The time between the feasts of Sts. George and Vitus on the Julian calendar is always a deeply special period in my practice, marked with the ushering in of the warmer months, the celebration of the land’s fertility, and the adoration of the Pleiades as they go on their voyage to greet the Mothers of the Sun, Moon, and Wind. Now for the third year in a row, this time has also heralded the creation of charms, made in compact with St. George, to celebrate the many powerful expressions of his current as divine horseman, solar prince, and warrior of the light half of the ritual year.
These charms are made each year in offering to the saint, to celebrate his many virtues and to give back to the community that has so lovingly supported our work and podcast, and shared so generously of their own traditions, spiritual encounters, and theurgic philosophies. In the first year, the divination that sets this course flagged the omen of victory and triumph; in the second, both saints anchoring this period stepped forward to guard against the evil eye. This year, the omen which arose in the favomancy reading was to create a kindred of charms steeped in the well-attested magics of St. George as a protector of love—the love of friends, romantic partners, parents and children, and the love of new and old bonds alike.
On Đurđevdan, as with many key saint days, I spent much of the day cooking and baking in honour of the martyr. A fresh slavski kolač was made, this time simpler in shape than in previous years, being a smaller and flatter loaf intended to represent the coins worn in many traditional Balkan bridal costumes. The yeast was grown with holy water taken from a church of St. Petka directly when a wedding was taking place inside, and the Thursday Salt which seasoned it was specifically isolated in its batch for the stoking of fertility and the protection of love in one’s life. Various bajalice or basme (oral charms) were recited throughout the process of its incubation, in dedication to the yeast, water, flour, sheep’s milk, and the oven itself as it proofed, rose, and rose again.
The herbs themselves which went into each charm were harvested directly on the eve of his feast. Rosehips and St. John’s wort were sung to over the course of the eve until the dawn of the new day, nestled in the fresh leaves of bigroot geranium, one of the primary plants of St. George in the Balkans. To each bundle was added a hagstone, wrapped up in the leaf of the geranium so that it does not see sunlight until the first crack of dawn on Đurđevdan proper. In this way, the very spear or sword of our saint, being the first ray of light to touch our serpent stones, is that which awakens them from the slumber they have been kept in since their finding.

With this light filling the stones, they were then offered to, given only those red gifts requested within the reading. The stones were fed rooster, red wine, and red ochre, and then kept within the mixture veiled before the icon of St. George for two full weeks. In the meanwhile, the herbs themselves were adored, anointed, and sung to, and laid out before him as his meal was prepared. In addition to the kolač, I prepared proja sa kajmakom, ajvar, and belmuž, a St. George’s day delicacy of sheep’s milk cheese and white cornmeal. After presentation, the whole meal was sprinkled with the red mixture given to the hagstones as well as holy water and sheep’s milk with sprigs of basil, plantain, and geranium from my own garden. Once complete, the red cloth on which the whole meal was given was divided into sections to be used for the charms at a later date.
Upon the day of their assembly, once the hagstones were sufficiently enlivened, the charms were swiftly fastened with a final favomancy reading thrown to confirm their strength. Every aspect of this charm needed to be red: red with life, blood, lust, love, desire, sex, and consumption; the need for the other and to be needed by the other in return. The chart was positive in every way but one, demanding that one last ingredient, far more ephemeral and difficult than the rest, needed to be sacrificed in order for them to be complete. In addition to herbs, dirts, powders, a trinity of squares cored from the slava bread at its base, petals of a rose held in the teeth of two lovers dancing at their wedding (many thanks to the couple for allowing me to keep such a token!), and many more ingredients left unnamed, the hagstones, garnets, and the very red string that ties each charm together needed to bear witness to what were determined to be three “moments of true love”: one of friendship, one of romance, and one of filial love.
This request, while more complicated to fulfill than I can even begin to write publicly, out of respect for all those involved, was by far one of the most beautiful aspects to a charm’s creation I have had to undergo in some time. I immediately recalled the lessons learned at Aphrodite’s shores, of the tenacity, endurance, and victory of love for love’s sake over all misunderstandings, confusion, and despair. I was forbidden from completing these charms until this was done, until these binding elements and their serpent-eyes directly witnessed the very intensity they are sworn to protect. Once this was done, the beans approved swiftly, and I was able to complete them fully.

Twelve of the kindred of stones were dedicated to these charms, who made themselves known to me in dream as the Red Shields. This charm protects long-term relationships, marriages, and even newer joinings with the ferocity of loves lived across lifetimes. Keep on your person, by your bed, or at your shrines and whisper to its stone precisely what you need nourished and protected. Set them atop pictures or by candles to boost workings of commitment, reconciliation, affection, and far more. Their eyes blink with awareness and knowledge; speak to them as an ally and they will respond to you in kind. Tell them if you need more sexual vigour and passion, more dedication and commitment, more publicity and pride, or more understanding and levity. Keep them over petitions, smoke them with incense and anoint them with oils programmed for each purpose, or simply give them frankincense and holy oil monthly to keep them active and alert. Whatever aspect of love in your life needs passion and longing, whoever’s heart requires softening so that they come to understand your needs and perspectives, or whatever lack in your relationship requires strengthening, these charms are eager to serve.
The red cape of St. George covers your heart and creates for it a banquet: may the beloved propose union, the lover propose marriage, the friend propose deeper nourishment and the spirit propose deeper initiation into their current. The cunning sorcerer will be aware that these charms follow the dedication of their keepers; they ask for the same commitment, care, and levity to be shown by those who request their aid. In this way, while they cannot be used to compel or control, or to force unearned forgiveness and dedication, they will happily assist their keepers in cultivating the character and vitality to be that which they themselves seek, and to further draw those to them who would best treasure those qualities.
Only twelve are available. Each will ship within a week of purchase.

Additionally, ever since my last series of Man of Might charms against nightmares sold out, I’ve been frequently asked to bring them back. This year, I wanted to make the exact same charms albeit with a set of hagstones fed in the same manner for St. George in his feast day, being an even more boosted version of the previous iterations. White horse’s hair was braided through the loops while the “man of might” rhyme was repeated without ceasing. The stones were awakened alongside those programmed for the Red Shields above, though directed specifically to drink deeply of the red offerings and use their vitality to fight off any nightmares, night-demons, and attacks of malefica and witchcraft during sleep with the force of St. George’s spear. They are slightly more expensive than last year’s to reflect the effort and time that went into the supplication, sacrifice, and enchantment of each hagstone.
Ten were made in honour of the White Horseman. Each will ship within a week of purchase.
Tha mon o´ micht, he rade o´nicht
wi´ neither swerd ne ferd ne licht.
He socht tha mare, he fond tha mare,
he bond tha mare wi´ her ain hare.
Ond gared her swar by midder-micht
she wolde nae mair rid o´ nicht
whar ance he rade, thot mon o´ micht.
Additionally, there is a bundle offered for those interested in getting both charms, offered at a slight discount.
My deepest thanks to each and every one of you for your support and care. My St. George keep and protect all that empowers, revitalizes, comforts, uplifts, and reddens your lives.
