Feeling called to keep bees? Begin your sacred beekeeping journey with these 10 grounded, beginner-friendly steps rooted in ecological care, animism, and natural hive wisdom.
My work is varied and brings many threads of interest together. Here you will find musings, essays, and thoughts on dreamwork, bees, nature, the feminine, and occasionally travel.
Do you go on costumed capers over the holidays? Because you should. Don’t leave your masks and revelry to Halloween, there is still time to join in with Celtic winter tradition of Mumming. Although, you may need to invite at least one friend to dress as a ghostly horse. Rules are rules.
Similar to wassailing, mumming has had a resurgence in Ireland and Britain. Mummers would typically dress unrecognisably, swap clothes, wear masks and go about the village singing, dancing and performing plays at each house. These revelries often happened within the twelve days of Christmas. Traditionally it was done in silence or “mum”, although singing and rhyme became a major part of the plays as the tradition continued. The word mum means silence. This is where we get the phrase “mum’s the word”. Mumming and wassailing often overlap, but there is a third tradition worth mentioning here as well: The Grey Mare.