In the Hagstone Tradition, the Witch Walk is a rite used to aid the witch as they cross the threshold between the ordinary world and the Spirit World. It marks the shift from mundane awareness into magical consciousness, attuning the mind, body, and spirit for the work ahead. This rite is especially valuable when working beyond the home, such as in the forest, field, or crossroads.

Before the Working: Before departing to the ritual space, gather any necessary tools or supplies into a simple bag for ease of carry. Once you step across your home’s threshold, you are symbolically travelling through the Spirit Realm. Travel directly to your ritual site without speaking, without turning back, and without pausing along your way. Maintain silence throughout the journey as a gesture to attune yourself to communion with Spirit.

After the Working: At the conclusion of the working, collect what you need and begin your return in the same mannerβ€”no words, no backward glance, no idle wandering. Only upon crossing the threshold of your home and closing the door behind you does the journey end.

Modifications: For witches working within the home or in a space where travel is not required, the Witch Walk may be adapted into a threshold-crossing gesture or brief movement that symbolically divides the β€œordinary” from the magical. Some practitioners may choose to walk or travel a short, intentional path through the house (from the front door to the ritual space, for instance) observing silence and presence as they do so. Others may simply step across the boundary of the designated ritual room, their altar space, or another threshold. However it is adapted, the core of the Witch Walk remains: a deliberate act of crossing that separates the mundane from the enchanted.

[1] The Witch Walk is a practice adapted from the β€œYear’s Walk” or β€œYear-Walking” ritual, as described in an interview with Otto Nord and transcribed in Thomas K. Johnson’s Tidebast och Vandelrot (2010).

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Giving Offerings to the Spirits of the Ritual Area

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Preparing the Body for Ritual