Posts Tagged ‘druid moon’

Rituals, omens, publishing, and more!

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

This week, the Grove celebrated two rituals: Ogronios, the end of the cold moon; and the Spring Equinox. Because the Druid Moon ritual was on Saturday, we’ll start with that.

We did the ritual out at Shepard’s Corner, where they keep a labyrinth. Our ritual was done around dusk, and moved into darkness quickly. We inducted three new Grove members, and drew omens for the evening:

  • What is our path?
    Ing – Fertility and the earth, a good omen for this time of year.
  • On what should the Grove focus until the next Druid Moon?
    Kenaz – The torch, light of the fire of fellowship. We should focus on our fellowship.
  • On what should each individual focus until the next Druid Moon?
    Tiwaz – The right path, the way of truth, the guiding star. Each of us should focus on our way.

For Spring Equinox, our ritual team came up with the creative notion of hiding eggs for children to find before the ritual. Each egg had a rune written on it in clear wax, and during the omens, three were drawn at random for the omen and dyed right on the altar. It was spectacular to watch, and added a lot of energy to the work. The omens for Spring Equinox were:

  • Have our offerings been accepted?
    Oþila – Ancestral land and holdings, wealth; they have been accepted!
  • What do the Powers offer us in return?
    Tiwaz – The guided path, the right way.
  • What further needs do the Kindreds have of us?
    Laguz – An overflowing of blessings.

Of note, we found that the first omen was actually (Ingwaz) when we re-examined the omens after the rite: the wax was not easy to read, and so first impressions were Oþila. It is the opinion of our priests that the omen, as read in ritual, is what is important, but understanding that the omen is also tempered by this other omen is important as well.

It is very interesting that these omens are very internally consistent between the two days, and leaves us with great food for thought as a Grove.

Also, Garanus Publishing officially opened this week: readers of this blog get a bit of a head’s up. On the site are several books by our members and by the Order of the Crane:

It has been a busy winter, but a good one for the Cranes!

Finally, I hear that a working that was done by Silver Falls Grove, ADF, at their Spring Equinox ritual, and it was very successful. I add my own prayers to theirs.

    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Anagantios, the stay-at-home month

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

Written 2/18/2010, posted 2/21/2010

I watched the Anagantios moon set in the west as I drove home, reflecting on the day. Awake at 3:30 AM and out the door by 5 AM, I began the ritual that has come to mean so much to me over the years: our “Stay-At-Home Moon” ritual, in which the Grove Priest travels from member house to member house, lighting the flame of our Grove’s devotion and illuminating and warming the home in this frigid month.

This year I was able to bring Rev. James “Seamus” Dillard with me, as he is now also a Grove Priest. The company and help was invaluable to me today, and it helped me to know that our future as a growing Grove would include secure traditions like this one, where our members can have a day when they can request that a Priest come to their house and bless it, and our membership numbers will not outgrow the availability of our Grove Priests.

What is so special about this moon to me is that I get to spend time not only with Grove members I know well in their own homes, but I often get to see members, new and old, that I either haven’t had a chance to connect with or that I have sorely missed over the time they have been away.

It is very special to me to spend that time with the members who ask me into their homes. The 212 miles traveled today were priceless to me in terms of joy and fulfillment.

But, for now, it is the end of a very long day; it is time for me to do a final house blessing (my own) and to fall asleep in preparation for tomorrow.

But I do so with the vision of that Anagantios moon gracefully setting to the west, and good conversation bringing a smile to my lips.

    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Reflecting on where we have been, and where we are going

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

This week, the light begins to return, and tomorrow night our Grove will gather to celebrate the December Druid Moon, Dumannios: the Dark Month.

Sometimes, following the moon months from the Coligny Calendar and fitting them into the solar and Julian calendars brings interesting coincidences: while our Yule ritual celebrated rebirth and the dawning of light, this ritual is about the darkness all around us, the depths of being under cover and the faded light.

As we were asked in our last ritual, however, to spend time in inward contemplation, we have an opportunity to do just that on the Sixth Night of this moon. The winter months encourage us to spend time looking within rather than without, and so the final omen of last Sunday’s Yule rite, Isa, the ice, is very apt.

With the secular new year approaching, it is time to reflect and re-think about where we have been, and to plan out where we will be going. We should do this at the beginning of all journeys, and we know that the sun will do this as it begins its journey back to strength.

To all traveling this week, travel safely and speedily to your destination, and home again with the same speed and safety.

    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

New Officers, an Anniversary, and a New Crane!

