Blessed Beltane!
In ancient times, Beltane was a festival celebrated on May 1st by the Celts. It marked the beginning of the pastoral summer season, when livestock were driven out into their summer grazing lands.
Beltane is known as a cross-quarter day as it marks the solar midpoint between the vernal equinox and summer solstice. It is possible that it was celebrated on the full moon nearest to this midpoint as the Celtic year was based on both the lunar and solar cycles.
One of the most significant activities preformed at this time by the ancient Celts was the building of bonfires on the eve of Beltane on top of sacred hills. Those who built these fires would drive the village cattle between them as to purify the herd and bring luck to the community. People would also pass between the fires to purify themselves. Household hearth flames were doused and then lit again from the bonfires.
May Boughs (usually made of hawthorn, which blooms in the British Isles at this time of year) were made at Beltane and hung on the doors and windows of houses. The morning of Beltane often saw pilgrimages to sacred wells where rituals to their spirits were preformed and healing water was drawn.
Maypoles were also erected at this time. These were slender trees that were cut down on the eve of Beltane, their branches were removed and the resulting pole was decorated and erected in the village square, some villages also had permanent Maypoles. Maypole ribbon dances (two circles of people holding ribbons interweaving around the pole) were a common sight on Beltane.
Today, Beltane is still observed by many Neopagans. These celebrations can vary considerably despite the shared name due to the many forms of Neopaganism.
Celtic Reconstructionists celebrate Lá Bealtaine when the local hawthorn trees come into bloom, or on the full moon that falls closest to the cross-quarter day. The traditional bonfire rites are observed as well as pilgrimages to sacred wells.
Wiccans celebrate Beltane as one of their eight sabbats. Their holiday more closely resembles a Germanic festival (celebrated at the same time of year) as it is more strongly linked with fertility then the Celtic one. Many people also consider the maypole to have originated among Germanic tribes. (However, both the Celtic and Germanic cultures became very much mingled over time due to longterm Roman dominance over the area.)
In my personal practice, my main focus is honoring the Earth and the changing seasons. Spokane’s climate is certainly transitioning into summer at this time of year, so the celebration of Beltane seems fitting. As it is an important day to many local Pagans, it touches me on a community level as it is a time we can all come together and celebrate the Earth. On Saturday I will be going out to a bonfire celebration in Medical Lake. (I can’t wait!)
As far as collective modern symbolically goes, this festival celebrates the sacred unity between between lovers and pleasures. As I write this, I am 8 months pregnant with my first child, perhaps this makes this larger connectivity more apparent to me then then ever. I was a maiden at past Beltanes, ready to dance the Maypole, but now I am at the cusp of being a mother, preparing to guide a new generation through the same stages I have passed though. I have noticed that this transition phase is certainly its own trial by fire and I find myself renewed by it.
I took this photo at Fishtrap Lake a couple years ago around Beltane, Arrowleaf Balsamroot is one of my favorite local wildflowers. As I said earlier, honoring the Earth is among the highest of my personal values so I thought I would include a list of all the native wildflowers that are blooming around Spokane at this time of year. I have spotted some so far and I hope to be able to see them before Summer Solstice.
- Arrowleaf Balsamroot (Balsamorhize sagittata)
- Calypso orchid (Calypso bulbosa)
- Dogtooth Violet (Erythronium grandiflorum)
- Fairybells (Disporum trachycarpum)
- Grass-Widow (Sisyrinchium inflatum)
- Heartleaf Arnica (Arnica cordifolia)
- Nuttall’s Larkspur (Delphinium nuttallianum)
- Sagebrush Buttercup (Ranunculus glaberrimus)
- Shooting Star (Dodecatheon pulchellum)
- Trillium (Trillium ovatum)
- Western Springbeauty (Claytonia lanceolata)
- Wild Hyacinth (Brodiaea douglasii)
- Yellow Skunk Cabbage (Lysichitum americanum)
- Yellowbell (Fritillaria pudica)
I hope you all have time to spend with Nature today and have a beautiful and blessed Beltane.


I’m impressed with your botany knowledge. I’d still be trying to identify all those flowers on the internet.
A Blessed Beltane to you too! Have a great time this weekend. Sounds like it will be fun.
The site I got all the correct Latin names (and most common common names) is http://www.fs.fed.us/ipnf/eco/yourforest/wildflowers/index.html
They have pictures for them all too, I knew most of them already but my botanical knowledge is not that amazing.
Interesting post. A patient gave me some of the yellow flowers in your picture and I didn’t know what they were.
Arrowleaf Balsamroot is a really neat wildflower. You can eat the young flower stems, seeds and roots. The leaves and roots can be used a poultice for burns and cuts too.
What a beautiful post. Blessed Beltane to you!
Blessed Be!