Correspondences

Activities and Rituals: End of summer, honoring of the dead,scrying, divination, last harvest, meat harvest

Incense : Copal, sandalwood, mastic resin, benzoin, sweetgrass, wormwood, mugwort, sage, myrrh or patchouli

Tools: besom, cauldron, tarot, obsidian ball, pendulum, runes, oghams, Ouija boards, black cauldron or bowl filled with black ink or water, or magick mirror

Stones/Gems: Black obsidian, jasper, carnelian, onyx, smoky quartz, jet, bloodstone

Colors: Black, orange, red

Symbols & Decorations: apples, autumn flowers, acorns, bat, black cat, bones, corn stalks, colored leaves, crows, death/dying, divination and the tools associated with it, ghosts, gourds, Indian corn, jack-o-lantern, nuts , oak leaves, pomegranates, pumpkins, scarecrows, scythes, waning moon

Foods: apples, apple dishes, cider, meat (traditionally this is the meat harvest) especially pork, mulled cider with spices, nuts-representing resurrection and rebirth, nuts, pomegranates, potatoes, pumpkins, pumpkin bread, pumpkin pie, roasted pumpkin seeds, roasted pumpkin seeds, squash.

Deities : Anubis, Arianrhod, Astarte, Baba Yaga Beansidhe (Banshee), Belili, Bran, Cailleach Beara, Cernunnos, Cerridwen, Crone , Dark Lord & Lady, Demeter, Hathor, Hecate, Hel, Horned God, Inanna, Ishtar, Isis, Kali, Kore, Lakshmi, Lilith, the Morrigan, Nephthys, Odin, Osiris, Oya,  Persephone, Pomona, Rhiannon,  Tlazoteotl

Herbs and Flowers: almond, apple leaf , autumn joy sedum, bay leaf, calendula, Cinnamon, Cloves cosmos, garlic, ginger , hazelnut, hemlock cones, mandrake root, marigold, mums, mugwort (to aid in divination), mullein seeds , nettle, passionflower, pine needles, pumpkin seeds, rosemary (for remembrance of our ancestors), rue, sage, sunflower petals and seeds, tarragon, wild ginseng, wormwood

Animals: Stag, cat, bat, owl, jackal, elephant, ram, scorpion, heron, crow, robin.

Work:  sex magick, release of bad habits, banishing, fairy magick, divination of any kind, candle magick, astral projection, past life work, dark moon mysteries, mirror spells (reflection), casting protection , inner work, propitiation, clearing obstacles, uncrossing, inspiration, workings of transition or culmination, manifesting transformation,creative visualization, contacting those who have departed this plane


Ideas and Activities

Leave milk and honey for the fae folk

Make resolutions, write them on a small piece of parchment, and burn in a candle flame, preferably a black votive candle within a cauldron on the altar.

Wear costumes that reflect what you hope or wish for in the upcoming year.

Carve a jack-o-lantern and place a candle in it.

Choose and enthrone a Winter Queen and King the counterparts of the May Queen and
King

Make masks and costumes representing the different aspects of the God and Goddess and wear them to ritual or used to decorate your altar or temple area

Have each covener bring a carved pumpkin and carry it, lit, above their head in procession to your ritual site in memory of all those who perished during the burning times or your own dearly departed.

Symbolically extinguish the "hearthfire" of your home and then re-light it from the Samhain Sabbat Fire or cauldron.

Read or act out the "Descent of Inanna" or the story of Demeter and Persephone.

During ritual invite departed friends and family into the circle and tell them of all that had happened in your life since their departure. You may wish to set a place for them at your dinner table and use this time to contact them. This is a good time to talk to them of any unresolved issues that you may have had with them and to let them go.

Slice an apple on the altar displaying the star within and say, "this is the fruit of life- which is death " and then slice a pomegranate and display the seeds saying, " this is the fruit of death- which is life."

Enjoy the trick or treating of the season.

Drink apple cider spiced with cinnamon to honor the dead. *see recipe section*

Bury an apple or pomegranate in the garden for spirits passing by on their way to being reborn.

Leave food outside as an offering to the dead

Do divination for the next year using whatever form of divination appeals to you.

Set out a mute or dumb supper.

Make a besom, or witches broom. *see instructions in craft section*

Make a witches ladder for protection or as an expression of what you hope to manifest in
the year ahead. *see craft section*

Find a magick wand of oak, holly, ash, rowan, birch, hazel, elm, Hawthorne or willow.

