Easter Folklore: Spring Festivals and Forecasts

Hare & Eggs in a Nest https://pixabay.com/en/easter-eggs-egg-nest-easter-nest-3257098/

With the renewal of the natural world in spring comes the celebration of Easter, when many ancient traditions are still kept alive today.

Flower Folklore: The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart

Holly Ringland

In the Victorian tradition, every Australian native flower has a meaning and, as she settles into her new life, Alice uses this language of flowers to say the things that are too hard to speak.

The Nordic Goat of Christmas Past and Present

Gävlebock by Seppo Laine (CC BY 2.0) https://www.flickr.com/photos/cyberhem/4829647723/

He used to bleat. Walking upright, a goat the size of a grown man would tramp in from the cold with a sack hanging over his shoulder, bleating.

Dog Folklore: Companion Dogs as Seers, Healers, and Fairy Steeds

Companion dogs were often believed to have mystical abilities. Dog Illustration from Johnson’s Book of Household Nature, 1880.

When considering dog folklore, we generally think of those stories which feature the Grimm, the Gytrash, or other sinister black dogs roaming the moors in the North of England. But there is more to canine folklore than the ominous black dogs of legend. Companion dogs, such as Pugs and Corgis, have their place in dog folklore as well.

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