Episodi

  • This episode explores folklore and pagan origins of the 12 days of Christmas, with a focus on the feminine winter figures of Perchta, Holle, and Grýla, featuring a conversation with Jenn Campus, author of A Guide to Celebrating the 12 Days of Yule.
    Pagan Ritual Song course: https://f77d9f-2.myshopify.com/products/pagan-ritual-song-course-jan-feb-2024
    Buy Jenn Campus’ book, A Guide to Celebrating the 12 days of Yule: jenncampusauthor.com/product/a-guid…-days-of-yule/
    Emilia Blom, who shared the solstice wishes ritual with me: www.instagram.com/vildmedicin/
    My Big Fat Solstice playlist on Spotify: open.spotify.com/playlist/2LFjxSU…a743490a69a6459c
    Gnome for Christmas Fair Folk episode: open.spotify.com/episode/5ysFM2qu…6172f7663bc0479f
    Join my mailing list: view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141
    Resources & references for this episode:
    The Stations of the Sun: the ritual year in Britain by Ronald Hutton
    "'He met his own funeral procession': The Year walk-ritual in Swedish folk tradition” Tommy Kuusela: www.academia.edu/9403910
    The Icelandic Yule Lads poem in English
ingebretsens-blog.com/wp-content/upl…-Lads-Poem.pdf
    “The Winter Goddess: Percht, Holda, and Related Figures” By Lotte Motz
dokumen.tips/documents/motz-lot…s-1985.html?page=5
    “Perchta the Belly-Slitter and Her Kin: A View of Some Traditional Threatening Figures, Threats and Punishments” by John B. Smith
www.scribd.com/doc/17325747/Perc…itter-and-Her-Kin
    ‘Grýla, Grýlur, Grøleks and Skeklers: Medieval Disguise Traditions in the North Atlantic?” by Terry Gunnell
notendur.hi.is/~terry/articles/T…_and_Skeklers.pdf
    Music in this episode:
    Opening theme: Forest March by Sylvia Woods
Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds
    Malpas Wassail by the Watersons
Buy it: www.amazon.co.uk/music/player/alb…483616862&sr=1-1
    Spinn, Spinn, Spinnerinn by Herbergsuche Gruppe
Buy it: music.apple.com/ca/album/spinn-sp…55276?i=318155791
    Grýlukvaeði by Thrju a Palli
Buy it:
music.apple.com/ca/album/gr%C3%BD…7315?i=1621787688
    Instrumental track: The Wanderer by Juniper and the Wolf
Buy Juniper and the Wolf’s music: juniperandthewolf.bandcamp.com/

  • This episode surveys the folklore of the first half of December, including St. Nicholas' Day on Dec 6th, St. Lucia's day on Dec. 13th, and the solstice. As we approach the darkest point of winter, I ask you to follow the rhythm of nature and turn your gaze to the small, the domestic and the precious.

    Sign up for the ONLINE Pagan Carols Singalong!: https://winter-lion-59052.myflodesk.com/sgn5zaflv8/
    Sign up for the IN-PERSON Pagan Carols Singalong in Victoria BC: https://winter-lion-59052.myflodesk.com/yl53dvqx1w

    Join my mailing list:
    view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141

    Music in this episode:

    St. Nicholas by Anúna
    Buy this track:
    anuna.bandcamp.com/track/st-nicholas-2

    Luciavisa by Lisa (singer Emma Härdelin)
    Buy this track:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/luciavisa/204432292?i=204434789

    There is no Rose by the King’s Singers
    Buy this track:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/there-is-no-rose/79623724?i=79623213

    Orientis Partibus by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels
    Buy music by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels here: www.medievalminstrels.com/

    Kąlėdų rytų saulė pražydo (The Sun Blossomed on Christmas Morning) by Sedula
    Buy this track:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/kal%C4%97d%C5%B3-ryt%C4%85-saul%C4%97-pra%C5%BEydo/1427982403?i=1427982982

    Rex Tua Nolo Munera by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels
    Buy music by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels here: www.medievalminstrels.com/

    Sources for this episode:

    Lyrics to The Sun Blossomed on Christmas Morning by Sedula:
    www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=5162

    Some more information about medieval animal carols:
    http://www.hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com/Hymns_and_Carols/friendly_beasts.htm

    More information about medieval carols:
    https://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology-south-east/news/2020/dec/evolution-medieval-christmas-carols

    The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen:
    https://americanliterature.com/author/hans-christian-andersen/short-story/the-snow-queen