Let this be the traditional time that you make candles for the coming year, infusing them
with color, power, herbs, and scent depending on the magickal purpose.

At Samhain, witches once gave one another acorns as gifts. During the Burning Times,
giving someone an acorn was a secret means of telling that person you were a witch.
Acorns are fruits of the oak, one of the most sacred trees to the ancient Celts. They are symbols of protection, fertility, growth, values, and friendship. Perhaps you would like to continue this tradition and give acorns as gifts this season. You might like to paint them gold as a God symbol and decoration.

Have a New Year's Party-it is, after all, the Celtic New Year!

Look at old family photo albums or scrapbooks. Try to tell stories about each person in the pictures

Honor the dead, remember those you loved who have passed on-perhaps by putting their pictures or something they gave you on your altar during your ritual.

Carve faces in apples and pumpkins

Mix up some hot mugwort tea

Make a pumpkin pie *see recipe section*

Dry meat or make jerky-this is the traditional meat harvest- *see recipe section*



Samhain Oil and Incense

Protection Oil

1 dram olive oil
1 dram Patchouli oil
1 tsp. broken pieces of Mandrake Root
1 dram Cinnamon Oil
3 heaping tsp. coarse sea salt ground very fine
1 dram Myrrh Oil

In a clean metal bowl, mix the olive oil, sea salt, and mandrake root. Mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon. Transfer the mixture to a clean sterilized jar. Using a dropper, add the essential oils. Swirl the essential oils into the base oil/salt/mandrake mixture, don't stir. Gently rotate the oil clockwise. Store the oil away from heat, light and moisture in an airtight glass bottle.

Samhain Incenses

#1
Nettle
Calendula
patchouli leaves
myrrh
Bay Leaf
Oak Leaf
Tarragon
2 drops Cinnamon Oil
Sage

Place ingredients in a bowl . The Cinnamon Oil is a resin used to bond the ingredients and retain scent. Burn in a safe dish or other burner on an instant light charcoal briquette.

#2

1 Part Powdered Allspice
1 Part Ground Black Pepper
2 Parts Clove Powder
1 Part Myrrh (small resin chunks)
12 Parts lightly crushed Rose Petals
from paganpath.com

#3

1 Part crushed Mugwort Leaves
1 Part Frankincense Tears (small resin chunks)
1 Part Myrrh Resin (small chunks)
2 Parts crushed Rosemary Leaves
from paganpath.com

Crafts

Door Wreath
Besom
Witches' Ladder


Recipes

Beef  or Turkey Jerky
Bread of the Dead
Eyeballs
Ghost Hand Punch
Grave Yard Dessert
Green Slime
Mulled Cider
Pecan Pie in Pumpkin Shells
Pumpkin Pie
Pumpkin Ravioli
Pumpkin Seeds
Pumpkin Shaped Cake
Pumpkin Bread
Samhain Cider
Samhain Meat Pie
Spiced Hot Chocolate
Spider Cake
Witches' Hats



A Samhain Chant


  This chant can be outdoors around a bonfire or inside around an extra
  large altar candle.
 
  Fire red, summer's dead,
  Yet shall it return.
  Clear and bright in the night,
  Burn, fire, burn!
 
  Dance the ring, luck to bring,
  When the year's aturning.
  Chant the rhyme at Hallowstime,
  When the fire's burning.
 
  Fire glow, vision show
  Of the heart's desire,
  When the spell's chanted well
  Of the witching fire.
 
  Dance the ring, luck to bring,
  When the year's aturning.
  Chant the rhyme at Hallowstime,
  When the fire's burning.
 
  Fire spark, when nights are dark,
  Makes our winter's mirth.
  Red leaves fall, earth takes all,
  Brings them to rebirth.
 
  Dance the ring, luck to bring,
  When the year's aturning.
  Chant the rhyme at Hallowstime,
  When the fire's burning.
 
  Fire fair, earth and air,
  And the heaven's rain,
  And blessed be, and so may we,
  At Hallowstide again.
 
  Dance the ring, luck to bring,
  When the year's aturning.
  Chant the rhyme at Hallowstime,
  When the fire's burning.
 
  Valiente, Doreen; "Witchcraft for Tomorrow"; Phoenix Publishing 1985
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"Eye of newt, and toe of frog,
Wool of bat, and tongue of dog"

"Adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting,
Lizard's leg, and owlet's wing"

"For a charm of powerful trouble,
Like a hell-broth boil and bubble"

"Double, double, toil and trouble,
Fire burn, and cauldron bubble"

William Shakespeare

Samhain