⛤⛤.๐”Š๐”ฌ๐”ฑ๐”ฅ๐”ฆ๐”  ๐”š๐”ฌ๐”ฏ๐”ก๐”ฐ๐”ช๐”ฆ๐”ฑ๐”ฅ/ ๐”‡๐”ž๐”ฏ๐”จ ๐”๐”ฒ๐”ฐ๐”ฆ๐”ซ๐”ค๐”ฐ/ ๐”๐”ฆ๐”ก๐”ซ๐”ฆ๐”ค๐”ฅ๐”ฑ ๐”™๐”ข๐”ฏ๐”ฐ๐”ข๐”ฐ/ โ„Œ๐”ž๐”ฒ๐”ซ๐”ฑ๐”ข๐”ก ๐”—๐”ฅ๐”ฌ๐”ฒ๐”ค๐”ฅ๐”ฑ๐”ฐ/ ๐”–๐”ฅ๐”ž๐”ก๐”ฌ๐”ด โ„œ๐”ข๐”ฃ๐”ฉ๐”ข๐” ๐”ฑ๐”ฆ๐”ฌ๐”ซ๐”ฐ/ ๐”–๐”ฅ๐”ž๐”ก๐”ฌ๐”ด ๐”š๐”ฆ๐”ฑ๐” ๐”ฅ/ ๐”„๐”ฒ๐”ฑ๐”ฅ๐”ฌ๐”ฏ & โ„ญ๐”ฏ๐”ข๐”ž๐”ฑ๐”ฏ๐”ฆ๐”ต/ ๐Ÿ‡ฆ​๐Ÿ‡บ​๐Ÿ‡ธ​๐Ÿ‡น​๐Ÿ‡ท​๐Ÿ‡ฆ​๐Ÿ‡ฑ​๐Ÿ‡ฎ​๐Ÿ‡ฆ​.⛤⛤

Sunday, May 18, 2025

Krรกkualjรณรฐ: The Black Tongue Rite of Raven-Calling in Norse Troll Witchcraft.

 ๐‘๐ˆ๐“๐„ ๐Ž๐… ๐‘๐€๐•๐„๐-๐‚๐€๐‹๐‹๐ˆ๐๐†

—For the Summoning of Corvid Spirits & Trollish Familiars in the Black Tongue of the North—

This ritual pertains to the summoning and command of raven-spirits, both flesh-bound and spirit-wrought, through the old arts of black Norse magic. It is not symbolic, nor metaphorical. It is functional sorcery—troll-seiรฐr wrought in accordance with the laws of blood, breath, and ancestral current.

The raven holds a high seat in the tradition of svartkonst and northern baneful magic. Known in the tongues of our dead kin as hrafn, it is not merely a creature of the battlefield, but a bearer of fetches, a scout of the unseen roads, and an enforcer of the sorcerer’s will.

To the old ones, ravens were not pets or totems, but servants and watchers—beings that walked between the corpse-road (helvegr) and the breath-road (รถndveg) with ease.

They consume the eyes of the fallen to see what lies beyond. They speak not in riddles, but in clear signs—if one is trained to listen properly.

This rite—Krรกkualjรณรฐ, “The Chant of the Raven’s Maw”—is not for novices, nor those seeking gentle counsel. It is for those who require the eyes of the raven in the dark, the claws of the raven in their working, and the call of the raven to pierce the veil between worlds. This is true summoning, not symbolic. It draws upon ancient trollkunnig methods from the hinterlands, where animal-bond, blood, ash, and binding are used to enforce obedience from the spirits summoned.

The rite must be performed under correct conditions or not at all. The place must be wild, preferably a high or liminal site—such as beneath bare rock, at the edge of bog or forest, or near a carrion place. It must be conducted beneath a waning moon, ideally on the thirteenth night before the dark moon, in the hour before midnight. The time is chosen to fall within the svartvindur—the black wind—when the boundary between the breath-world and the under-roads thins, and the hrafn may cross freely.

This chapter provides the correct construction of the rite, including tools, ingredients, vocal methods (throat-sung overtones), protective boundaries, and instructions for binding a raven-ally into service. This is not Wiccan fluff, and it contains no rhymes or false light. It is ancestral, brutal, and effective.

If you proceed, do so knowing the raven remembers all. It watches the hand that calls it—and it punishes the hand that misuses its trust.

Proceed with discipline. Or not at all.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

The Casting of Bones in Trolldรณmr – Rรกรฐbeining Bein (Counselling Bones)


What Are the Rรกรฐbeining Bein?

Pronounciation- 

"Rรกรฐbeining": Rath-bay-ning
"Rรกรฐ"pronounced like "rath" with a rolled "r."
"Beining" sounds like "bay-ning" with the "e" in "bay" sounding long.
Bein: Bane
"Bein" is pronounced like "bane," rhyming with "rain."
So, it would sound like: "Rath-bay-ning Bane."

 

The practice of casting bones—known as Rรกรฐbeining Bein, or "Bones of Counsel"—is an ancient and sacred form of divination. This ritual was once employed by seiรฐfolk, cunning folk, and the solitary witches who roamed the northern wilds. It is believed that the bones, once marked and empowered by those who wielded the craft, carried the whispers of the spirits from the animals they came from. These bones became more than mere remnants of life; they were the vessels through which the hidden forces of the universe were called upon. They became oracles—quiet, powerful, and sometimes cryptic—offering answers to questions of fate, death, omens, and the unseen truths that weave through the fabric of reality.

