Another glorious Sunday is nearly upon us. May the radiant undying sun's blessings be given to his loyal followers.
Hail all that is solar.
Hail the Gods
Hail the Sun.
Hail all that is solar.
Hail the Gods
Hail the Sun.
A poem by a member of our community:
I look without, at morrow's Hue
Luminescent Golden Blue
Dawning on those dying leaves
Adieu ye Summer Days and Eves
And now the pluming Fire-Cloud
Burning 'way the twilight shrouds
Announces forth that rising Day
Bidding darkness Heed! Give way!
But gone now is Glee of Summer Months
Now Banshee shrieks and One-Eye Hunts
For Ettin souls at Even's War
Beware hooves' clank in wood and moore
Lest ye be taken to the skies
On Grey-Beard's endless Winter Ride
Keep safe and warm and Keep Alert
In cabin, cottage, hut or yurt
Until that Yule-Day Sun doth rise
And end the Sun-Wheel's long demise
And Halt the frigid Winter-tide
Be Warm, Be Ware, and Watch the Skies!
I look without, at morrow's Hue
Luminescent Golden Blue
Dawning on those dying leaves
Adieu ye Summer Days and Eves
And now the pluming Fire-Cloud
Burning 'way the twilight shrouds
Announces forth that rising Day
Bidding darkness Heed! Give way!
But gone now is Glee of Summer Months
Now Banshee shrieks and One-Eye Hunts
For Ettin souls at Even's War
Beware hooves' clank in wood and moore
Lest ye be taken to the skies
On Grey-Beard's endless Winter Ride
Keep safe and warm and Keep Alert
In cabin, cottage, hut or yurt
Until that Yule-Day Sun doth rise
And end the Sun-Wheel's long demise
And Halt the frigid Winter-tide
Be Warm, Be Ware, and Watch the Skies!
Forwarded from Αρυολογία☀️ (The Indo-Europeans)
The Yamnaya Culture phenotype was interesting; their skull shape and facial features were much like Vikings or Romans, but they did not possess the genes for blue eyes (OCA2). They did, however, have fair skin (HERC2), unlike the WHG and Neolithic Farmers they replaced in northern Europe.
They also had dark hair, although they carried the gene for blonde hair types as well.
They also had dark hair, although they carried the gene for blonde hair types as well.
Forwarded from 📖 Ancient Restoration
The Equinox happens twice a year at the Loughcrew Cairns in Co. Meath. Throughout time people have gathered to honour and celebrate the sun at these ancient passage tombs, which are over 5,000 years old. Autumn's Equinox falls on September 22nd/23rd.
Forwarded from Αρυολογία☀️ (The Indo-Europeans)
The Lay of Rig (Rígsþula) is an important poem of The Edda. In it, the tripartite structure of society - as in in the Indo-European tradition - is presented; Heimdall travels and figuratively fathers all three races that correspond to the classes of labourer, farmer and noble.
Rígsþula, 13;
Daughters had they, Drumba and Kumba,
Ökkvinkalfa, Arinnefla,
Ysja and Ambott, Eikintjasna,
Totrughypja and Tronubeina;
And thence has risen the race of thralls.
The thralls correspond to peasants, or one of the 'houses' of society.
Similarly, the farmers' race born in the 25th stanza represents the next house, followed by the nobleman born in the 34th.
The author demonstrates the values of nobility from his description of their qualities and what he does for them;
36; 'Then out of the thicket came Rig walking,
Rig came walking taught him the #Runes.'
37; '(He) made his horse gallop, wielded his sword;
He awakened a war, began to redden the plain,
Began to fell dead men, he fought to gain lands.'
38; 'Then he alone ruled eighteen settlements;
He started to share his wealth, offered to everyone.'
Finally, the Lay of Rig concludes showing both the benevolent and faustian aspects of the Noble Caste;
42; 'Those born to Lord grew up there,
Tamed horses, bound rims to shields,
Smoothed arrow-shafts, brandished ash spears.'
