29/04/2026
Beltane marks a surge point in the wheel of the year where fertility, fire, and life force rise to the surface. This isn’t passive seasonal change, it’s active expansion, and in traditional practice, it’s something you engage with directly. Fire is the core.
Light a flame, a candle, or a bonfire if possible. This represents ignition, not just warmth. Beltane fire is used to activate intention, to bring something out of dormancy and into motion. Pass your hands through the smoke, step over the flame (safely), or sit in its presence with clear focus. This is not symbolic, it’s alignment with increase.
Work with the land. Fresh flowers, hawthorn, rowan, greenery, these are not decoration. They mark growth, life, and protection. Place them at thresholds, windows, and entrances to draw in expansion while holding your boundary. Beltane is fertile, but it is not selective. You decide what is allowed to grow in your space.
Create a focal point.
A small altar, a candle surrounded by greenery, or even a simple natural setup. This acts as your working centre. Beltane energy is active and scattered without direction, it disperses. You need a point to hold it.
Set one clear intention.
Not multiple. Not vague. Something you want to grow physically, mentally, or energetically. Speak it, hold it, and return to it throughout the night. Repetition builds it.
Beltane sits between seasons, and that creates openness. If you work with offerings, leave something small in nature herbs, food, or drink as exchange. Not as a request, but as balance.
Close your space.
This is where most fail. After working with fire and increase, you don’t leave everything open. Extinguish the flame with intention, clear your space, and ground yourself. What you activated needs direction, not constant exposure.
Beltane is not just about celebrating life. It’s about choosing what grows, while everything else is trying to do the same.