This website began as a personal blog, a space to gather my thoughts, document my evolving magical path, and share the workings of my craft. Over time, and especially through the growth of my own small, cherished community of fellow witches, I became aware of a growing need for real resources in the magical community, resources that are freely available, grounded in lived experience, and reflective of the diversity of modern magical practice.
My own journey was shaped in no small part by the witchcraft websites and forums of the late 1990βs and early 2000s; simple, hand-coded spaces where practitioners shared their spells, rituals, and insights long before the rise of social media. It was in those corners of the internet, amidst cottage magic blogs and hedgecraft forums, that I found the guidance, resonance, and belonging that I needed to carry my practice on after my mentorship ended. That spirit of open, generous sharing remains at the heart of my interactions with the community.
With that in mind, this website is now the digital home of the Hagstone Tradition, a path founded in 2015. It is a living archive of magical thought, focused on practical witchcraft rooted in folklore, folk magic, and practical traditional sensibilities. My goal is to provide thoughtful, accessible resourcesβsuch as my public Hagbook project and my growing online courseβthat support, inspire, and invite adaptation by other practitioners.
This site operates entirely independently. I do not sell my courses or readings, accept donations, or host sponsorships or partnerships. What youβll find here is a labour of love: witchcraft that is freely offered, deeply considered, and meant to be lived, not commodified.
Hagstone Witchery (as both a website and a magical tradition) is built on the belief that magical knowledge should be collaborative, evolving, and available to those who seek it. May what you find here serve your path well, wherever it leads.