of time. I think that even the Egyptian history of switching to sun God worship was probably a very human connection to a coming Christ. Just my opinion, although we know in history of Egypt enslaving Israelites and fighting against the warnings of prophets who were hearing from God guiding Israelites to their promise land. I really enjoy history and culture and story telling.
Well, England ‘relapsed’ into paganism in the early medieval with the arrival of the Anglo Saxons of course, so not pre Christian in terms of BCE necessarily
Just for my own entertainment I'm going to challenge myself this week to randomly use the words Asian Puritans in a sentence this week to random people.
The Island dwellers are claiming May Day as a "English" custom! Your country with tiny May trees is where this custom is supposed to stem from? Laughable! The smallest village here in Austria and Southern Germany has a taller May tree than you! (obviously joking with the phallic comparison but still true in essence) and yes it is from pre-christian times. You should come to the Austrian alps during some of the pagan festivities that were not revivied but survived in the mountains through the middle ages.
The impertinence of these schnitzel eating continent dwellers with their pristine forests and punctual services! Under no illusions the land Willy came from Germanic Europe to Britain. Just the later trappings like green men I associate with Englishness. I’ve been looking for a source to definitely show the May pole stemmed from pagan practice though - and can’t find any, even though it seems likely. Is there evidence of that in your area? Id be interested for sure. Thanks for the comment 👍
@@TheStoryCrow The earliest references for the maypole in Germany and Austria would seem to be from about 1500 - whereas in Britain it is from the mid 1300's. So, in Britain for it to be pagan in origin the tradition would have to have been in existence for some 500 years or more before it was first noted. That might be the case, but without proof to say this is a pagan tradition tends toward wishful thinking.
I wish I lived in the homeland, well I suppose I kinda do as a part Native American, also a direct descendant of Brian Boreau. The mother land calls me!!
Some would argue it’s the other way round, despite beltane being a Gaelic loan word, evidence of vast fire festivals way back in the British Neolithic. Whereas May poles may have been a Germanic import. But the festivals merge the further back we go in time 👍
@@TheStoryCrow The Beltane customs go back to Ireland, having obfuscated any Brythonic ones that pre-existed. There's nothing about Beltane that can be disentangled from the Irish because even a hybrid Irish/Brythonic is not actually Brythonic. To be considered natively Brythonic it would have to have all the Irish customs removed, including the word Beltane. Even Taliesin gives reverence to Christ in his poem The Battle of The Trees, illustrating that even in Taliesin's 6th century era, that there was quite a divergence between what we now see celebrated in Beltane as to what was actually happening in Brythonic Britain in the 6th century. It's an interesting topic, I love the spread of your videos!
I see your point, fair enough. All I’m saying is ritual activity involving slaughter of livestock and massive fires occurred around early May in British pre-history - before Celtic languages arrived on these islands (probably). To call these ‘Beltane’ might be a stretch, sure, but the similarity is there. But yes, I do agree the Gaelic tradition steamrolled over any native Brythonic one for sure, although those probably died out long before, in the shift to an agrarian economy from a pastoral one (in southern Britain at least). Interesting topic though, thanks for the input 🙏☺️
@@TheStoryCrow Yup, agreed! Although there is still some continuing Brythonic things going on-and anyone can call their MayDay bonfire a Brythonic Bonfire instead of a Beltane Bonfire :D problem solved