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  • In this episode I gently interrogate what we mean when we say "the veil is thin" at Halloween, and offer a vision of the whole of winter as a season of hospitality between humans and the otherworld(s) through fire, story, music, and rituals of generosity.
    Listen to past Fair Folk episode "All Hallows' Folk Tradition at the Gates of Winter" https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/all-hallows-folk-tradition-at-the-gates-of-winter/id1177770160?i=1000452872493
    Get love letters from me: https://winter-lion-59052.myflodesk.com/pijrgnu11x
    Join my Patreon for as little as $2 a month!: https://www.patreon.com/fairfolkcast
    Where to find Kirsten Milliken, the storyteller: instagram.com/kirstinmillikenstoryteller
    facebook.com/com/kirstinmillikenstoryteller
    www.kirstenmilliken.co.uk
    Music in this episode:
    Opening theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds
    "Réidh Chnoc Mná Duibhe" by Diarmuid Ó Súilleabháin
    Buy the song: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/re-idh-chnoc-mna-duibhe/1653578592?i=1653581085
    Image is Fairy Tale of Kings by Lithuanian painter Mikalojus Konstantinas Ciurlionis

  • We have reached the energetic peak of the year. The main ancient and folkloric themes of June ritualise the human relationship to two of our primary life-givers, the sun and water. Our romance with these elements (and one another) reach a peak as the year completes its in-breath around the summer solstice. This episode outlines a faint thematic arc in historical Whitsun practices at the start of June, and Midsummer at the end, focusing especially on the folk rituals and folksong of the Baltic countries, Eastern Europe and Ireland.

    Purchase my new Gathering the Gods course on Thor, Odin, & Freya: fantastic-hall-390.myflodesk.com/

    My excellent Midsummer Solstice / June Almanac playlist on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0gG8z6O83kpkjflUqaSMZc?si=a7a6693c091046ef

    The Midsummer Solstice episode of Fair Folk podcast from 2018: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1QZliHXdfHHmSVy0ySfpbv?si=fe6608a7395c4a5e

    “Rusalki: Anthropology of time, death, and sexuality in Slavic folklore” by Jiří Dynda
    https://www.academia.edu/34620531/Rusalki_Anthropology_of_time_death_and_sexuality_in_Slavic_folklore

    “The Mythic Sun: An Aerial Perspective” by Thomas Dubois:
    https://chs.harvard.edu/chapter/thomas-a-dubois-the-mythic-sun-an-areal-perspective/

    “Migration of Song Genres: Two Typical Lithuanian Cases” by Rytis Ambrazevičius
    https://bop.unibe.ch/EJM/article/view/8335

    “The Midsummer Solstice As It Was, Or Was Not, Observed in Pagan Germany, Scandinavia and Anglo-Saxon England” by Sandra Billington
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hX0NJJHjoicOq-5VH3kPfsQAX3NTbAtj/view?usp=sharing

    Music in this episode:
    Opening theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    “O Na Ivana Na Kupala” by Olexa Kabanov -
    Buy it: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/oh-na-ivana-na-kupala/919387915?i=919387973

    “Švinta Jona Vakaralia” by Nalšia -
    Learn more and buy it (scroll down for English): http://www.lnkc.lt/go.php/lit/Kupole-roze-sekminiu-joniniu-dainuojamoji-tautosaka/110946

    Ozolini, Ozolini by Vilkači -
    Buy it: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/j%C4%81nis/1201942701

  • This episode, a bonus introductory unit to my upcoming Gathering the Gods course, introduces Old Norse culture and language, and describes the status of gods in the Old Norse religion and cosmology. This course will give an overview of the surviving historical texts and traces of the gods Thor, Odin, and Freya.
    Gathering the Gods begins May 7th! Sign up here: https://fantastic-hall-390.myflodesk.com/
    Access the reading and materials for this intro unit: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1GPjFkblda1E7NlXrpMCHRa0Q5WWk_JJO?usp=sharing

  • This episode outlines the key themes of May folklore embodied in the celebrations of May 1st, aka May Day or Beltane: bonfires for purification and protection, veneration of plants and trees, the leading of animals to green pastures, erotic expressions of pleasure, and the blooming promise of earth's abundance.