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

Over the past seven years, it has been my deepest pleasure to work with the members of this Grove. Today, it was a deep pleasure to hand over the “reins” of leadership to a new Executive Committee: we have elected a new Senior Druid, lees, and a new Secretary, Irisa. Our Treasurer remains Maggie, but we find ourselves in new territory: not only is this the first time all our officers have been women, but this is also the first time they have all been redheads!

The ritual today included the oaths of two of our officers (Irisa was visiting the Pittsburgh Grove, and will be installed at the next Druid Moon rite), but it also included the retirement of our old statue of Garanus and the presentation of a new statue. Our old statue was honoured one last time, and presented to the folk and to the new statue, allowing each to acknowledge the other for a moment before I gently kissed the old wooden statue and placed it on the ritual fire, a sacrifice to the patron of this Grove, Teutates.

It was a moving experience, taking the old statue around the fire: Garanus had seen so much through those eyes, and watched over so many of our rituals. While the Garanus statue is not considered to be the Crane himself, it is an icon that represents the Crane to many of us. I saw tears in the eyes of many of our members, and felt my own eyes sting with joy and reverence as I carried the statue around.

When I lifted the statue, I uttered a prayer:

Garanus Crane,
You have guided us,
Walked with us,
Watched over us.

Garanus Crane,
See now this statue of wood,
The icon we have gazed upon so long.

Garanus Grane,
See through its eyes the new statue.
Know that we honour you with it as our new focus.

Garanus Crane,
For guiding, walking, and watching,
We honour you.

We offer this icon now to Teutates,
God of our Tribe.

I then kissed the head of the statue, knelt, and placed the wooden statue on the fire. I reflected on this Grove, on how it has grown and on where it has been, and I smiled.

One day, we will retire this new statue, too. And I pray that we will do so on land that is ours, in a permanent nemeton.

As the statue of the crane went up in flames, I knew: we have and will continue to pray with a good fire.

    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

It’s never too early for festival season!

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

To those who celebrate the secular new year, a happy one to you, indeed!

While last week, I was out in Kansas with family (thus no update), this week we’re back and ready to get back to work. The Grove had a Druid Moon on January 1st, during which we honoured Skaði and thought about the way that the frost and snow can sometimes bind us at this time. I love this ritual, as it’s a good time to think about what is keeping you where you are, and what you can do to break free from it.

Also, the Festival season dances brightly on the horizon, and the full schedule of events on the ADF site shows the upcoming list of places to go that have amazing people to meet.

If you haven’t been to an ADF festival, consider going to one this year. If you’ve been to one in the past, well, there’s no such thing as too much of a good thing! Come back to the festival scene again this year and getting to see some of the friends you made last year.

Remember, it’s never too early to start asking for days off, saving money, and getting your camping gear ready to go.

I hope to see you at a festival in 2009!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Reviewing a good harvest

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

After last week’s Druid Moon (and the ADF Clergy Retreat, which I somehow forgot to mention), there’s a sense of renewed vigor within the Grove, with new interest being shown in our Dedicant study group and the number of events in general starting to wane, there is much to be happy about in what we have harvested in this year.

This year we planted much as a Grove: we increased our already impressive levels of community service; began a serious partnership and co-sponsorship with The 6th Night Grove, ADF, of the Summerland Festival; welcomed many new members; and worked hard to add 12-13 moon festivals to our calendar.

All of this seems impressive when laid out upon the page like this, but what it came down to was that our members were strongly committed to building and growing this Grove. They’ve done a marvelous job, whether new to the Grove or old hands.

This Grove has a long way to go, and we’re taking steps in the directions we know we need to go: increasing our advertising, opening more doors to service (and each other), and deepening our connections to the Kindreds.

I hope to see this Grove build on the vigor that we have at this time, and I know that it will. We are, after all, guided by a Gardener whose touch is gentle yet firm, and who has a plan for us.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Opening the Ancestor Box

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

In a tradition we began in 2004, our Grove keeps a box on the altar at all our rituals. Within this box are mementos of our Ancestors: the ones we remember, the ones we may not know as well as we’d like, and the ones that above all, we love.

The act of keeping this box has brought us closer as a Grove, too: the box is taken home by the person in charge of the next ritual, and devotions are done to the Ancestors of our Grove by that person for the six weeks or so until the next High Day. This has helped us to maintain the connection each of us feels toward the Grove as a whole, as we find our shared Ancestors helping us and moving with us through the years.

This year, we opened the ancestor box with some new Grove Members and Friends of the Grove at our last Druid Moon of our Grove’s year: Cantlos, the Song Moon.

It’s hard to describe what happened that night, with each of us gathered around the box, telling stories of our ancestors and explaining why we felt such kinship with them. Harder still to describe is what each of us went through as we remembered our own ancestors, and what happened to each person when the Ancestors of the Grove spoke to them individually.