The practice of bone casting is deeply intertwined with the animistic beliefs of the Norse and other pre-Christian cultures of Scandinavia. These beliefs held that every part of a living being—their bones, blood, and breath—possessed intrinsic power. In this view, the very essence of a creature lived on in its bones, even after the flesh had rotted away. The bones were not simply fragments of the dead; they were sacred relics, imbued with the spirit of the creature that once inhabited them. This belief extended beyond the realm of animals—human bones, too, could be used in divination, provided the spirit of the deceased gave its consent. Thus, bones gathered from the wild were treated with the utmost reverence, carefully marked and inscribed with runes or sigils to empower them for their role as messengers of fate.

Bone divination was not a common practice in the halls of kings or the courts of learned scholars. It was an art kept largely in the shadows, practiced by those on the fringes of society—hermits, outcasts, and those who sought knowledge hidden from the eyes of the world. In a time when the wild and untamed lands of the North were believed to be teeming with spirits—both benign and malicious—the casting of bones was seen as a powerful method of communion with the unseen. To cast the bones was to open oneself to the wisdom of nature itself, listening to the subtle guidance of animal spirits, ancestors, and the forces of the land.

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Shadows Distilled: Compound Sorcery of the Autumnal Veil.

Preservation, Tool Cleansing & Ritual Labelling.

The crafting of ritual compounds—especially those involving baneful or toxic materia—demands more than botanical knowledge. Preservation of their potency, safe containment, and the metaphysical cleanliness of the tools involved are vital components of responsible and effective sorcery.

Autumn in the Southern Hemisphere arrives not with gentle fading but with a veiled descent. Shadows grow long and secrets rise with the mist. This is the season when compounds are not merely mixtures but conjured echoes, tools of threshold-walking, and containers of will. In the craft of the nocturne and the shadowed, materia is not selected for beauty or fragrance but for resonance with death, silence, memory, and hidden vision. This chapter is not for the surface practitioner. It demands that the witch harvest with understanding, handle poisons with awareness, and infuse each preparation with intention sharpened like obsidian. The use of native Australian botanicals is not a matter of novelty but necessity: the land speaks in its own tongue, and our spirits are shaped by what grows under its stars. Some of these plants are baneful, some dream-singing, some protective in their silence. Each is treated with gravity, marked for its spiritual and physical nature.

Materia magica in shadow craft is not an accessory—it is a binding force. The oil stirred on the eve of a waning moon holds the echo of that descent. The dust scattered along a windowsill at dusk is not symbolic but operative. Here, each recipe serves a ceremonial function: a ritual bath, a spell of veiling, a circle drawn not in chalk but in rust and ash. The compounds offered in this chapter are not mild. They are deliberately complex, sometimes toxic, and intended for seasoned hands. Every measurement is exact, every plant included for its magical and ecological essence. Harvesting must be done in ritual, not haste. Storage is part of the spell. The labelling of each vessel becomes a charm in itself, a ward, a contract, or an omen.

Compound Recipes for Shadow Work in Autumn.

Featuring Australian Botanicals & Toxic Plant Handling (Southern Hemisphere). 

This chapter provides detailed formulations for complex ritual compounds used in Shadow and Nocturnal Witchcraft during the Autumn season in the Southern Hemisphere. Each recipe draws from both traditional materia and regional botanicals, including native and toxic plants. Compounds include powders, oils, incenses, inks, and tinctures for baneful, ancestral, protective, and trance-related work. Every ingredient has been selected for its energetic properties, seasonal availability, and ritual function.

Note on Toxic Botanicals:
All poisonous plants included in this chapter are for external ritual use only. Do not ingest or allow contact with mucous membranes or broken skin.

Handle with gloves and proper ventilation. Always label your tools and store safely, away from children, animals, and food preparation areas.

1. Shadow Walking Powder

Used to anoint the soles of feet, cloak the body in energetic obscurity, or scatter in ritual paths to enter altered states or cross thresholds unseen.

Ingredients:

  • 1 tsp burnt wattle ash (Acacia spp., native to Australia)

  • 1 tsp powdered dead eucalyptus bark (collected dry from the forest floor)

  • ½ tsp dried and ground datura flower (handle with gloves)

  • 1 tsp grave dust (ethically gathered from a family or spirit-allied grave)

  • ¼ tsp powdered charcoal from storm-fallen ironbark

  • Optional: 3 drops patchouli essential oil (to anchor in the physical plane)

Harvest Notes:

  • Eucalyptus bark: gather only dry, fallen pieces. Do not strip live trees. Break into small pieces before grinding.

  • Datura: harvest only fully dried flowers. Use gloves. Dry in a sealed paper bag away from sun. Store in airtight glass.

  • Grave dust: Offer coin or blood at grave. Use a dedicated spoon or bone scoop.

Instructions:
Grind all dry ingredients to a fine powder using a mortar and pestle or spice grinder. Add essential oil last and stir with a wooden stick. Store in black glass or stone jar in a cool, dark place. Use sparingly—this is not for physical invisibility, but spiritual obscuration.