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  • Good morning everyone I hope your all looking forward to sunset and the start of…
    Good morning everyone I hope your all looking forward to sunset and the start of Lughnasadh /Lammas. May your rituals / meetings be full of inspiration may you find all the things in your life that need harvesting and have the strength to cut them down. It’s easy to focus on plants at harvest time but Lughnasadh is not just about plants! Throughout our lives we plant seeds, sometimes they take a lifetime to grow other mature quickly but among those seeds we can often plant weeds which may look pretty or useful but can be damaging to future harvests now at Lughnasadh we harvest somethings to be re-sown something’s to be use and something’s to be transformed May the gods give you the wisdom to know what needs to be re-sown, used or transformed Brightest Blessings Draco )o(/|\
  • The Coming of Lugh

    [M]ANANAUN MAC LIR who rules the ocean took the little Sun…

    The Coming of Lugh

    [M]ANANAUN MAC LIR who rules the ocean took the little SunGod, Lugh, in his arms and held him up so that he could see the whole of Ireland with the waves whispering about it everywhere.

    "Say farewell to the mountains and rivers, and the big trees and the flowers in the grass,

    O Lugh, for you are coming away with me."

    The child stretched out his hands and cried:

    "Good-bye, mountains and flowers and rivers: some day I will come back to you."

    Then Mananaun wrapped Lugh in his cloak and stepped into his boat, the Ocean-Sweeper, and without oar or sail they journeyed over the sea till they crossed the waters at the edge of the world and came to the country of Mananaun–a beautiful country shining with the colours of the dawn.

    Lugh stayed in that country with Mananaun. He raced the waves along the strand; he gathered apples sweeter than honey from trees with crimson blossoms: and wonderful birds came to play with him. Mananaun's daughter, Niav, took him, through woods where there were milk-white deer with horns of gold, and blackmaned lions and spotted panthers, and unicorns that shone like silver, and strange beasts that no one ever heard of; and all the animals were glad to see him, and he played with them and called them by their names. Every day he grew taller and stronger and more beautiful, but he did not any day ask Mananaun to take him, back to Ireland.

    Every night when darkness had come into the sky, Mananaun wrapped himself in his mantle of power and crossed the sea and walked all round Ireland, stepping from rock to rock. No one saw him, because his mantle made him invisible, but he saw everything and knew that trouble had found the De Danaans. The ugly, mis-shapen folk of the Fomor had come into Ireland and spread themselves over the country like a pestilence. They had stolen the Cauldron of Plenty and carried it away to their own land, where Balor of the Evil Eye reigned. They had taken the Spear of Victory also, and the only one of the four great Jewels of Sovereignity remaining to the De Danaans was the Stone of Destiny. It was hidden deep in the earth of Ireland, and because of it the Fomorians could not altogether conquer the country, nor could they destroy the De Danaans, though they drove them from their pleasant palaces and hunted them through the glens and valleys like outlaws.

    Mananaun himself had the fourth Jewel, the Sword of Light: he kept it and waited.

    When Lugh was full grown, Mananaun said to him: "It is three times seven years, as mortals count time, since I brought you to Tir-nan-Oge, and in all that time I have never given you a gift. To-day I will give you a gift."

    He brought out the Sword of Light and gave it to Lugh, and when Lugh took it in his hand he remembered how he had cried to the hills and rivers of Ireland -" Some day I will come back to you!" And he said to Mananaun:

    "I want to go back to Ireland."

    "You will not find joyousness there, O Lugh, or the music of harp strings, or feasting. The De Danaans are shorn of their strength. Ogma, their Champion, carries logs to warm Fomorian hearths; Angus wanders like an outcast; and Nuada, the King, has but one dun, where those who had once the lordship of the world meet in secret like hunted folk."

    "I have a good sword," said Lugh. "I will go to my kinsfolk."

    "O Lugh," said Mananaun, "they have never known you. Will you leave me, and Niav, and this land where sorrow has never touched you, for the sake of stranger kinsfolk?"

    Lugh answered:

    "I remember the hills and the woods and the rivers of Ireland, and though all my kinsfolk were gone from it and the sea covered everything but the tops of the mountains, I would go back."

    "You have the hardiness that wins victory," said Mananaun. "I will set you on my own white horse and give you companions as high-hearted as yourself. I will put my helmet on your head and my breast-plate over your heart: you shall drive the Fomorians out of Ireland as chaff is driven by the wind."

