Corn-dolly, eggs, and candles on the altar. Photograph courtesy of Highland Fire Gatherings and used with permission.
Spiderweb woven from yarn and string-lights, made by one of the organisers.Photograph courtesy of Highland Fire Gatherings, used with their permission.
Me singing in my black robes. Photograph courtesy of H.F.GThe gathering itself was quite informal in structure, and there was a blessing, but there was also lots of drumming and communal music, which had a really good energy. I’d brought some recorders and whistles with me, and I played a lot of music that day – sometimes in the circle (where I used two plastic recorders knocked together as a percussion instrument as well as playing them the conventional way), sometimes just playing tunes while sat in my little shelter. I find music is a good way to express the sort of spiritual feelings that just come out awkward when expressed in words – if the best I can do with language is cringe-worthy attempts at poetry, I will stick to wordless sound. I did attempt to sing at one point, but singing publicly is not something I comfortable with so I was nervous and thus did not do so well at that. My purple shelter is on the right. I think I’m inside it! Photo courtesy of H.F.G.Faces are obscured because I don’t know who might be ‘in the broom closet’.As you can see from the photograph above, there was a reasonable but smallish group. I think I was in the shelter when this photograph was taken, obscured by the lady sitting in front, and there were a couple more people not in the shot. We gathered firewood communally from fallen timber to build our little fire – which was built on a bed of stones as not to damage the ground. On the tree behind us is an ancient sun-wheel symbol which exists in cultures worldwide and may be very, very ancient indeed – it’s certainly simple to draw; a circle with an equal-armed cross, which occurs in ancient carvings across Europe, might well be the heritage of the Celtic cross, and which is also similar to the Medicine Wheel. It can be the four elements, the four directions, the sun the cross of the solar year within the eight spokes of the Wheel of the Year (appropriate for an Equinox which is part of the solar cross), etc. It’s Earth in Astrology, copper alloys in Alchemy and Odin’s cross in Norse Paganism. In its centre is a stag’s skull. I don’t know what that skull meant to the person who made the sun-wheel, but to me the horns are that of Cernunnos.
Celtic Bodhran
A row of lanterns hung with garlands at the entrance to the grove.More distant lanterns as specks of light in the distance. Courtesy of H.F.G
Dusk, looking back towards the path. Photo from H.F.G.