    Join the Gathering the Gods course on Thor, Odin, & Freya: https://fantastic-hall-390.myflodesk.com/

    Listen to the Big Beltane Spotify playlist (newly updated): https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6UVpAwkdX39Bk5mY1Kd2Xc?si=0f91f96826544081

    Big Beltane: May Day Song and Custom episode from 2019: https://open.spotify.com/episode/62jeozEUNP0FFrKKSafLEJ?si=4de8b4c66c284d5b

    Music in this episode:
    "Don't you Go a Rushing" by Lisa Knapp
    https://lisaknapp.bandcamp.com/album/till-april-is-dead-a-garland-of-may

    "Robin Hood and the Tanner" by Jesse Ferguson
    Buy it:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/folk-favourites/1238844872

    "Äggavisan" by Folk och Rachare
    Buy it: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/%C3%A4ggavisan/1462963060?i=1462963069

    Opening theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

  • This episode my guest is Olle Möllervärn, Swedish folklore and paganism researcher and bear nerd! In this episode we discuss animism and how it brings us into more ethical relationship with animals, the connection between human fertility and bears, including human-bear romance, as well as the reason bears are connected with St. Tiburtius' day, April 14th.

    Join my mailing list for a discount on my upcoming course on Old Norse polytheism, Gathering the Gods: https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141 (Registration opens April 17th)

    Olle Möllervärn on Academia.edu: https://miun.academia.edu/OlleM%C3%B6llerv%C3%A4rn

    Norwegian bear dance - skip to 18:00: https://tv.nrk.no/program/FOLA69009669

    Opening theme:
    Forest March by Sylvia Woods
    Purchase Sylvia Woods' music: https://www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

  • This episode outlines the folklore of April in northern Europe: April Fool's day, Palm Sunday, Easter, St. George's day, and the history of gathering greenery for ritual and soups, rising at the dawn to worship a goddess, cuckoo folklore, dragon lore, and lovely spring ritual songs to set the mood!

    This month's April Almanac Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2AJtQbVqaNJKhwbSNpRqxc?si=4d2dafd206f74a15

    Join the mailing list: https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141

    Goddess of the Dawn episode of Fair Folk: https://soundcloud.com/fairfolkcast/goddess-of-the-dawn

    Goddess of the Dawn Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37OdQr0zs03bygse4ULS47?si=1dcb8ccce828438e

    Resources:

    Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, chapter: In the Footsteps of Nanabozho: Becoming Indigenous to Place.
    A quote: https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/7192815-our-immigrant-plant-teachers-offer-a-lot-of-different-models

    Mimisbrunnr entry on the Nine Herbs Charm (Nigon Wyrta Galdor): https://www.mimisbrunnr.info/nigon-wyrta-galdor

    A nice German nine-herb soup recipe: https://www.kitchenproject.com/german/recipes/Suppe/Grundonnerstagsuppe/index.htm

    Music in this episode:

    Opening theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    Kuku Kaki Kultarinta by Honeypaw
    Purchase:
    https://honeypawband.bandcamp.com/track/kuku-kaki-kultarinta

    Edi Beo Thu Hevene Quene by Helena Ek and Goran Mansson
    Purchase:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/edi-beo-thu-hevene-queene/1625877870?i=1625879088

    Now the Green Blade Riseth by Caedmon
    Purchase:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/now-the-green-blade-riseth/1491931796?i=1491932896

    St. George by Waterson: Carthy
    Purchase:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/st-george/1280110185?i=1280110191

    Instrumental track at 54:29: A Madre De Jhesu Cristo by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels
    Purchase:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/a-madre-de-jhesu-cristo/1346857580?i=1346857906

    Bright morning stars are rising by Tony Saletan and Irene Saletan
    Purchase:
    https://folkways.si.edu/tony-and-irene-saletan/folk-songs-and-ballads

  • This almanac episode dives into the folklore of February through the lens of the Ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia on February 15th, tracing the themes of birth, milk, wolves, wildness, purification, death, twilight, and thunder through the month’s other pagan holidays, including St. Brigid’s day on February 1st, Candlemas / Gromnica / Perkunas Day on February 2nd, and Scandinavian St. Peter Hotstone on February 22nd.

    This month’s episode asks what the notion of purification might mean in a pagan context, and suggests it may mean facing the shadow parts of ourselves that we tend to project onto animals (and women) so we can ritually integrate them, clarifying and owning our role as powerfully in-between creatures in a powerfully in-between world.

