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St. Louis Pagan Picnic

Every year for the past 27 years in Tower Grove Park in early June you will find a gathering of Pagans. This picnic is a fantastic start to the festival season in Missouri. 2019 was the first year that my husband and I were able to go for both days of the picnic. This year the picnic was able to boast that they had nearly 100 vendors. The vendors are in the middle of the picnic. The picnic coordinators are hoping to welcome even more next year.

On Saturday at 10 AM, there was an opening ritual. Ritual is on the south side of the vendor’s row. The Ritual takes place in an area that is marked by flags for each compass point. It is always open to all who want to participate.

Speakers start their presentations at 11 AM and go until 3 PM both days. The lectures take place on the north side of the vendors’ row. There were so many speakers this year, but I could only pick a few because there are four presentations every hour. Speakers only took an hour for a lecture; many also-ran vendor stalls while at the festival too.

Celia was there her talk was titled “Adventures of an Everyday Goddess,” and we could hear her singing during her lecture too. Reverend Don Lewis-Highcorrell was there talking about Cornellian Soul. Mickie Mueller taught about “Magical Self-Care During Hard Times. Reverend Bill Duvendack was there teaching about “Astrological Timing of Rituals.” And Sunday started with Oberon Zell giving a presentation on “Awakening into Quantum Consciousness.” (there were so many more that I didn’t get to hear this time around.)

At the St. Louis Pagan Picnic, there are a lot of local artists, writers, and teachers that give lectures. If there is a time that you don’t want to go to hear a speaker, you can sit on the south side of the vendors’ row at the Bardic Circle. At the Bardic Circle, they have some great singers and Dancers. Celia also was at the Bardic Circle. At another time, you could catch Mama Gina or watch Sugar Cyanide dance.

My husband and I purchased a Tarot deck and a refillable book from artist Karen Swartz, who has a shop on Etsy, Talenshistudios. The Tarot deck is called “A Darisa Tarot.” I found that the Tarot deck is genderless to be a unique aspect that makes reading with it more accessible in so many ways.

Another vendor I adore is “Chaos Emporium.” She has a shop in South County Mall in St. Louis. Her shop and her vendor space deal with corsets, hats, gloves, and some beautiful Parasols. (I had to get a purple one to go with the primary color I wear daily.)

I also found a new vendor that I hope is there again next year, Obsidian Sithin. They have amazing wooden puzzles. (I purchased a Unicorn from them. I want to get more of their puzzles.)

About the Author:

Dawn Borries loves reading and was thrilled to become a Reviewer for PaganPages.Org. Dawn, also, has been doing Tarot and Numerology readings for the past 25 years. Dawn does readings on her Facebook page. If you are interested in a reading you can reach her on Facebook @eagleandunicorn.

Pagan picnic

Rev. Don Lewis interviews Spirit's Edge Shamonial Temple Founder & High Priestess Kassa S. Morgan for Magick TV's amazing videos on the 2019 St. Louis Pagan Picnic! Also, a correction. where Kassia talks about our public sabbat rituals, our Spirit's Edge Shamonial Temple's public sabbat rituals started at Mabon 2012. Love, Light & Blessings!

Pagan Picnic & Online Auction - Current Year - click HERE

Scenes from Spirit's Edge Shamonial Temple and friends at the St. Louis Pagan Picnic! Fun in the sun! Come to the Edge, where Spirit dwells!

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    A Recap of This Weekend's Pagan Picnic in Tower Grove Park

    Living and working near Tower Grove Park allows me to experience the joys of that special place on a regular basis. This past weekend, my park usage was amplified four-fold through twice-a-day-visits to the Pagan Picnic, an annual event held in the park’s northeast quadrant. With one of the outer roads turned into a bazaar, the Pagan Picnic experience is a mix of commerce with artistic and faith concerns. For sale: drums, books, drums, rainsticks, clothing (from tie-dye to gothic), drums, candles, incense, tribal masks, ice cream, herbs and drums. Every few booths, a personal experience is offered, from Reiki and chair massages to Tarot readings and palmistry. While many of the vendors are local, others travel to the event, and a colorful, little tent city lines the back of the booth walk. Just beyond them, pushing a little deeper into the park, the occasional workshop’s held under a canopy, often based around non-mainstream faith traditions or healing forms. One grass field traditionally enjoys a weekend-long larping tourney, with role-players engaged in short, pitched battles, foam and lightweight weaponry crashing down on the heads and legs of well-heeled competitors. Music’s a staple and is typically based around acoustic songwriters and drum groups; on Saturday, though, the main stage was held down by Tuatha Dea, a large, percussion-heavy, electro-acoustic group that sang of watchtowers and Celtic maidens and coming storms. Totally, totally appropriate stuff. My own commerce at the event was minimal: I bought a used copy of Cloud-Hidden: Whereabouts Unknown, a memoir by the mystic philosopher Alan Watts. The book came in an individual, plastic sandwich baggie, as did a flyer for Spirit’s Edge, a local “Shamonial Temple and Mystery School.” Cool. But you don’t have to buy anything, or be Pagan, to enjoy the Pagan Picnic. Maybe the best thing about the annual event is the people watching; that’s totally free, and you’re going to come across folks from a really curious blend of disciplines and tribes, with that seldom-seen blend of flowing-garb Ren Faire vets alongside leather-clad Futurists. (Hat tip, by the way, to those who rocked the multi-layered, head-to-toe black gear this weekend, with temps cracking 90 in the shade.) A few wandered the park with pets-on-arm, be they lizards or rats. Others sported swords and tails. Most simply came as they were, and on a hot summer’s weekend, that meant an impromptu tattoo convention breaking loose. What an array of ink! The best moments may’ve come when people unfamiliar with the event wandered through, whether running or walking. (Cycles were stopped at each end.) These folks brought the most wide-eyed wonder, their heads on a swivel, as St. Louis’ most interesting gathering space for the weekend enveloped them. Here’s to next year.

    by Thomas Crone June 9, 2015 8:19 AM CONNECT WITH US

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    light matica

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