    When Lugh put on the helmet of Mananaun, brightness shot into the sky as if a new sun had risen; when he put on the breast-plate, a great wave of music swelled and sounded through Tir-nan-Oge; when he mounted the white horse, a mighty wind swept past him, and lo! the companions Mananaun had promised rode beside him. Their horses were white like his, and gladness that age cannot wither shone in their faces. When they came to the sea that is about Tir-nan-Oge, the little crystal waves lifted themselves up to look at Lugh, and when he and his comrades sped over the sea as lightly as blown foam, the little waves followed them till they came to Ireland, and the Three Great Waves of Ireland thundered a welcome–the Wave of Thoth; the Wave of Rury; and the long, slow, white, foaming Wave of Cleena.

    No one saw the Faery Host coming into Ireland. At the place where their horses leaped from sea to land there was a great wood of pine trees.

    "Let us go into the wood," said Lugh, and they rode between the tall straight tree-trunks into the silent heart of the wood.

    "Rest here," said Lugh, "till morning. I will go to the dun of Nuada and get news of my kinsfolk."

    He put his shining armour from him and wrapped himself in a dark cloak and went on foot to the dun of Nuada. He struck the brazen door, and the Guardian of the Door spoke to him from within.

    "What do you seek?"

    "My way into the dun."

    "No one enters here who has not his craft. What can you do?"

    "I have the craft of a Carpenter."

    "We have a carpenter within; he is Luchtae, son of Luchaid."

    "I have the craft of a Smith."

    "We have a smith within, Colum of the three new ways of working."

    "I have the craft of a Champion."

    "We have a champion within; he is Ogma himself."

    "I have the craft of a Harper."

    "We have a harper within, even Abhcan, son of Bicelmos; the Men of the Three Gods chose him in the faery hills."

    "I have the craft of a Poet and Historian."

    "We have a poet and historian within, even En, son of Ethaman."

    "I have the craft of a Wizard."

    "We have many wizards and magicians within."

    "I have the craft of a Physician."

    "We have a physician within, even Dian Cecht."

    "I have the craft of a Cupbearer."

    "We have nine cupbearers within."

    "I have the craft of a Brazier."

    "We have a brazier within, even Credne Cerd."

    "Go hence and ask your king if he has within any one man who can do all these things. If he has, I will not seek to enter."

    The Guardian of the Door hurried in to Nuada.

    "O King," he said, "the most wonderful youth in the world is waiting outside your door to-night! He seeks admittance as the Ildana, the Master of Every Craft."

    "Let him come in," said King Nuada. Lugh came into the dun. Ogma, the Champion, took a good look at him. He thought him young and slender, and was minded to test him. He stooped and lifted the Great Stone that was before the seat of the King. It was flat and round, and four score yoke of oxen could not move it. Ogma cast it through the open door so that it crossed the fosse which was round the dun. That was his challenge to the Ildana.

    "It is a good champion-cast," said Lugh. "I will better it."

    He went outside. He lifted the Stone and cast it back–not through the door, but through the strong wall of the dun–so that it fell in the place where it had lain before Ogma lifted it.

    "Your cast is better than mine! " said Ogma. "Sit in the seat of the champion with your face to the King."

    Lugh drew his hand over the wall; it became whole as before. He sat in the champion-seat.

    "Let chess be brought," said the King.

    They played, and Lugh won all the games, so that thereafter it passed into a proverb "to make the Cro of Lugh."

    "Truly you are the Ildana," said Nuada. "I would fain hear music of your making, but I have no harp to offer you."

    "I see a kingly harp within reach of your hand," said Lugh.

    "That is the harp of the Dagda. No one can bring music from that harp but himself. When he plays on it, the four Seasons–Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter- pass over the earth."

    "I will play on it," said Lugh.

    The harp was given to him.

    Lugh played the music of joy, and outside the dun the birds began to sing as though it were morning and wonderful crimson flowers sprang through the grass–flowers that trembled with delight and swayed and touched each other with a delicate faery ringing as of silver bells. Inside the dun a subtle sweetness of laughter filled the hearts of every one: it seemed to them that they had never known gladness till that night.

    Lugh played the music of sorrow. The wind moaned outside, and where the grass and flowers had been there was a dark sea of moving waters. The De Danaans within the dun bowed their heads on their hands and wept, and they had never wept for any grief.

    Lugh played the music of peace, and outside there fell silently a strange snow. Flake by flake it settled on the earth and changed to starry dew. Flake by flake the quiet of the Land of the Silver Fleece settled in the hearts and minds of Nuada and his people: they closed their eyes and slept, each in his seat.

