Cultivating Abundance this Harvest Season

Cultivating Abundance this Harvest Season

Cultivating Abundance this Harvest Season

The stretch of time between the Summer solstice and the first harvest festival brings mixed feelings for many people. In some cultures, the Summer solstice is seen as the beginning of the summer season; for others, it represents the peak of the season. Secularly, July is the last full month before students head back to school for the fall semester. This is equally a time of celebration and a time of mourning. We rejoice in the warmth of summer, the hottest time of the year, the season when fruits ripen and the Earth's bounty can truly be felt all around us. And we also mourn this time because we know, too, that the barren winter will soon rear its head. And while we celebrate and mourn, we use the harvest season to check in with ourselves and prepare for the dark half of the year. 

Harvest Festival: From Ancient Ireland to Modern Day

The Celtic harvest season starts with Lughnasadh on August 1st. This multiday festival took place during the first grain harvest of the season. The harvest season was important to agrarian societies; it was a community effort to gather and prepare enough food to sustain themselves until the next growing season. It was thought to be bad luck to harvest grain before Lughnasadh; otherwise, your stock would not last through to the next harvest.

Across the USA, many communities throw harvest festivals to celebrate a bountiful crop and say goodbye to the summer season. In Massachusetts, they celebrate the cranberry harvest, New York hosts a pumpkin harvest festival, and right here in North Carolina, we enjoy the pecan harvest. As in ancient times, these harvest festivals bring communities together to enjoy the last moments of Summer and to reap the benefits of the growing season. 

Preparing for a Spiritual Harvest

Though many of us may not grow our own food, we can use the harvest season to cultivate spiritual abundance. As we mourn the end of the summer, may we also use this time to take stock of our spiritual gifts and prepare ourselves for the harsh winter. 

One way we can cultivate an abundance mindset is to examine our relationship to time itself. Modernity has molded us to think of time as linear, consumable, and irreplaceable. However, that is not always how humanity has approached the concept of time: for example, the Greeks viewed time as a rhythm that ebbs and flows. Other ancient cultures viewed time cyclically, where ages repeated themselves as if on a wheel. 

As pagans, we do our best to be in tune with the natural world and its seasons. To be in tune with nature’s cycles is to reject the anxiety of time being used up. We look to the heavens and know that the moon will return to this exact place every month, the sun every year, and so on with every celestial body since the beginning of time. This exact moment will come back to us.

While we mourn these final days of summer, we also rejoice in knowing that they will return as the wheel itself keeps moving. To live in abundance is to know that the cycle will continue to ebb and flow, that what is meant for you will come to you, that the “perfect time” is not just one moment, but many in a series of cycles. 

 

Informative Witchcraft Blogs

  • Hekate’s Torch: Honouring the Goddess of Witchcraft

    Hekate’s Torch: Honouring the Goddess of Witchcraft

    As the long nights of winter approach, the torch-bearing goddess Hekate appears to us. She is the keeper of the crossroads, the guardian of thresholds, and the guide through shadowed places. November 16th marks a night of venerating this ancient goddess of death, magic, and liminal spaces—a time to honor her as the green life of summer fades and the earth sinks into dormancy. In this darkening season, we call upon Hekate to light the path ahead and to shield us as we move through the frozen stillness of winter.

    Hekate the Lightbringer

    Hekate is often depicted holding a pair of blazing torches, their flames illuminating what lies hidden in the darkness. In Greek mythology, she is the only deity who retained her power when Zeus divided the heavens, earth, and sea—a testament to her strength and autonomy. Her torches appear throughout myth: most famously, she uses them to guide Demeter through the night as the grieving mother searches for Persephone. In this way, Hekate becomes a literal and spiritual light-bringer—one who leads the lost and the sorrowful toward understanding and transformation.

    Over time, Hekate also became linked to the moon, her triple form representing the lunar phases: maiden, mother, and crone. Each face of Hekate corresponds to a stage of the moon’s cycle and to a stage of life itself—birth, maturity, and death, perpetually turning. Her connection to the moon and torches alike reminds us that even in the darkest night, illumination can be found.

    Mullein Torches

    Just as Hekate’s torches pierce the night, so too can the humble Mullein plant be transformed into a source of flame and protection. Mullein is a soft, velvety herb long associated with healing, purification, and banishing negativity. Folk names include Candlewick Plant, Hag’s Taper, and Witch’s Taper—titles that speak to its magical nature and practical use. The tall, dried stalks of Mullein can be dipped in wax or oil to create natural torches, while the fluffy leaves were once used as lamp wicks.

