This is a poem I wrote for Epona after watching the lunar eclipse from my local valley, where my Friends group planted apple trees two years ago. I read it at a ritual organised for Epona by Potia in Glasgow shortly afterward.
Apples
For EponaThe blood moon:
an apple in a goddess' eye
drops and I think of the windfall
crisp autumn mornings when we released
the horses slipping from their halters
twisting away in leaps and bucks
with piquant glint-eyed excitement
to the trees where they'd drop their heads
whuffle up the crispy moons of green and red.
Some days before we turned them out
we whispered to them "apples"
and they knew exactly what we meant...
The blood moon has passed.
The horses are staying out late this year.
Yet the sun has gone down on my stable-yard:
baling freshly-cut hay, stacking barns
with hard-shouldered labour,
stuffing stretching nets
for hungry mouths.
As I cut the meadow and gather orchard fruits
I reminisce about the rural life that didn't last.
When the horses are tied behind bar and bolt
tugging at hay with meadow-sweet muzzles
I will feed them apple-moons
from my open palm.