    Important dates:
    February 1: Brigid’s Day / Bride (Ireland / Scotland)
    February 2: Candlemas (Christian) / Gromnica (Slavic) / Perkunas day (Lithuania) / Perun’s Day (Belarus)
    February 14: St. Valentine’s day
    February 15: Lupercalia
    February 21: Mardi Gras / end of Carnivale / Start of Lent
    February 22: St. Peter Hot-stone

    Listen to the February Almanac playlist on Tidal:
    https://tidal.com/browse/playlist/4c148b82-bfe5-46cf-ba26-63b7bc2a7acd

    Listen to the February Almanac playlist on Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2QSKLQ8WeAq9v26NWfpTtX?si=33e31c5e2fe74971

    Music in this episode:

    “Lupercalia” by Faun
    Buy Faun’s music: https://shop.faun-music.com/

    “Värgsangen” by Jonna Jinton
    More Jonna Jinton music: https://www.youtube.com/user/jonnajinton
    Buy Jonna Jinton’s art: https://jonnajintonsweden.com/

    “Ulvetimme” (The Hour of the Wolf) Maria Franz and Christopher Juul
    Buy Heilung’s (Maria Franz and Christopher Juul) music: https://heilung.bandcamp.com/

    “Mary’s Keen” by Noirin Ni Riain
    Buy this track: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/marys-keen/992023961?i=992023970
    Buy Noirin Ni Riain’s music: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/stor-amhran/41446103

    “Grá” by Wardruna
    Buy Wardruna music and merch: https://wardrunashop.com/collections/music
    Buy Wardruna digital tracks: https://wardruna.bandcamp.com/music

    Opening theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    Sources for this episode:

    Watch Ronja Robbersdaughter: https://fsharetv.io/watch/ronja-robbersdaughter-episode-1-tt0088015

    Watch Wolf Walkers: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_Z_tybgPgg

    Emperors of Rome Podcast, Lupercalia episode: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/episode-cxxxv-lupercalia/id850148806?i=1000465237605

    History and Folklore Podcast: Medieval Wolves episode: https://historyandfolklorepodcast.libsyn.com/medieval-wolves

    Medieval Folklore: A Guide to Myths, Legends, Tales, Beliefs, and Customs edited by Carl Lindahl, John McNamara, and John Lindow: entry: “Wolf [Canis Lupus] and Werewolf”

    The Nordic Animist Year (book) by Rune Rasmussen

    Candlelight Tales Podcast: Brigid episode: https://soundcloud.com/candlelittales/episode-7-brigid

    Transcript:
    Welcome to the podcast. This is the February Almanac episode  of Fair Folk called Wolf Milk.

    In these Almanac episodes, I comb through European calendar custom. that is folklore relating to the cycle of the year, typically with a focus on Northern Europe. And I share what I find with you to help you orient the month ahead. Equipped with knowledge of nourishing traditions that can help reconnect you to the natural cycles of the year to land and the life in the plants, animals, our bodies, and ourselves.

    Seasonal folklore and festivals call us back into community with all beings on the earth in its regular spinning wheel of life and death. And they help us to tend through ritual, our ties to our kin of all species, both our ancestral kin and our future kin to come. The recovery of European traditional cultures, the ones that privilege relationality, interconnection and respect for all beings, which you might call indigenous cultures, is so early in its stages.

  • In this January almanac episode, I share about how English Plough Sunday and Plough Monday rituals dovetail with pagan midwinter worship of Odin to present a quandary as rich today as ever:

    How do we hold sacred the human capacity to employ technologies that multiply our power, while dancing on the delicate balance between service and domination?

    How do we bless the hard work of human hands where it meets the life of the world?

    This episode delves into traditions of chasing out the spirits of Yule, as well as blessing of apple trees, ploughs, and ultimately ploughboys as representatives of the overflow of human passion and physical power.

    Sign up for UNEARTHED, my course on the roots of imperialism in the Christian Middle Ages: https://rustic-waterfall-641.myflodesk.com

    Listen to the January Almanac playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2lcgJz369QMIDmN8J4LEAq?si=96bd3fac66c8482f

    Contact me by email fairfolkcast [at] gmail.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/danica.boyce/

    Music in this episode:

    January Man by Lau & Karine Polwart
    Buy it:
    https://lau-music.bandcamp.com/track/january-man

    Apple Tree Wassail by Jon Boden
    Buy his albums https://hudsonrecords.co.uk/shopfront/jon-boden

    Ploughboy’s Dream by Janice Burns and Jon Doran
    Buy it:
    https://bandcamp.com/download?cart_id=97060025&sig=7770feb4eddf1844063928c397bc5b88&from=checkout

    Ploughboy’s Glory by Lisa Knapp
    Buy it:
    https://lisaknapp.bandcamp.com/track/ploughboys-glory

    Instrumental track:
    St. Agnes’ Eve by Carol Wood
    Buy it:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/st-agnes-eve/130331483?i=130332115

    Opening theme: Forest March by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    Sources and Resources for this episode:
    Rune Hjarno Rasmussen’s St Knut / Odin parallels video:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l99YoPiPLrg