43; 'But the young Kin learned Runes to use,
Runes everlasting, the runes of life;
Soon could he well the warrior's shield,
Dull the sword blades and still the seas.'
This poem is significant because it demonstrates Nordic social stratification along Indo-European lines; tripartite, yet devoid of a priestly class. Or perhaps this wasn't considered important, or perhaps it was taken as a given that the nobility performed priestly roles.
Rígsþula, 13;
Daughters had they, Drumba and Kumba,
Ökkvinkalfa, Arinnefla,
Ysja and Ambott, Eikintjasna,
Totrughypja and Tronubeina;
And thence has risen the race of thralls.
The thralls correspond to peasants, or one of the 'houses' of society.
Similarly, the farmers' race born in the 25th stanza represents the next house, followed by the nobleman born in the 34th.
The author demonstrates the values of nobility from his description of their qualities and what he does for them;
36; 'Then out of the thicket came Rig walking,
Rig came walking taught him the #Runes.'
37; '(He) made his horse gallop, wielded his sword;
He awakened a war, began to redden the plain,
Began to fell dead men, he fought to gain lands.'
38; 'Then he alone ruled eighteen settlements;
He started to share his wealth, offered to everyone.'
Finally, the Lay of Rig concludes showing both the benevolent and faustian aspects of the Noble Caste;
42; 'Those born to Lord grew up there,
Tamed horses, bound rims to shields,
Smoothed arrow-shafts, brandished ash spears.'
43; 'But the young Kin learned Runes to use,
Runes everlasting, the runes of life;
Soon could he well the warrior's shield,
Dull the sword blades and still the seas.'
This poem is significant because it demonstrates Nordic social stratification along Indo-European lines; tripartite, yet devoid of a priestly class. Or perhaps this wasn't considered important, or perhaps it was taken as a given that the nobility performed priestly roles.
Forwarded from Αρυολογία☀️ (The Indo-Europeans)
"Friday" retains an almost uniform pre-Christian tradition accross European languages. In Romance languages, the name for Friday is a variant of the Latin diēs Veneris (Venus' Day).
French: Vendredi
Spanish: Viernes
Italian: Venerdi
The Greek ἡμέρᾱ Ἀφροδῑ́της (hēmérā Aphrodī́tēs) uses the Goddess Aphrodite, their equivalent to Venus.
The Germanic langauges also base the name for Friday upon their Goddess of broadly equivilant function; Frejya.
Old English/Modern English: Frīgedæg/Friday
German: Freitag
Afrikaans: Vrydag
Old Norse: Frjádagr
Norwegian: Fredag
Image: Freyja and her boar Hildisvíni, Lorentz Frölich 🇩🇰 (1895)
French: Vendredi
Spanish: Viernes
Italian: Venerdi
The Greek ἡμέρᾱ Ἀφροδῑ́της (hēmérā Aphrodī́tēs) uses the Goddess Aphrodite, their equivalent to Venus.
The Germanic langauges also base the name for Friday upon their Goddess of broadly equivilant function; Frejya.
Old English/Modern English: Frīgedæg/Friday
German: Freitag
Afrikaans: Vrydag
Old Norse: Frjádagr
Norwegian: Fredag
Image: Freyja and her boar Hildisvíni, Lorentz Frölich 🇩🇰 (1895)
Forwarded from Hyperborean Reflections✨🍄
Happy sunnōniz dagaz! Hail to Sunne! Christians should be shamed for trying to steal this day from us. Sunday is heathen and belongs to the Teutonic peoples as a day we honored the sun for giving us light and warmth, which is far more precious to us in the north than in the desert where they have an abundance of it.
Forwarded from .
“Worldview" is not based on books; it is an internal form, which at times in a person with little education is expressed much more brightly, than in some other "intellectual" or scientist.”
