Obtaining a New Ogham Set
I'm currently in the process of obtaining a new Ogham set from the wonderful Craftsman who makes most of the tactile Divination sets I work and read with. This has been a long time coming, as I have been partial to My Birch set ever since I received it. However, I have discovered that Birch is not the best wood for longterm useage, or at least the kind of longterm useage I put My set through. While the feda of My Birch set are still tactile, are still legible even, They aren't as even as They used to be, as the wood has warped slightly over the years.
The new set that I'm commissioning is going to be made from an Oak that was struck down by Lightning. I plan on trading out My Birch set for this Oak set as the primary Ogham set I'll be reading with moving forward, while keeping the Birch set in reserve for specific occasions, or whenever Someone askes for Me to read with that set instead of the Oak one.
The other main difference between this new Oak set and the old Birch set is that I'm opting to forgo the Forfeda with this set. I'm not invalidating the Forfeda, nor am I judging Anyone who prefers to read and work with the Forfeda, but it's time to let Them go in My practice with the Ogham as I move forward with My practice in general. There are all kinds of reasons why I made this choice, but the simplest answer is this: In My opinion, Ogham, or at least the original twenty feda of the Ogham, is the form of Divination in the world that is the easiest to make accessible for the Blind in My opinion. The Forfeda greatly detracts from the quality of accessibility. I mean, I have several tactile Ogham sets, and yet no two People can seem to make the Forfeda exactly the same in a tactile sense.