    The Nordic Animist Year (book) by Rune Hjarno Rasmussen: https://shop.nordicanimism.com/shop/9-books-and-calendars/9-the-nordic-animist-year/

    The Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain by Ronald Hutton (book)

    “The Winter Goddess: Percht, Holda, and Related Figures” By Lotte Motz
    dokumen.tips/documents/motz-lot…s-1985.html?page=5

    “Perchta the Belly-Slitter and Her Kin: A View of Some Traditional Threatening Figures, Threats and Punishments” by John B. Smith
    www.scribd.com/doc/17325747/Perc…itter-and-Her-Kin

    Lyrics to folk song "Ploughboy’s Glory"
    http://www.joe-offer.com/folkinfo/songs/362.html

    Episode Image: by John Bauer from story "The Ring," by Helena Nyblom, 1914

    Transcript:
    This is the January Almanac episode of Fair Folk in which I will be discussing the folklore and pagan roots of January celebrations with an emphasis on nourishing traditions we can bring forward and apply to our modern lives, to help us connect to land and to history in productive and empowering ways.

    This month I'll be focusing on the new cycle of years changing over the end of the Yule season and our relationship to labour and technology, which was a focus that arose for me while I was researching this January episode. That hasn't arisen for me before, but it definitely is an emphasis of English and Nordic tradition, and it'll explain more as we go ahead.

    Other themes that arise in January folklore are the continued divination and predictive quality for the year ahead that we've may have already seen in December. Folklore also the supernatural and the feminine visiting from the wilds beyond, because it is still winter and these forces still rule.

    There's often a theme in January songs especially of weather, bad weather, loneliness, cold and love, longing as metaphorically associated with those sensations of coldness and isolation in the wintertime. And of course, the slow return of the sun is being observed across European folklore, which is what I always focus on.

  • This episode explores folklore and pagan origins of the 12 days of Christmas, with a focus on the feminine winter figures of Perchta, Holle, and Grýla, featuring a conversation with Jenn Campus, author of A Guide to Celebrating the 12 Days of Yule.

    Unearthed: medieval imperialism course: https://rustic-waterfall-641.myflodesk.com

    Buy Jenn Campus’ book, A Guide to Celebrating the 12 days of Yule for $5: https://jenncampusauthor.com/product/a-guide-to-celebrating-the-12-days-of-yule/

    Emilia Blom, who shared the solstice wishes ritual with me: https://www.instagram.com/vildmedicin/

    My Big Fat Solstice playlist on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2LFjxSUsJYrJE2S0nuYWdB?si=a743490a69a6459c

    Gnome for Christmas Fair Folk episode: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5ysFM2qushhgWVuEx5kLq1?si=6172f7663bc0479f

    Join my mailing list: https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141

    Resources & references for this episode:

    The Stations of the Sun: the ritual year in Britain by Ronald Hutton

    "'He met his own funeral procession': The Year walk-ritual in Swedish folk tradition” Tommy Kuusela: https://www.academia.edu/9403910

    The Icelandic Yule Lads poem in English
    https://ingebretsens-blog.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/The-Yule-Lads-Poem.pdf

    “The Winter Goddess: Percht, Holda, and Related Figures” By Lotte Motz
    https://dokumen.tips/documents/motz-lotte-the-winter-goddess-percht-holda-and-related-figures-1985.html?page=5

    “Perchta the Belly-Slitter and Her Kin: A View of Some Traditional Threatening Figures, Threats and Punishments” by John B. Smith
    https://www.scribd.com/doc/17325747/Perchta-the-Belly-slitter-and-Her-Kin

    ‘Grýla, Grýlur, Grøleks and Skeklers: Medieval Disguise Traditions in the North Atlantic?” by Terry Gunnell
    https://notendur.hi.is/~terry/articles/TerryGunnell-2001_Gryla,Grylur,Groleks_and_Skeklers.pdf

    Music in this episode:

    Opening theme: Forest March by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    Malpas Wassail by the Watersons
    Buy it: https://www.amazon.co.uk/music/player/albums/B09WJGTF52?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1483616862&sr=1-1

    Spinn, Spinn, Spinnerinn by Herbergsuche Gruppe
    Buy it: https://music.apple.com/ca/album/spinn-spinn-spinnerin/318155276?i=318155791

    Grýlukvaeði by Thrju a Palli
    Buy it:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/gr%C3%BDlukv%C3%A6%C3%B0i/1621787315?i=1621787688

    Instrumental track: The Wanderer by Juniper and the Wolf
    Buy Juniper and the Wolf’s music: https://juniperandthewolf.bandcamp.com/

  • This episode surveys the folklore of the first half of December, including St. Nicholas' Day on Dec 6th, St. Lucia's day on Dec. 13th, and the solstice. As we approach the darkest point of winter, I ask the listener to follow the rhythm of nature and turn your gaze to the small, the domestic and the precious.