- Julius Evola
- Julius Evola
Forwarded from Boogaloo: How To Survive. (Catlog)
Tons of Europeans keep asking me what their best options are since it's very hard to off grid or even find rural land. My first point of advice is to keep trying. Find a lot in the countryside that nobody wants near farms an forests with nothing on it. A plot of just woods is fine. If you can't, then build a house boat (it's free if you move it every week like 10ft last I looked in the UK) or a camper or a van. Here's a list you will need to be basically self sustaining.
>Electricity
>2-4 100 watt solar panels mounted to the roof.
>1000 watt pure sine wave inverter. 3k would be the absolute max you could use.
>2-4 deep cycle marine batteries
>Appropriately sized charge controller. Pwm is fine. Buy cheap and get a spare.
>Use boat wiring for best results. The battery and inverter connections will have to be very thick guage copper though. You can find it at Auto part stores but they are pricey.
>12v and 120v a/c wiring.
>Water
>Get a good quality 12v on demand water pump from a local marine or RV dealer. Don't get a cheap one, the switches fail often.
>Use PEX for plumbing along with crimp rings. Ask a friend for their tool or I you're on the cheap use compression rings instead of crimped. No promises though long term.
>Get a 40 to 60 gallon tank off of eBay. Ones for boats work well but RV polyethelene tanks are cheap. Mount them solid as a rock under a bench.
>Get a shower kit and small RV sink. Be creative and have fun.
>Buy a black water tank bigger than your water tank, or vent greywater under the vehicle or camper.
>Get either a portable toilet or hopefully an RV toilet.
> Plumb it all up
>Cooking
>Get a Coleman stove or my favorite a camp chef stove/oven combo. Runs for months on a 20 gallon tank. Get a 30 gallon propane tank and be set for 6 months almost. It will heat the small space. Install an RV vent fan though.
>Either use ice in a really good cooler (don't cheap out) or find a propane fridge used in boats and RVs. Buy used if you can because this is the single most expensive item. If you can find consistent power a small dorm sized fridge will suffice. I use a cooler for 6 months and found if I got a really nice one it wasn't bad at all.
>Learn to cook. And buy good quality multiuse chef quality cookware. My favorites are a 12 inch cast iron skillet, Pyrex visions borosilicate glass pots, a USA Pan stainless pan and small pot for acidic foods and all stainless steel serving supplies. Victorinox 8 inch chefs knife is best value or a mora knife. Lodge cast iron and glass covers most of your bases.
>Cleaning
>Good synthetic clothes clean easily in a bucket and dry in an hour or two. Merino wool is an investment and needs kookabura wash to be happy and last. Goretex and all hiking gear gets tech wash from nikwax. Nikwax waterproofing spray is amazing but do it outside and keep it off your skin.
>Either boat or vehicle needs to be kept clean and in good repair or you will stay out. Get a generic business logo if you want to make it look like a work van. Maybe use your investment to advertise surveillance services since people with money could use someone to watch their property and call the police if migrants show up at night. Think outside the box. Tell people you are an author traveling and documenting this "interesting time".
>Get a gym membership for showers and a good workout. It will save you tons of water. Most gas stations have a water valve somewhere outside and so do camp and rv sites. They charge a few dollars to dump your blackwater tank.
>Filter your drinking water always. Dupont makes. Good inline cartridge system. And on demand hot water heaters (propane) for campers are 100 bucks on Amazon.
>Electricity
>2-4 100 watt solar panels mounted to the roof.
>1000 watt pure sine wave inverter. 3k would be the absolute max you could use.
>2-4 deep cycle marine batteries
>Appropriately sized charge controller. Pwm is fine. Buy cheap and get a spare.
>Use boat wiring for best results. The battery and inverter connections will have to be very thick guage copper though. You can find it at Auto part stores but they are pricey.
>12v and 120v a/c wiring.
>Water
>Get a good quality 12v on demand water pump from a local marine or RV dealer. Don't get a cheap one, the switches fail often.
>Use PEX for plumbing along with crimp rings. Ask a friend for their tool or I you're on the cheap use compression rings instead of crimped. No promises though long term.