    Lugh put the harp from him and stole out of the dun. The snow was still falling outside. It settled on his dark cloak and shone like silver scales; it settled on the thick curls of his hair and shone like jewelled fire; it filled the night about him with white radiance. He went back to his companions.

    The sun had risen in the sky when the De Danaans awoke in Nuada's dun. They were light-hearted and joyous and it seemed to them that they had dreamed overnight a strange, beautiful dream.

    "The Fomorians have not taken the sun out of the sky," said Nuada. "Let us go to the Hill of Usna and send to our scattered comrades that we may make a stand against our enemies."

    They took their weapons and went to the Hill of Usna, and they were not long on it when a band of Fomorian devastators came upon them. The Fomorians scoffed among themselves when they saw how few the De Danaans were, and how ill-prepared for fighting.

    "Behold," they cried, "what mighty kings are to-day upon Usna, the Hill of Sovereignity! Come down, O Kings, and bow yourselves before your masters! "

    "We will not bow ourselves before you," said Nuada, "for ye are ugly and vile: and lords neither of us nor of Ireland."

    With hoarse cries the Fomorians fell on the De Danaans, but Nuada and his folk held together and withstood them as well as they were able. Scarcely had the weapons clashed when a light appeared in the horizon and a sound of mighty battle trumpets shook the air. The light was so white that no one could look at it, and great rose-red streamers shot from it into the sky.

    "It is a second sunrise!" said the Fomorians.

    "It is The Deliverer! " said the De Danaans.

    Out of the light came the glorious company of warriors from Tir-nan-Oge. Lugh was leading them. He had the helmet of Mananaun on his head, the breast-plate of Mananaun over his heart, and the great white horse of Mananaun beneath him.

    The Sword of Light was bare in his hand. He fell on the Fomorians as a sea-eagle falls on her prey, as lightning flashes out of a clear sky. Before him and his companions they were destroyed as stubble is destroyed by fire. He held his hand when only nine of them remained alive.

    "Bow yourselves," he said, "before King Nuada, and before the De Danaans, 'for they are your Lords and the Lords of Ireland, and go hence to Balor of the Evil Eye and tell him and his mis-shapen brood that the De Danaans have taken their own again and they will wage war against the Fomorians till there is not one left to darken the earth with his shadow."

    The nine Fomorians bowed themselves before King Nuada, and before the De Danaans; and before Lugh Lauve Fauda, the Ildana; and they arose and carried his message to Balor of the Evil Eye, King of the Fomorians.

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  • safe image.php?d=AQAvE0TRUWIWPKPn&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fupload.wikimedia.org%2Fwikipedia%2Fcommons%2Fthumb%2F6%2F62%2FLugh spear Millar.jpg%2F220px Lugh spear Millar Shop products
    Lugh – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    en.wikipedia.org
    Lug or Lugh /lu?/; modern Irish: Lú /lu:/) is an Irish deity represented in mythological texts as a hero and High King of the distant past. He is known by the epithets Lámhfhada (pronounced /'la:wad???/, meaning "long arm" or "long hand"), for his skill with a spear or sling, Ildánach ("skilled in m…
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    ODU Irish Druidry Ritual part 3 – Apspen Grove Lughnasadh – 8-8-09
    August 1st has come to be known as Lughnasadh, the festival of the harvest. It was associated with Lugh after he is said to have held a festival on that date…
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    ODU Irish Druidry Ritual part 2 – Aspen Grove Lughnasadh – 8-8-09
    August 1st has come to be known as Lughnasadh, the festival of the harvest. It was associated with Lugh after he is said to have held a festival on that date…
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    ODU Irish Druidry Ritual part 1 – Aspen Grove Lughnasadh Campout – 8-8-09
    August 1st has come to be known as Lughnasadh, the festival of the harvest. It was associated with Lugh after he is said to have held a festival on that date…
  • These always put me in a Lughnasadh mood BB Draco )o(/|\
    These always put me in a Lughnasadh mood BB Draco )o(/|\

    safe image.php?d=AQDkEfhNFl0o4NQj&w=130&h=130&url=http%3A%2F%2Fi1.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2FHkRiKeg7TPg%2Fmqdefault Shop products
    Paul Giovanni [Magnet] – Corn Rigs [The Wicker Man] 1973
    Paul Giovanni [Magnet] – Corn Rigs [The Wicker Man] 1973 Paul Giovanni: Born 1933, Atlanta, GA, United States Died June 17, 1990 // New York, NY, United Stat…