    Join my mailing list:
    https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141

    Music in this episode:

    St. Nicholas by Anúna
    Buy this track:
    https://anuna.bandcamp.com/track/st-nicholas-2

    Luciavisa by Lisa (singer Emma Härdelin)
    Buy this track:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/luciavisa/204432292?i=204434789

    There is no Rose by the King’s Singers
    Buy this track:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/there-is-no-rose/79623724?i=79623213

    Orientis Partibus by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels
    Buy music by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels here: https://www.medievalminstrels.com/

    Kąlėdų rytų saulė pražydo (The Sun Blossomed on Christmas Morning) by Sedula
    Buy this track:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/album/kal%C4%97d%C5%B3-ryt%C4%85-saul%C4%97-pra%C5%BEydo/1427982403?i=1427982982

    Rex Tua Nolo Munera by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels
    Buy music by Trouvere Medieval Minstrels here: https://www.medievalminstrels.com/

    Sources for this episode:

    Lyrics to The Sun Blossomed on Christmas Morning by Sedula:
    https://www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=5162

    Some more information about medieval animal carols:
    http://www.hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com/Hymns_and_Carols/friendly_beasts.htm

    More information about medieval carols:
    https://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology-south-east/news/2020/dec/evolution-medieval-christmas-carols

    The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen:
    https://americanliterature.com/author/hans-christian-andersen/short-story/the-snow-queen

  • This is a conversation with Scottish folk-magic blogger and social worker Scott Richardson Read about the Gaelic folklore figure called the Cailleach: the old woman known as Scotland’s midwife; landscape shaper, storm-bringer, sovereignty figure, ancestral being, resurrected once and again, and present all through the folk calendar of the year.The Cailleach has been popularly associated with wintertime, which is why I feature her on Fair Folk now, at the beginning of winter.Transcript of this episode: https://docs.google.com/document/d/12oDeT-0u-0fnnascirU_k5izVU4kQHACj2zqTFI2wGA/Resources referenced in this episode:Cailleach’s Herbarium blog, Cailleach article #1https://cailleachs-herbarium.com/2015/08/the-cailleach-a-tale-of-balance-between-darkness-and-light/Cailleach’s Herbarium blog, Cailleach article #2https://cailleachs-herbarium.com/2015/08/the-cailleach-a-tale-of-balance-between-darkness-and-light-part-two/Cailleach’s Herbarium blog entry on an animist shrine dedicated to the Cailleach:https://cailleachs-herbarium.com/2018/01/the-cailleach-scotlands-midwife-tigh-na-bodach/Article: The Cailleach in Place-names and Place-lore by Alasdair C. Whyte:https://clog.glasgow.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/JSNS/article/view/58/107Mckenzie’s Wonder Tale, Beira, Queen of Winter:https://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/tsm/tsm04.htm9th century poem about the Cailleach, “The Old Woman of Beare”Audio: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65CWjdVcBmgText: https://www.ronnowpoetry.com/contents/anonymous/OldWomanBeare.htmlSongs in this episode:Opening theme: “Forest March” by Sylvia WoodsBuy Sylvia Woods’ music:www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds“The Old Woman of the Mill Dust / Cailleach An Dudain” by Alison Kinnair & Christine PrimroseBuy Alison Kinnair & Christine Primrose’s music:https://guysegers1.bandcamp.com/track/cailleach-an-dudain-the-old-woman-of-the-mill-dust-alison-kinnaird-christine-primrose (album)https://music.apple.com/ca/album/cailleach-an-dudain-the-old-woman-of-the-mill-dust/294080419?i=294080481

  • This episode asks how we can take the natural themes of the month and separate them from the contexts that have framed and sometimes twisted them, so we can use them to empower all beings – especially, this month, foxes and geese. It surveys November droving and pannage traditions, Guy Fawkes Day on November 5th, fox hunting and its complex legacy, St. Martins day on November 11 and its entanglement with goose lore, and St. Catherine’s day on November 25th, which opens the season of the Germanic winter goddesses, whose later folklore connects spinning and wheels, snow, wild animals, flying, geese, and children.