    Traditionally, Mullein has been burned to ward off evil spirits, cleanse sacred space, and promote health and vitality. The herb carries the energy of fire and light, making it a perfect offering or tool in workings that invoke Hekate. At Asheville Raven & Crone, Mullein Tapers are crafted and used for a variety of magical purposes—from protection spells to seasonal rituals of renewal and illumination.

    Invoking Hekate’s Light

    As we journey into the dark half of the year, we can welcome Hekate’s guiding flame into our homes. Lighting a Mullein torch in her honor is both a devotional act and a practical charm. Use it to purify your space, to banish unwelcome energies, and to petition the Goddess’s protection. 

    Let your Mullein torch stand as a symbol of Hekate’s eternal flame—a reminder that the goddess lights the way even in the deepest night. With her torches burning brightly beside us, we move forward through winter not in fear, but in knowing that the light will always return.

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  • Enodia: Hekate of the Crossroads

    Enodia: Hekate of the Crossroads

    Apotropaia, Propulaia, Triodia, Kleidouchos, and Enodia: these are all epithets designated to Hekate, the Hellenic goddess ruling over roads, thresholds, ghosts, the underworld, and much more. “Enodia” is the first epithet used in the Orphic hymn to Hekate, denoting its importance: “I call Hekate of the Crossroads, worshipped at the meeting of three paths, oh lovely one.”

    Enodia or Ἐνοδία translates to “travel” or “in the road”; it is most commonly understood as “of the crossroads” when used in relation to Hekate. This epithet is used when referring to Hekate as a protective guide, and is deeply connected to crossroads, nocturnal travel over land, and protection for travelers. As Enodia, Hekate is Goddess of the night, guidance, protection of the home from outside dangers, the restless dead, and witchcraft. Due to her protective powers and her rulership of roads, images of Hekate were commonly erected at entrances of cities and along busy roads in ancient Greece. 

    How did Hecate come to be known as Enodia?

    As with many pagan deities, Hekate gained her Enodia characteristics through conflation and syncretism with other deities. Enodia is actually a distinct Thessalian goddess with cults across Thessaly, a region on the northeast coast of ancient Greece. She was also called Goddess of Pherai, the center of her most prominent cult.  The Thessalian Ennodia ruled over roads, ghosts, funeral rites, and the sovereignty of cities and groups of people. Due to similar rulership and attributes, Thessalian Ennodia became absorbed into the worship of Hekate across the wider ancient Greek religion.

    Hekate Enodia is best represented in the Homeric myth of Persephone. Hekate observed from her cave the moment Persephone was kidnapped and alerted Demeter. Being the torch-bearing goddess, Hekate helped in the search for Persephone. Once she was found, it was Hekate who guided Persephone out of the underworld, being a liminal goddess who can travel freely between worlds. 

    Enodia in our Modern World

    In many ways, Hekate Enodia is the center of our modern renaissance of Hekatean worship, possessing characteristics that are attractive to modern pagans. As magic practices become more popular, naturally, we would propitiate the Hellenic goddess of witchcraft. Furthermore, being “of the road” can imply being an outsider, intentionally cloistered, or even having nefarious intent, as it contrasts with those who choose to stay within the safety of the home. As a female deity who freely roams liminal spaces, Enodia can represent liberation from patriarchal norms. These aspects speak to the witchy and pagan community as we choose a life path that exists outside of patriarchal standards. 

    As we journey into the dark half of the year, you may call upon Hekate Enodia for spiritual guidance and protection. Samhain, the witch’s new year, is a great time to perform a home cleansing and protection ritual. As you waft incense or herbal smoke through your home, petition Hekate for her protection through the darkness of winter. Another powerful tool for your altar is the mineral Vivianite, known as the “crystal of death”. Vivianite is a mineral found in places of decay, such as graves and bogs. It is formed from decomposed bones, teeth, and iron-rich peat. Vivianite is a transformational mineral, and great for banishing negative energy. Its association with death and decomposition (transformation) makes it a powerful tool for working with Hekate. You can find vivianite, along with all your other spellwork supplies, in our Asheville shop or in our online store.  

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