Do Your Own Research
“Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more,…
“Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more,…
The sixth episode of the 32 Ingredients podcast is now live! Walk with Ciarán through the finest gallery in all…
“(As a remedy for psoriasis, pityriasis or leprosy) Take the leaves of burdock, pound them well with a little wine…
“I am not young enough to know everything.” Oscar Wilde All art by Richard Dadd There are many places in…
“I am seeking. I am striving. I am in it with all my heart.” Vincent Van Gogh All art by…
“I have walked through many lives, some of them my own, and I’ve walked with ghosts.” W.B. Yeats All art…
The fifth episode of the 32 Ingredients podcast is now live! Need recipe ideas for Christmas day? Why not try…
“O Well of the Strand of the Two Women, beautiful are thy cresses, luxuriant, branching; since thy produce is neglected…
“A great obnubilation was conjured up for the bard so that he slept a heavy sleep, and things magic-begotten were shewn to him to enunciate, apparently in his sleep. This was called “illumination by rhymes,” and a similar method was used in Wales. When consulted, the seer roared violently until he was beside himself, and out of his ravings the desired information was gathered. When aroused from this ecstatic condition, he had no remembrance of what he had uttered. Giraldus reports this, and thinks, with the modern spiritualist, that the utterance was caused by spirits.” – J.A. MacCulloch


“Becoming a Druid is a life-long task. Indeed, many say that the work of being a Druid is a constant process of becoming, of reaching the archetype of strength, wisdom, clarity, invulnerability, and gentle humanity, together with an understanding of nature at its rawest edges. We stretch through our souls the essence of life, to the spirit that vitalizes, to the gods that empower us, in search of inspiration.” – Emma Restall Orr
“Members of the learned caste or priestly profession in Celtic and early Irish culture. The word ‘druid’ is probably derived form the Celtic dru-wid, which would have meant ‘very knowledgeable’. The Greek and Latin writers attest to the importance of the druids among the Celtic Gauls. They were at the centre of society, making decisions on matters of tradition, custom and law and also on general questions concerning nature and human life.” – Dáithí Ó hÓgáin