    Join the Mailing List:
    view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141

    Listen to the November Almanac playlist on Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/playlist/094rCk7NZWNOSLmoHHPqc2?si=83d27558f563416b

    Fair Folk’s Patreon:
    www.patreon.com/fairfolkcast

    Songs featured in this episode:

    “The Fox” by Laura Viers
    Buy Laura Viers’ music on Bandcamp:
    https://lauraveirs.bandcamp.com/track/the-fox

    “Kadrilaul” by Collage / Choir of Tallin University of Technology
    Buy Collage’s music:
    https://music.apple.com/gb/album/kadriko/1100185926

    “Martinmas Time” by James Yorkston
    Buy James Yorkston’s music digitally:
    https://jamesyorkston.bandcamp.com/

    Buy James Yorkston’s records:
    https://www.jamesyorkston.co.uk/shop/

    “Goose and Common” by the Askew Sisters
    Buy the Askew Sisters’ music:
    http://www.askewsisters.co.uk/

    Opening theme:
    Forest March by Sylvia Woods
    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    Some sources for this episode:

    The Year in Ireland by Kevin Danaher, 1972.

    Folk-Lore and Folk-Stories of Wales by Marie Trevelyan, 1909.
    https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book//lookupid?key=olbp54204

    Article: “The Winter Goddess: Percht, Holda, and Related Figures” by Lotte Motz
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1HDXoKGBG3PojPXDJrJXZ3Ae2A7HQCCA7/view?usp=sharing

    Article: "Perchta the Belly-Slitter and Her Kin: A View of Some Traditional Threatening Figures, Threats and Punishments" by John B. Smith
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1280qQAcXA-p0bbrF3_zujAbB0tJMr0Bo/view?usp=sharing

    Frau Holle in the Grimm's Fairy Tales:
    https://sites.pitt.edu/~dash/grimm024.html

    An article about enclosure:
    https://medium.com/@daveuwakwe/what-a-poem-about-a-goose-teaches-us-about-property-3dfe6f7972ec

    St. Martin Lore from County Kerry ℅ the National Folklore Collection of Ireland: https://www.duchas.ie/en/cbes/4666609/4666442 (Search the vast collection for more!)

  • Fair Folk is back in operation after a year's break! This episode shares some of the folkloric themes of October: it's the pagan start of winter, and features spooky post-harvest customs of feeding the dead, love longing, rekindling the community fire, and a cute dose of shoe folklore.

    Call for key collaborators in the Pagan Monastery Project:
    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1jq9XCt29MqQXEaRNtnoUj4n_5LObtqmWf-F-g8fGdto/edit?usp=sharing

    Listen to the Pagan Monastery Podcast on Apple Podcasts:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/pagan-monastery-podcast-with-danica-boyce/id1610505250

    Listen to the Pagan Monastery Podcast on Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/show/7xFdHUx1nJqge8Oq9Bs1GY?si=53d91206134049e8

    Join the Mailing List:
    https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d72c01da642d55a9868141

    Listen to the October Almanac playlist on Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6vxucYP0zGjsH2AxfwlayL?si=d5ae8d42bbbe473f

    Fair Folk’s Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/fairfolkcast

    Listen to Our Supernatural Landlords: folklorist Terry Gunnell on northern European winter guising traditions:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/fair-folk-podcast/id1177770160?i=1000501474652

    Songs featured in this episode:

    Tam Lin by Anais Mitchell and Jefferson Hamer

    Buy Anais Mitchell and Jefferson Hamer’s album:
    https://anaismitchell.ochre.store/release/250476-anas-mitchell-jefferson-hamer-child-ballads

    Cheshire Souling Song by Cantorion CynWrig Singers

    Buy the Cantorion CynWrig Singers’ music:
    https://music.apple.com/ca/artist/cantorion-cynwrig/156043718

    Holland Handkerchief by Chris Foster

    Buy Chris Foster’s music:
    https://chrisfoster1.bandcamp.com/music

    Who’s Gonna Shoe my Pretty Little Foot by Barbara Dane

    Buy Barbara Dane’s music:
    https://barbaradane.bandcamp.com/

    “Old Jacky Frost” by the Wildness Yet

    Buy the Wilderness Yet’s music:
    https://www.thewildernessyet.com/shop.html

    The Wilderness Yet on Bandcamp (digital):
    https://thewildernessyet.bandcamp.com/

    Opening theme:
    Forest March by Sylvia Woods

    Buy Sylvia Woods’ music:
    https://www.harpcenter.com/category/harp-cds

    Some sources for this episode:

    Andreas Nordberg “Ritual Time and Time Reckoning.” The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: History and Structures, Volume ii, 725

    On Shoes in walls: https://ztevetevans.wordpress.com/2020/08/12/strange-folklore-the-mystery-of-concealed-footwear/

    For more info on boots and shoes and Hedwig: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/oa-edit/10.4324/9781315166940-13/boots-saint-hedwig-jacqueline-jung

    Recipe for Hedwigsohlen (Hedwig's soles pastries): https://catholiccuisine.blogspot.com/2014/10/soles-of-st-hedwig.html

    British Calendar Customs: England (1942)

    Polish Customs, Traditions and Folklore. 1996.