>Get a 40 to 60 gallon tank off of eBay. Ones for boats work well but RV polyethelene tanks are cheap. Mount them solid as a rock under a bench.
>Get a shower kit and small RV sink. Be creative and have fun.
>Buy a black water tank bigger than your water tank, or vent greywater under the vehicle or camper.
>Get either a portable toilet or hopefully an RV toilet.
> Plumb it all up
>Cooking
>Get a Coleman stove or my favorite a camp chef stove/oven combo. Runs for months on a 20 gallon tank. Get a 30 gallon propane tank and be set for 6 months almost. It will heat the small space. Install an RV vent fan though.
>Either use ice in a really good cooler (don't cheap out) or find a propane fridge used in boats and RVs. Buy used if you can because this is the single most expensive item. If you can find consistent power a small dorm sized fridge will suffice. I use a cooler for 6 months and found if I got a really nice one it wasn't bad at all.
>Learn to cook. And buy good quality multiuse chef quality cookware. My favorites are a 12 inch cast iron skillet, Pyrex visions borosilicate glass pots, a USA Pan stainless pan and small pot for acidic foods and all stainless steel serving supplies. Victorinox 8 inch chefs knife is best value or a mora knife. Lodge cast iron and glass covers most of your bases.
>Cleaning
>Good synthetic clothes clean easily in a bucket and dry in an hour or two. Merino wool is an investment and needs kookabura wash to be happy and last. Goretex and all hiking gear gets tech wash from nikwax. Nikwax waterproofing spray is amazing but do it outside and keep it off your skin.
>Either boat or vehicle needs to be kept clean and in good repair or you will stay out. Get a generic business logo if you want to make it look like a work van. Maybe use your investment to advertise surveillance services since people with money could use someone to watch their property and call the police if migrants show up at night. Think outside the box. Tell people you are an author traveling and documenting this "interesting time".
>Get a gym membership for showers and a good workout. It will save you tons of water. Most gas stations have a water valve somewhere outside and so do camp and rv sites. They charge a few dollars to dump your blackwater tank.
>Filter your drinking water always. Dupont makes. Good inline cartridge system. And on demand hot water heaters (propane) for campers are 100 bucks on Amazon.
Forwarded from Αρυολογία☀️ (The Indo-Europeans)
I know that I hung
upon a windy tree
for nine whole nights,
wounded with a spear
and given to Óðinn,
myself to myself for me;
on that tree
I knew nothing
of what kind of roots it came from.
They cheered me not with a loaf
and not with any horn,
I investigated down below,
I took up the runes,
screaming I took them,
and I fell back from there.
Hávamál 138-139
upon a windy tree
for nine whole nights,
wounded with a spear
and given to Óðinn,
myself to myself for me;
on that tree
I knew nothing
of what kind of roots it came from.
They cheered me not with a loaf
and not with any horn,
I investigated down below,
I took up the runes,
screaming I took them,
and I fell back from there.
Hávamál 138-139
On the topic of dawn, I'd recommend:
Worship the Dawn Goddess (Ēostre in the Anglo-Saxon tradition, Aurora in the Roman tradition, other traditions have their own variants).
Perform ritual at sunrise. This is obviously essential for the Dawn Goddess. I attended a blót around Easter earlier this year where we woke up at dawn to perform it and it was very auspicious. ☀️
Worship the Dawn Goddess (Ēostre in the Anglo-Saxon tradition, Aurora in the Roman tradition, other traditions have their own variants).
Perform ritual at sunrise. This is obviously essential for the Dawn Goddess. I attended a blót around Easter earlier this year where we woke up at dawn to perform it and it was very auspicious. ☀️
Forwarded from Αρυολογία☀️ (The Indo-Europeans)
“You have learned how great a mistake you made in preferring an imported despotism to your ancestral mode of life, and you have come to realize how much better is poverty with no master than wealth with slavery.”
Boudica rallying her troops, AD 60/61.
Boudica rallying her troops, AD 60/61.