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Sunday 26 December 2021

Picture of the month

 


There isn't much to say here as the picture says it all! A real seasonal one at that! Wolf taking off with a present from Santa! 

Seasonal and Yule blessings from She Wolf Night. 

🌲🌲🌲🌲

Monday 20 December 2021

The Yule Lads


 

These characters are Yule spirits from Icelandic folklore. While Santa is the beloved man who rides in a sleigh bringing gifts, the Yule Lads are thirteen men who appear bringing gifts and other surprises. They don't arrive all at once. Much loved in Iceland, children always look forward to the thirteen lads bringing seasonal cheer. The Yule laddies don't visit households together but once a day alone. 

So the 12th December is when the first Yule Lad sets off. His name is Stekkjarstaur that means "Sheep-Cote Clod". He lingers on earth and then leaves on the 25th December. He's got impaired legs and walks with a limp or uses a peg to help him. He's actually quite naughty for upsetting sheep. 

On the 13th December the next lad sets off. His name is Giljagaur and it means "Gully Gawk." He likes to hover around waterways and gullies. He hides and then comes out at night to enter barns so that he can grab some milk. He stays around until the 26th December. 

The next lad arrives on the 14th December and leaves on the 27th December. His name is Stúfur and it means "Stubby". He's the smallest of the Yule Lads and dwarf sized. He likes to steal from kitchens and he eats the remains of pie crust inside pots and pans.

On the 15th December arrives Þvörusleikir whose name means "Spoon-Licker." He looks very thin and almost skeletal. He leaves germs on spoons because he licks them. He departs on the 28th December.

Then arrives Pottaskefill whose name means "Pot- Scraper." He turns up on the 16th December and leaves on the 29th December. He's another who likes eating the remains of food inside pots!

On the 17th December the lad Askasleikir arrives and his name means "Bowl-Licker." He tends to hide inside the house, usually under beds so he can be ready to take off with bowls of hot food. He stays around and then departs on the 30th December.

The next is Hurðaskellir whose name is "Door-Slammer"! He arrives on the 18th December and leaves on the 31st December. Whilst around, he enjoys being noisy and slams doors late at night to wake everyone up.

Then Skyrgámur whose name means "Skyr-Gobbler" arrives on the 19th December and he leaves on the 1st January. He loves Icelandic yoghurt Skyr and will eat it up in shops and households when they sleep.

On the 20th December arrives lad Bjúgnakrækir whose name is "Sausage-Swiper". He hides in the rafters, in the attic or somewhere in the house watching sausages being cooked. He likes smoked sausages and he'll come along and steal it. He departs on the 2nd January.

It will be the 21st December when lad Gluggagægir whose name is "Window-Peeper" appears. He tries looking through windows to find something to steal. This is probably the most weirdest of all. He leaves on the 3rd January.

On the 22nd December arrives lad Gáttaþefur whose name means "Doorway-Sniffer". He's got a very acute sense of smell, loves bread and has an incredibly big nose. He'll sniff for "leaf bread" (also called "snow bread," a traditional Icelandic bread during Yule season). Then he'll leave on the 4th January.

The next lad is Ketkrókur whose name means "Meat-Hook." He appears on the 23rd December, and always carried a long metal hook to steal meat. He leaves on the 5th January.

Then Kertasníkir whose name means "Candle-Stealer" appears on the 24th December and he leaves on the 6th January. He follows children and waits to steal their candles, in the hope they're made of juicy tallow! 

While these Yule Lads seem up to mischief, they also leave candies and cakes for children. I seem to be highlighting the bad the Yule Lads do. If children are well behaved, they get goodies (toys, sweets, gingerbread) from the visiting Yule Lads. The purpose of Yule Lads is to leave gifts to nice children even if they'll steal a few morsels from kitchens. But what about badly behaved kids? They get potatoes shoved in their boots.  

Posted by She Wolf Night 🎄

Thursday 16 December 2021

The goose that laid black eggs



There is the folk story of the goose that laid golden eggs but what about black eggs? Black eggs are something dragons would lay. It's rare for birds to lay eggs with black shells and emus lay very dark green eggs. A goose has been laying eggs with black yolks and nobody knows why.      

This goose is from Hangzhou City in Zhejiang Province, China. The owner is a friend of a man identified only as "Zhu" who informed the mass media, claiming the goose laid perfectly normal eggs before but has recently been laying strange eggs with black yolks. The yolks didn't smell bad so it wasn't considered any form of illness. 

Some believe the bird was eating black mulberries which grows on the farm, and caused the black eggs, but Zhu doesn't think it's that. Worried about pollution being the culprit, certain experts come forward to explain it but the view is that this remains a mystery. 

If there's nothing wrong with these eggs, why are they this colour?

More on this story Oddity Central baffling goose laying black eggs yolk

Posted by She Wolf Night

 

Friday 10 December 2021

Revontulet


The aurora borealis is made by foxes, which is the story in Finnish and Lapland folklore. Arctic foxes running across snow leaves sparkles, their bushy tails whipping up snow towards the sky, and turning the flakes into colourful fiery glitter, creating the northern lights, aurora borealis. This is called revontulet, or "fox fires". In Finnish legends, a Firefox is a supernatural creature that looks like a dark fox in the daytime but whose tail glows at night. 

Check out and visit this luminous page on Fox fires at Visit Finland

Posted by She Wolf Night

Friday 3 December 2021

Mistletoe bride


 

A ghost story for Yuletide. There is a curious urban legend linked to Bramshill House in Hampshire. Within that house are more than a dozen resident ghosts. Among them is a White lady that is considered the ghost of a bride who was found dead. This is how it goes...

There was a Yule wedding in the 17th century, to celebrate a girl named Anne Cope who married Lord Lovell. Afterwards there was a great feast at Bramshill House. The cheerful bride wanted to play Hide and Seek and the wedding guests all agreed. After many hours, long after everyone was discovered in their hiding places, only the bride was still missing. She was nowhere to be found and it seemed that she just disappeared. The bride hid so well that she remained undiscovered for a very long time.

So many years passed that Lord Lovell and all the other wedding guests were dead and gone. The house was very old and it was sold to another, who spent time clearing away rotten furniture. The new owner went up into the attic full of cobwebs, and found a big chest made of mistletoe wood. Inside the chest was a horrific sight: A skeleton of a young woman wearing an old fashioned bridal gown.

There are ghost sightings at the house today. It's believed that the bride is one of them. She's described as a glowing Lady in White. She's reported to have scared some guests staying over in the house. The phantom bride has terrified people when they saw her passing through walls. She haunts certain rooms and brings a smell of flowers. Her ghost has been standing in the window looking outside. The house is so popular with this ghost bride that the actual chest itself is placed by the reception. A lot of poems and stories were based on this ghost legend, including "The Mistletoe Bough" by Sir Henry Bishop. 

Posted by She Wolf Night