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    099 – How to make Corn Dollies
    My boys wanted to make this video…Yay!! they are pros at making these.
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    098 – Lammas / Lughnasadh Ideas
    Hope you find these ideas helpful! Blessed Be
  • safe image.php?d=AQBGzpsANzmBGuYJ&w=130&h=130&url=http%3A%2F%2Fi1.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2FL03tMqhpYNQ%2Fmqdefault Shop products
    Lughnasadh – Damh The Bard
    "I really wanted to write a 'foot-stomper' for old John Barleycorn. So this song tells the story of the Corn King, from birth, to death, to rebirth." – By Da…
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    LUGHNASADH BLESSINGS
    Lammas, also called Lughnasadh, falls at the beginning of the harvest season. Apples are ready and grain is beginning to ripen. It's also a day for honoring …
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    Lughnasadh – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    en.wikipedia.org
    Lughnasadh (pronounced LOO-n?-s?; Irish: Lúnasa; Scottish Gaelic: Lùnastal; Manx: Luanistyn) is a traditional Gaelic holiday celebrated on 1 August in the northern hemisphere and 1 February in the southern. It originated as a harvest festival, corresponding to the Welsh Calan Awst and the English La…
  • ~ Lughnasadh Bounty Spell ~

    Lughnasadh; it is a celebration of plenty and op…

    ~ Lughnasadh Bounty Spell ~

    Lughnasadh; it is a celebration of plenty and optimism, and of nature's infinite bounty. It is the time of the first harvests, and it marks midsummer's joyous and fanciful energy. This spirit is celebrated, too, in Shakespeare's A Mid-Summer's Night Dream. To tap into this energy, gather a small bundle of long grass or reeds to braid, and light a white candle. Braid the grass as you speak this verse:

    "Fairies prancing in the meadow, Spirits in the corn;
    Green Man is flourishing everywhere On this Midsummer morn.
    Grains begin to ripen, All things bear fruit.
    Summer glistens with possibility, Blossoms take root.
    Fairies whisper secrets, Powerful blessings to see.
    Cycles move and all around, they share their gifts with me.
    Air to fire, Fire to water, Water to earth, Earth to air.
    Elements feed spirit, And the circle glows.
    At Lammas, day and night, We witness Nature's awesome might.
    Growing full And blessing all,
    'Tis Earth's celebration Before the chill of fall.
    Now braiding this grass, I mark this day
    Protect my hearth, With the abundance of grain.
    The blessings of the Goddess come again;
    Place the braid above my door. Hunger be banished now and then.
    Blessings be drawn to this place, Summer's energy fill this space.
    Air, fire, water, earth unite, And bless us all this day."

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  • Moon Day 13
    European tradition treats this day as an exclusively negative for al…

    Moon Day 13
    European tradition treats this day as an exclusively negative for all sorts of affairs and especially negative for health. At the same time in Vedic tradition this day is auspicious. It favours important beginnings, improvement of relationships with other people and pleasant ways of spending time.
  • Jul 31 2012 Waxing Gibbous

    93.6% of lunar illumination
    2 days to full moon
    17 d…

    Jul 31 2012 Waxing Gibbous

    93.6% of lunar illumination
    2 days to full moon
    17 days to new moon

  • Tuesday — Tiu's day
    Middle English tiwesday or tewesday
    Old English tiwesdæg "T…

    Tuesday — Tiu's day
    Middle English tiwesday or tewesday
    Old English tiwesdæg "Tiw's (Tiu's) day"
    Latin dies Martis "day of Mars"
    Ancient Greek hemera Areos "day of Ares"

    Tiu (Twia) is the English/Germanic god of war and the sky. He is identified with the Norse god Tyr.

    Mars is the Roman god of war.

    Ares is the Greek god of war.

  • Lughnasdh / Lammas starts Sunset: 8:56 PM BST have a good time BB Draco )o(/|\
    Lughnasdh / Lammas starts Sunset: 8:56 PM BST have a good time BB Draco )o(/|\
  • Sunrise: 5:34 AM BST
    Sunset: 8:56 PM BST
    Length of Day: 15h 22m
    Tomorrow will…

    Sunrise: 5:34 AM BST
    Sunset: 8:56 PM BST
    Length of Day: 15h 22m
    Tomorrow will be 3m 3s shorter.
    Moon Rise: 7:35 PM BST
    Moon Set: 3:35 AM BST
    Moon Phase: Waxing Gibbous 95% Illuminated

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