Tears of joy and sorrow are hard to separate sometimes, but the knowledge that we remember those who went before stirs our hearts each time we re-open this box.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Six Years of Ritual!

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

Today, our Grove has passed a wondrous milestone: six full years of offering service to the folk through regular public ritual, community action, and outreach as a solid Pagan presence here in Columbus.

And, as has become usual for our Grove, the week was full of many different events.

We began by adding to our Grove Poem, Clutiā Trion Garanonon (“The Fame of Three Cranes”). Each year, we add a new stanza to the poem, detailing what we have done in the past year. This year’s addition involved a number of things, but (as always) there are things that could not be included. Here is the most recent addition to our poem:

Each moon we meet ‘neath robur’s crown
And celebrate what members bring
Through work and deed our voices sound
We stand as one, our gardens sing

To read the full poem, check out Clutiā Trion Garanonon on our site!.

On Saturday, Three Cranes co-hosted Pagan Pride Day, and led the main ritual that day as well. The turnout was excellent, and many people seemed very appreciative that we had come out to do a ritual again this year.

As we began doing last year, though, we also decided to have our own, Grove-centered ritual on Sunday, back at our original shelter where we did our first ritual as a Grove. This year, there was a bit of a snag, though, as the shelter is non-reservable: we ended up moving one shelter over, but retrieving ashes from the fireplace in the original shelter in order to retain continuity.

The rite was good, and I felt renewed that evening. Old faces and new joined us as we sang our praises to the Kindreds and thanked them for six good years.

May we see many more years, inspired by fire and drenched by the nurturing waters!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

A Year of Druid Moons

Sunday, August 10th, 2008

This week, we celebrated the Druid Moon of Elembivios, “the many-sided-moon.” This moon was the one-year anniversary of our work with the 6th Night moons, and (because it fell on a Thursday) also a business meeting.

It’s somewhat strange to group ritual and business together sometimes, especially when things are a bit pressing. With Summerland coming up and our Grove helping The 6th Night Grove, ADF, sponsor the festival this year, there was no way around doing both.

However, this worked out just fine: we came away with a couple of new member applicants, too, and approved one new Friend of the Grove!

At this ritual, we often celebrate the many facets of our lives, and the many ways that our Grove serves each of us. We were also fortunate to welcome a new member into our Grove that evening, and show the mystery that is Three Cranes to another long-time Friend.

There are exciting things going on in ADF these days: the Vice Archdruid called us in the middle of our meeting and had some excellent news! As always, we look forward to how things will turn out in the coming days!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

The Fire on Our Hearth – A Devotional of Three Cranes Grove, ADF

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

The Fire on Our Hearth - A Devotional of Three Cranes Grove, ADFSeveral weeks ago, we discussed “The Voice of Three Cranes” in a post. In that post, we offered a glimpse of the devotional book we have been working on.

We’re officially releasing the book, entitled The Fire on Our Hearth – A Devotional of Three Cranes Grove, ADF on Tuesday, April 1st, 2008. Leaves readers (such as yourself) get to see it a bit early, because we really do love you all.

Thirteen different people are represented in the pages of this book, only three of whom are not current Grove members. The first sixty pages are prayers for all occasions (the bulk of which are original to this book, though a couple have been published elsewhere). There are also eight chants that were created by Three Cranes members which are not on the ADF website or available through other means.

Significant events from our history are recorded, too: not only in our Grove poem, “Clutiā Trion Garanonon,” but also in the evocations and rituals included: the poetic drama of last year’s ComFest, the Ritual for Healing after Hurricane Katrina, the prayers to Belenos at Summerset, and our Grove Inception Statement are all included.

Prayers don’t only appear in English, either: there are a few prayers in Latin and a couple in Spanish, too (translations provided)! There’s also a table for translation of the Coligny Calendar month names into English.

In short, The Fire on Our Hearth does an excellent job of capturing the Voice of Three Cranes.

Rev. Kirk Thomas, ADF’s Vice Archdruid, supplied us with a marvelous quote for the back of the book, saying, “This is a great book for solitaries, new Groves and Protogroves interested in investigating new rites and traditions for their personal and grove practices.” He also informs me that he has submitted a review to Oak Leaves!

You can purchase The Fire on Our Hearth at the Three Cranes CafePress site, or via this direct link. We expect to bring copies to the ADF Festivals that Cranes attend, too, but don’t wait: get them while they’re hot!

The book is $16.99 from CafePress. Please do help support our Grove: the profit from this book all goes back to the Grove for ritual space rentals, ritual gear purchases, and all those little things that just aren’t free when you’re running a church. And thank you in advance for your support, as well!

[also, for those unaware, the article mentioned in last week's post was published on Monday.]
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler