September 2025 Witch Guide
First Quarter: September 29th
Last Quarter: September 14th
Sabbats: Mabon- September 22nd
Also known as: Corn Moon Haligmonath, Haefest Monath & Witumanoth
Nature Spirts: Trooping faeries
Deities: Brigid, Ceres, Demeter, Freya, Isis, Depths & Vesta
Trees: Bay, hawthorn, hazel & larch
Herbs: Copal, fennel, rye, skullcap, valerian, wheat & witch hazel
Colors: Brown, dark blues, Earth tones, green & yellow
Flowers: Lily & narcissus
Scents: Bergamot, gardenia, mastic & storax
Stones: Carnelian, cat's eye, iolite, lapis lazuli, peridot, sapphire, spinel, tourmaline & zircon
Issues, intentions & powers: Confidence, manifestation & protection
Energy: Balance of light & dark, cleaning & straightening mentally, physically & spiritually, dietary matters, employment, health, intellectual pursuits, prosperity, psychism, rest, spirituality, success & work environment
The Celtic name for the hazel tree is ‘coll’ which is the ninth letter of the Ogham alphabet’. The Hazel Moon is the ninth month of the Celtic Tree Calendar. This is the time of year when Hazelnuts are appearing on the trees, & are an early part of the harvest.
•There is a total lunar eclipse On September 7th.
A blood moon is commonly referred to as the dramatic red glow of the moon during a total lunar eclipse. It happens when Earth's shadow completely covers the full moon, filtering sunlight through our atmosphere & turning the lunar surface deep red or coppery brown.
September is commonly referred to as Corn moon by The Farmers Almanac because this time of year—late summer into early fall—corresponds with the time of harvesting corn in much of the northern United States. For this reason, a number of Native American peoples traditionally used some variation of the name “Corn Moon” to refer to the Moon of either August or September. Examples include Corn Maker Moon (Western Abenaki) and Corn Harvest Moon (Dakota).
Also known as: Alban Elved, Aequinoctium Auctumnale, Autumn Equinox & Witch's Thanksgiving
Symbols: Acorns, apples, autumn leaves, balance, berries, bolines, corn, cornucopia, dried seeds, effigies/scarecrows, gourds, grains, grapes, ivy, pine cones, pomegranates, vines, wheat, white roses, sickles, scythes & wine
Colors: Blue, brown, dark red, deep gold, gold, indigo, leaf green, maroon, orange, red, russet, violet & yellow
Oils & Incense: Aloe, apple, apple blossom, benzoin, black pepper, cinnamon, cedar, clove, frankincense hay/straw, myrrh, passionflower, patchouli, pine, red poppy & sage
Animals: Dog, horse, salmon, squirrel & wolf
Birds: Blackbird, eagle, goose, hawk, owl, swallow & swan
Stones: Amber, Agate, amethyst, carnelian, hematite, lapis lazuli, sapphire, yellow agate, & yellow topaz
Foods: Apples, beer, blackberries, blackberry wine, breads, carrots, cider, corn, cornbread, grapes, heather wine, melons, mead, nuts, onions, pomegranates, potatoes, rye, squash, vegetables, wheat & wine
Herbs & plants: Acorn, benzoin, corn, echinacea, ferns, grains, grapes, hops, ivy, milkweed, myrrh, pine, sage, sassafras, Salomon's seal, thistle, tobacco, & wheat
Flowers: Aster, carnation, heather, honeysuckle, hyssop, marigold, mums, passionflower, rose, sunflower & yarrow
Trees: Ash, Aspen, cedar, cypress, elder, hazel, locust, maple, myrtle & oak
Goddesses: Danu, Demeter, Epona, Ereshkigal, Inanna, Ishtar, Juno, Modron, Minerva, Morgan, The Morrigan, Muses, Osun, Oya, Pomona, Persephone, Sin, Sophia, Sura & Yemaya
Gods: Apollo, Dionysus, Dumuzi, Esus, The Green Man, Hermes, Jupiter, Mabon, Mannanan, Thoth, Thor & Vulcan
Tarot Cards: The Empress, The Hanged Man, Wheel of Fortune & The World
Spellwork: Balance, grounding, harmony, healing, protection, prosperity, self-confidence & transition
Issues, Intentions & Powers: Accomplishment, agriculture, balance, community, death, family harmony, goals, gratitude, grief, love, planning, public safety, preparation, security, sharing, success & wisdom
•Scatter offerings in a harvested fields & Offer libations to trees
• Decorate your home and/or altar space for fall
• Perform a ritual to restore balance and harmony to your life
• Cleanse your home of negative energies
• Collect fall themed things from nature like acorns, changing leaves, pine cones, ect)
• Have a dinner or feast with your family and/or friends/ communal feasts
• Set intentions for the upcoming year
• Purge what is no longer serving you & commit to healthy changes
•Take a walk in the woods
• Enjoy a pumpkin spice latte
• Donate to your local food bank
• Gather dried herbs, plants, seeds & pods
• Brew an apple cinnamon simmer pot
• Create an outdoor Mabon altar
•Adorn burial sites with leaves, acorns, & pinecones to honor those who have passed over & visit their graves
The name Mabon comes from the Welsh/Brythonic God Mabon Ap Modron, who's name means "Divine/great Son", However,there is evidence that the name was adopted in the 1970s for the Autumn Equinox & has nothing to do with this celebration or this time of year.
Though many cultures see the second harvest (after the first harvest Lughnasadh) & Equinox as a time for giving thanks before the name Mabon was given because this time of year is traditionally when farmers know how well their summer crops did & how well fed their animals have become. This determines whether you & your family would have enough food for the winter.
That is why people used to give thanks around this time, thanks for their crops, animals & food
• Sukkot- Is a Torah-commanded holiday celebrated for seven days, beginning on the 15th day of the month of Tishrei. It is one of the Three Pilgrimage Festivals on which Israelites were commanded to make a pilgrimage to the Temple in Jerusalem. Originally a harvest festival celebrating the autumn harvest, Sukkot’s modern observance is characterized by festive meals in a sukkah, a temporary wood-covered hut, celebrating the Exodus from Egypt.
• Thanksgiving- This is a secular holiday which is similar to the cell of Mabon; A day to give thanks for the food & blessings of the previous year. The American Thanksgiving is the last Thursday of November while the Canadian Thanksgiving is celebrated in October
• The Oschophoria- Were a set of ancient Greek festival rites held in Athens during the month Pyanepsion (autumn) in honor of Dionysus. The festival may have had both agricultural and initiatory functions. Amidst much singing of special songs, two young men dressed in women's clothes would bear branches with grape-clusters attached from Dionysus to the sanctuary of Athena Skiras & a footrace followed in which select ephebes competed. Ancient sources connect the festival and its rituals to the Athenian hero-king Theseus & specifically to his return from his Cretan adventure. According to that myth, the Cretan princess Ariadne, who Theseus had abandoned on the island of Naxos while voyaging home, was rescued by an admiring Dionysus; thus the Oschophoria may have honored Ariadne as well. A section of the ancient calendar frieze incorporated into the Byzantine Panagia Gorgoepikoos church in Athens, corresponding to the month Pyanopsion (alternate spelling), has been identified as an illustration of this festival's procession.
Llewellyn's Complete Book of Correspondences by Sandra Kines
A Witch's Book of Correspondences by Viktorija Briggs
Llewellyn 2025 magical almanac Practical magic for everyday living
Llewellyn's Sabbat Essentials: Mabon