Along Schoeneck Creek 3 years ago today.

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Along Schoeneck Creek 3 years ago today.
Turning of the Wheel: Summer Solstice traditions in Latvia
Photographed by Jānis Jusjukevičs and Ivo Kušķis
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Rooted in ancient pre-Christian nature worship, Latvia’s midsummer festival called "Līgo" or "Jāņi, historically honored the summer solstice figure Jānis.
Jānis is a complex and debated figure in Latvian mythology. Often mistakenly referred to as a deity of fertility and light, and additionally being linked to the Dieva Dēli - twin sons of the sky god found in Baltic and other Indo-European traditional beliefs (i.e. Ashvins in Hinduism). Unlike other deities of the Baltic pantheon, he appears almost exclusively in connection with the Midsummer festival, raising questions about his origins. Some scholars believe the name "Jānis" may be a later adaptation of John the Baptist, introduced during Christianization. However, the rituals associated with his festival, such as: bonfires, wreaths, fertility symbols, and even remnants of phallic cult practices, are unmistakably pre-Christian and rooted in ancient agrarian traditions.
During Jāņi rituals, villagers crowned with oak and wild herbs gather on hilltops, at dusk, to roll a flaming wheel downhill; a fiery symbol of the sun’s peak and its slow descent. This ritual, like the wreaths and Jāņi fires, invokes ancient hopes for protection, abundance, and harmony between sky, land, and spirit.
This pattern is where I found the insects I used in my midsummer/Kupala piece.
'Bugs Sampler' by MaryHickmottDesigns available on Etsy for download
Today being Saint John’s Eve, you can, of course, commemorate it with a Kern Baby. Tonight, however, you may want to enjoy Modest Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain, which was originally titled St. John's Eve on Bald Mountain (Иванова ночь на лысой горе), as famously depicted by Disney animators for 1940’s Fantasia:
Mussorgsky wrote the piece based on Nikolai Gogol’s short story “St. John’s Eve,” available via the link.
Or you may want to take in a performance, live or recorded, of Will Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which some believe was written to celebrate this night, the 24th being Midsummer Day.
Here are four lovable moptops in 1964 mugging their way through that work’s play-within-a-play, the tragical tale of the lovers Pyramus and Thisbe:
Source: Maren Toom photo - jaaniõhtu. Midsummer night in the country garden.
ℍ𝐚𝓵l נ𝐀 𝔳คĻǤẸ
Happy Philip Pullman rips your heart from your chest and gleefully stomps it into the ground Day!
Happy Midsummer!!!
Happy Midsummer to all of my gays, theys, and unashamed f*ggots ily all 🧚♂️✨💘🌞❤️🔥🥰