Vine Moon

September 2th – September 30th

In the Celtic tradition, the lunar month of the vine offers the opportunity to bring your plan to fruition before the winter.

Summer has brought its abundance, enabling early harvest.

At this time of the year, the grapes are green and still need to grow. They will mature with the support of Nature’s last burst of energy before it enters in the Autumn equinox, when the day and the night are equal length (September 22nd) .

Like the warmth of the earth, the sunlight, the bees and all elements collaborates for the vine to grow and ripe, we need the extra support or cooperation with others to complete the projects we started this year. Indeed, when we follow the rhythm of the Nature, our project feel like unripe grapes who need a little external support. Until the 22th September, it’s time to focus on the last solar energy for our project maturation.

This Month we will concentrate on the valuable input from others, consolidating relations and network. It’s time to make peace, end arguments, pay off existing debts to be aligned in our community where our project has a meaning. Collaborative work made under the Vine Moon may be very valuable for the forthcoming darken months.

In the ancient times, Grapevine was a symbol of fertility as well as bramble or blackberries in the colder areas where Grape didn’t grow.

Hélène Courrier

During this MOONLIGHT MINGLE, we will:

  • Bring peace within
  • Open up to fruitfulness at this time of the year
  • Find ways to complete your project
  • Eat a prosperity pie

Reserve a spot : here

Rowan Full Moon

The first full moon of the year calendar 2021 was celebrated online without knowing who would come and when.

It asks a lot of #resiliency when knowing that last year, we were 11 women sharing the same space celebrating this very first moon under the Wolf native American symbol, with Christmas cookies and a lot of other delicious things in a beautiful garden cottage. From the wisdom I have now, I have noticed that things are never twice the same; so enjoying every moment in every form it takes, without expectation is a good recipe for happiness. 

The Rowan tree stands for the tree of the first moon of the year (the Celtic new year starts in November, but I will stay with the modern calendar year). It’s winter, cold, frost and snow make the earth sterile to our eyes, but underneath life is waiting to deploy. In the fields, winter ploughing is performed to prepare the soil to receive later the seeds that will turn into harvest. It is a good time to make groundwork in the garden. If you consider your mind as a garden and your thoughts as seeds, then it is also time to gather positivity, love and abundance as a groundwork for your mind. 

Here the Rowan guided imagery to help you to gather the strengths you need before seeding;

Here are the strengths that the 10 Rowan Moonlight Minglers gathered this year. From all the #Love, I got the #inspiration to make this warm color artwork:

Have a great Rowan month,

Hélène