Tag: harvest moon

  • Harvest Moon September 10th, 2022!

    Harvest-moon-oil-painting-2-e1471695114941
     
     
     
    Harvest Moon – Things To Do! 
    by Sister Bridget
    The Harvest Moon will shine bright this weekend! There are many ways to take advantage of this once-a-year energy! Here are just a few!

    1. Visit your local farmers market and stock up on fruits and berries a their peak of freshness. Make a batch of jam or jelly to get a jump on holiday gifts! Or, make a yummy apple-cranberry pie (see recipe above!) 

    2. Set out your magickal tools and crystals in the moonlight for a cleansing and recharging. Meanwhile, give your altar space a thourough cleasning and refershing for the upcoming Samhain, Ancestor, Fet Ghede season. 

    3. Open doors and windows and cense and sweep your home of old, stale energies, and usher in the fresh Fall air.
     
    4. 
    The Marie Laveau House Blessing Kit

    5. Get a jump start on your Mabon/Fall Equionox decorating.
     
    6. Mix up a batch of Harvest Moon Oil! 

    7. Create a bucket list full of ideas to celebrate Autumn

    8. Journal-  As summer comes to a close, is there anything else you’d like to complete before the cold and dark Winter months arrive?  What accomplishments, skills, and creativity do you want to bring with you into the Autumn season? What bad habits, regrets, and negative thoughts will you release?

    9. Follow the special energy as it moves through you! There is no wrong answer! 

  • The Harvest Moon is fast approaching!

     

    What are your plans to harvest this special energy? 

    Harvestmoonoil

  • Speaking of September Rituals!

    Hello friends and family!

    Thank goodness Khouzhan Lucy's post reminded me of  The Chinese Harvest Moon Festival!  This fun festival is easily celebrated by a party of one (or more) and ties right in with love spell work!

    I made  a  page about it several years ago:

     http://voodooboutique.typepad.com/mambosam/chineseharvestmoon.html

    It gives you all the history of the festival, how it relates to finding the love of your life (or petitioning if you have someone in mind!), and just the general beauty and tradition of this day.

    I think it is a great celebration whether you are involved in a love case or not! We all need more love in this life, this world! So petitioning for love and good wishes for yourself and others is a great thing.

    I would love to see any pictures you take, especially if you incorporate any love spell work with it!

    Love,

    Mambo Sam, www.spellmaker.com

    Mooncakes1

     

  • Harvest Moon ~~~ 9-15-08

    One of the more well known or commonly known full moons is the Harvest Moon. It has been the subject of much folk lore, poems, and there is even a famous song! The full harvest moon is the full Moon that occurs closest to the
    autumn equinox. In two years out of three, the Harvest Moon comes in
    September, but in some years it occurs in October. At the peak of
    harvest, farmers can work late into the night by the light of this
    Moon.  Corn, pumpkins, squash, beans, and wild rice, the chief Indian
    staples, are now ready for gathering.

    300pxharvest_moon_2

    Often, the Harvest Moon seems to be bigger or brighter or more colorful
    than other moons. These effects have to do with the seasonal tilt of
    the earth. The warm color of the moon shortly after it rises is an
    optical illusion, based on the fact that when the moon is low in the
    sky, you are looking at it through a greater amount of atmospheric
    particles than when the moon is overhead. The atmosphere scatters the
    bluish component of moonlight (which is really reflected white light
    from the sun), but allows the reddish component of the light to travel
    a straighter path to your eyes. Hence all moons (and stars and planets)
    look reddish when they are low in the sky.

    According to NASA: The Harvest Moon is no ordinary full moon; it behaves in a special way.
            Throughout the year the Moon rises, on average, about 50 minutes later each day. But near the autumnal equinox, which comes this year on Sept. 22nd, the day-to-day difference in the local time of moonrise is only 30 minutes. The Moon will rise around sunset tonight–and not long after sunset for the next few evenings. That comes in handy for northern farmers who are working long days to harvest their crops before autumn. The extra dose of lighting afforded by the full Moon closest to the equinox is what gives the Harvest Moon its name.

    There are many interesting stories and mythologies around this moon.

    The Harvest Moon is also known as the Wine Moon, as this is a time after the grapes have been harvested and wine is made. 

    The Chinese Traditional name for this moon is the Chrysanthemum Moon.

    Please check out Mambo Sam’s Blog about the Chinese Harvest Moon Festival  ! It was great fun with Moon Cakes last year!
    200pxmooncake1

     

    The Cherokee call this Nut Moon (because of harvesting some species of nuts from trees….not for the other reason you might be thinking 😉  )

    The Choctaw call this the Mulberry Moon.

    The Celts call this the Singing Moon as after the seasonal harvests are complete comes a time for acceptance,
    mellowing, and rest after labor.
    It has been so named in reference to the festive attitude known to
    every laborer who has toiled to complete work necessary to the survival
    of the community and now celebrates the completion of those labors.

           Images3

    Under the Harvest Moon
    by Carl Sandburg


    Under the harvest moon,

    When the soft silver

    Drips shimmering
    Over the garden nights,
    Death, the gray mocker,
    Comes and whispers to you
    As a beautiful friend
    Who remembers.

         Under the summer roses
    When the flagrant crimson
    Lurks in the dusk
    Of the wild red leaves,
    Love, with little hands,
    Comes and touches you
    With a thousand memories,
    And asks you
    Beautiful, unanswerable questions.


    Images4

    The Harvest Moon by Longfellow

    It is the Harvest Moon!  On gilded vanes
      And roofs of villages, on woodland crests
      And their aerial neighborhoods of nests
      Deserted, on the curtained window-panes
    Of rooms where children sleep, on country lanes
      And harvest-fields, its mystic splendor rests!
      Gone are the birds that were our summer guests,
      With the last sheaves return the laboring wains!
    All things are symbols: the external shows
      Of Nature have their image in the mind,
      As flowers and fruits and falling of the leaves;
    The song-birds leave us at the summer’s close,
      Only the empty nests are left behind,
      And pipings of the quail among the sheaves.

    However you choose to celebrate this moon, even if its just with a cup of tea and a few quiet moments in the grass appreciating it’s beauty, Happy Autumn Everyone!

    Much Light and Love,

    Sister Bridget

    Fullmoon