    Kevin Danaher. The Year in Ireland. 1972.

  • This episode announces that I will not be producing Fair Folk Podcast for the forseeable future. I am deeply grateful for all of the support you have all given me as I have grown this podcast, and I hope you will continue to connect with me in one of the following ways:
    My mailing list: https://mailchi.mp/53d8b01c469b/newsletter
    My Youtube channel with my partner Quinn: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw5BgVgYLuRWmEs66AHx38A
    Instagram: www.instagram.com/danica.boyce
    Patreon: patreon.com/fairfolkcast
    If you stay subscribed to this podcast, you will receive updates on any further Fair Folk activity, and I'll let you know if I start another audio venture in the future!
    All my love,
    Danica

  • This episode is a road map to the folklore, mythology, songs and rituals of the goddess of the dawn, gathered from the many cultures of the Indo-European language family. It paints the picture of a radiant, dependable, go-getter goddess who is born again with every day and every epoch. The episode ends with my ritual performance of the medieval hymn “Polorum Regina” in an abandoned church on a mountaintop at sunrise.

    Check out Medieval Hymn to the Dawn Goddess on our new YouTube series! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_moj-dcn5nM

    The episode I mentioned: A Priest and a Piper: A Conversation with Ignas Šatkauskas, Pagan Priest of Romuva https://m.soundcloud.com/fairfolkcast/ignas-satkauskas-interview

    A great resource for Indo-European mythology, folklore and poetry research that I used for this episode is Indo-European Poetry and Myth by Martin Litchfield West

    Episode edited by Quinn McCord.

    Thank you very much to Sylvia Woods, whose song Forest March is the opening theme to Fair Folk Podcast!

    Image: The Coming of Bride by John Duncan, 1917

  • In our second conversation on Fair Folk, folklorist Terry Gunnell and I discuss the northern European folklore of the winter season, especially the tradition of guising and monstrous visitors in pagan and Christian times, and -- getting to the juicy stuff -- how male deities came to dominate the Nordic sphere in the Viking era, when it is rather obvious feminine deities used to play a significantly larger role.
    Join me on Patreon for future pre-released episodes and Q&As:
    www.patreon.com/fairfolkcast
    Some of Terry Gunnell's articles can be downloaded here: https://hi.academia.edu/TerryGunnell

    Music:
    Intro theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    32:32 “K Viola” by ICP Orchestra
    58:30 “K Viola” by ICP Orchestra (again)

  • An interview with Daniel Allison, Scottish storyteller and author. We talk about the beginning of the winter season, how he became a storyteller, and how we can make our dreams a reality with the winter dark as our guide and protector. He tells the beautiful story "The Dream Makers" from his book "Scottish Myths and Legends."

    House of Legends Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/59C6P4JKydqeUoWYhILZBU?si=WqKHjqsTT7i8uZulU5U5aA
    Get Daniel's books: https://www.houseoflegends.me/books
    Daniel's Membership Site: https://www.houseoflegends.me/membership-site
    instagram: https://www.instagram.com/houseoflegendspodcast/

    Fair Folk Patreon: www.patreon.com/fairfolkcast
    Danica on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/danica.boyce

    Music in this episode:
    Intro theme: "Forest March" by Sylvia Woods
    1:30 Untitled Scottish melody by Stephen Arndt
    24:05 "The Song of the Chanter" by Tale of the Gael

  • Enjoy this 2019 episode exploring the ancient traditions behind today's favourite Halloween activities: trick-or-treating, jack-o-lantern carving, divination, and... communing with the dead.
    This episode's music:
    Intro Music: “Forest March” by Sylvia Woods
    2:09 “Nöstmo Halvar” by Per O G Runberg
    7:04 “King Orfeo” by Alva
    13:07 “Samhain” by Ron Allen
    14:55 “Punkie Night” by Withe & Stone
    17:11 “Tam Glen” by Jean Redpath
    22:45 “Colcannon” by The Black Family
    26:30 “The Wife of Usher’s Well” by Alfred Deller & The Deller Consort
    31:38 “Souling Song” by the Watersons
    38:10 “Faithful Johnny” by Bryony Griffith & Will Hampson
    42:30 “Lyke Wake Dirge” by the Young Tradition
    Image: Scotch Mist by John Duncan