soliloquyjewelry:

Cailleach’s Sceptre Rings. 🔮⚔️❄️ These sterling silver pieces were created in homage to the ancient Celtic crone goddess and ruler of the winter months, the Cailleach. Both creator and destroyer, she was said to have shaped the very landscape of Ireland, and each winter she freezes that same landscape with her magical staff. The white of moonstone represents the winter snow and stark landscape, while their deep blue glow nods to the blue hue of the Cailleach’s skin (sizes 6 and just under 10). The purple of the amethyst and amethyst sage agate encapsulates the realms of magic, dreams, and divination which are ruled by her (sizes 7 ½ and 7 ¼). Topped with either a snowflake or a crescent moon, these pieces embody the season and divine feminine power of the Cailleach, and will be available in my Winter Solstice Collection release tomorrow at 8pm est. 🖤 #soliloquyjewelry #celticmythology #cailleach (at Boston, Massachusetts)
https://www.instagram.com/p/Brd_k8UAGcD/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=qjhuy8u5fh31

benvironment:

Well…..yesterday was a peculiar and memorable day of weather to say the least. There was an amber warning for freezing rain but for the bulk of the day nothing happened here in Fife. Mid afternoon, the usual wet rain started falling. I stepped out the front door and it was all pretty normal outside, wet and cold but not slippy.

But then 10 mins or so later there was a peculiar clicking noise on the windows. A similar sound to hail but not quite the same. More of a popping sound, and when I stepped outside again, the difference in just that short space of time was incredible – all surfaces had a thin sheen of ice on them.

That kept on going for much of the day and after a few hours there was perhaps half a cm of ice on everything, including vertical surfaces like the windows and the stone walls of the house. Despite the 30mph wind, the weather station stopped measuring windspeed and direction as it iced up, and on inspecting the car it was clear that I couldn’t get into it even if I wanted to. 

Ice pellets followed, adding another 1cm of weirdness to the layer of ice, and then as the night wore on it turned to snow and we awoke to a normal white wintry scene this morning. That’s now melting of course as the temperature has rocketed up to a balmy 3C, but the car was still covered in an icy glaze an hour ago. 

In continental climates, freezing rain is much more common than here. I’ve only ever seen fleeting, thin deposits of the stuff in the hills, so it was fascinating to watch it falling and accumulating for hours at home. Not to the extent that it brought down trees or power lines or anything, as it famously does elsewhere in the world, but truly fascinating nonetheless 🙂

Do you know any traditional Celtic dishes for yule? Everything I found so far is just generic Christmas-y treats and someone adding a star or something and calling it Celtic.

breelandwalker:

breelandwalker:

Indeed I do, my friend! I have three lovely cookbooks in my collection which I highly recommend on the subject:

  • Celtic Folklore Cooking (Joanne Asala)
  • Witch in the Kitchen (Cait Johnson)
  • The Food and Cooking of Ireland (Biddy White Lennon & Georgina Campbell)

Celtic Folklore Cooking includes an entire section in the index on dishes for Yule. The Food and Cooking of Ireland has a number of feast-worthy recipes, and a very informative foreword which describes the holiday traditions celebrated in Ireland today. Witch in the Kitchen has a lot of tasty vegetarian options for any occasion year-round.

Dishes for Yule include:

Stay tuned, I’ll be posting the recipes for all of these throughout the day!

My listing of winter holiday recipes from last year, with entrees, desserts, drinks, and veggie options.

Enjoy, everyone! 🙂