Festivities of Natural Annual Events: Australis Translux (Midway Global Equinox & Solstice)

Festivities of Natural Annual Events: Australis Translux (Midway Global Equinox & Solstice) October 29, 2013

F.N.A.E. articles are written with Ehoah phrases

Ehoah Phrases

What is Seasonally Occurring

The southern hemisphere is tilting toward the sun, making the sun’s rays hit the southern hemisphere more than the northern hemisphere. Therefore…

In Australis the days are getting longer with the daily turning view of the sun becoming higher along the north horizon. Spring has arrived. Migrations have moved southward and started the avian mating season. For most of Australis the dry season is ending with the arrival of the tropical rain belt, heralding the growing season.

The equator will be seeing the daily turning view of the sun further south. This is when the Tropical Rain Belt is moving southward past the equator moving toward the Australis Sol Axis.

In Borealis the days are getting shorter, seeing the earth’s daily turning view of the sun lower on the southern horizon. Deciduous trees have leaves changing colour and are loosing, or have lost all their leaves. Wildlife are either migrating or preparing for winter by storing food in their environment or body fat, the later doing so to prepare for hibernation. Hibernating species may already be hibernating, and migrating species may have already left in the cooler and more nothern regions. Depending on crops, weather and climate, most regions in borealis are already done their major annual harvest.

Seasonal Customs

Australis is celebrating spring – new growth and life. Flowers blooming, birds nesting, and pollinators abuzz.

Australis activities around Translux include: Watching the ti kouka / cabbage tree to see if a good flowering would occur, if so it is said to be a sign that a long, fine summer will follow; Wildcrafted flowers would be put out in a mandala display; Flower costumes (especially floral crowns, necklaces, and wrist/ankle bands) and costumes themed on wings of butterflies, bees, or birds; Bird, Bumble Bee and flutter bug themed kite flying; making ‘seed bombs’ and dispersing them in the area; Making butterfly and bird landart that can be posed with (like snow angels); Chocolate eggs are gifted to friends and family; simple origami flutter bugs decorate public spaces that can have notes of hopes for the year and some seeds to sprout from them when they inevitably disperse; bread buns in the shape of chicks are made; opening ceremony of ‘pollinating’ each other with yellow powder; children paint hands as pollinators and ‘pollinate’ punch box flowers to get a seasonal treat.

 

Borealis is celebrating the end of harvest, the year’s hard work and giving thanks. As the nights are longer lights are brought into celebrations and symbolisms along with that light. The darkness and now dormant vegetation brings considerations of death and so death is also themed in events.

Borealis activities around Transnox include: Feasts from the harvest: North America typically having turkey and pumpkin pie, with apple pie being the most accessible throughout Borealis; Giving thanks for the harvest and preceding year; Remembering those that have died through various expressions such as tending graves or making the deceased’s favourite meal, some traditions involve inviting ancestors to the feast; pasture livestock are brought back down from the summer pastures; Livestock are slaughtered for the winter; Bonfires, lanterns, fireworks, and other various light displays to lighten the earlier nights; Colouful rangoli art in open areas in and out of the home; hair put in fishtail braids as a reminder of the salmon’s sacrifice for the prosperity of future generations; seed exchanges made from the year’s harvest and the seeds that need winter stratification are planted; earth looms that were hung over or by the threshold is placed in garden/forest to rot away and as a practice of ‘letting go’ since nothing stays the same forever; feast themed on the circle of life where the food is depicted as dead creatures to remind feasters of how death sustains life. Those depicted in human forms being a reminder that those who have died in the past have dispersed into the land and the food in the area that is now being eaten; and floral and mycelia facepaint is donnned as symbolism of own eventual dispersal.

 

 

BOREALIS

CELEBRATION

GENERAL DATE

SPECIFIC DATE

CALENDAR

REGION OF ORIGIN

CULTURE

Thanksgiving

Late October to Late November

2nd Monday in October (Canada);

1st Thursday in November (Liberia);

4th Thursday in November (USA)

Gregorian calendar

North America

European Settlers

Labor Thanksgiving Day

勤労感謝の日

Kinrō kansha no hi

Late November

二十三日 (nijūsan-nichi) 十一月 (jūichigatsu), 23rd of November

Japanese calendar

East Asia

Japanese

Transnox

Early November

Midway Equinox & Solstice,

Artiodactyla – Cervid 15/16, November 5/6

Ehoah Year Wheel – Gavia, Borealis Kalendar

Earth

Saegoah

Samhain

Late October

October 31st

Gregorian calendar

Wheel of the Year

North Western Europe

Celtic

AllantideKalan Gwav, meaning first day of winter, or Nos Kalan Gwav, meaning eve of the first day of winter

Late October

31st October

Gregorian calendar

North Western Europe

Cornish

Deepavali

Diwali

festival of lights

Late October – Early November

13th day of Ashvin

अश्विन् to the 2nd day of Kārtika, November 3rd, Correlates with 2nd New Moon after Equinox

Hindu Lunisolar calendar

Southern Asia

Hindu

Día de Muertos,

Day of The Dead

Late October – Early November

October 31st to November 2nd

Gregorian calendar

Middle America

Mexican

 

AUSTRALIS

CELEBRATION

GENERAL DATE

SPECIFIC DATE

CALENDAR

REGION OF ORIGIN

CULTURE

Beltane

Late October/Early November

October 31st/ November 1st

Gregorian calendar

Wheel of the Year

North Western Europe

Celtic

Whiringanuku

Late October

Whiringa-ā-nuku / Oketopa ? , Midway Equilux and Nox

unknown

Oceania

New Zealand / Maori

Translux

Early November

Midway Equinox & Solstice,

Artiodactyla – Camelid 15/16, November 5/6

Ehoah Year Wheel – Sphenisci, Australis Kalendar

Earth

Saegoah

Please let me know about any relevant celebrations that were missed


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