Thursday, November 30, 2023

Dragon's Eye Returns for 2024 Season

The Golden Koi
RL McNulty 2023

Dragon's Eye Adventures will return with the 2024 season. We are partnering with RSU5 Community Programs, so each mystery will be held at Durham Community School, at 654 Hallowell Rd. in Durham, ME. 

We will have two large classrooms for our program, plus use of the library, hallways, partial gym, playground, and outdoor spaces, so our stories, art and sneaking will be well-supported. This may be the best space Dragon's Eye has ever inhabited!

Winter break will feature a four-day adventure called The Winter Queen, followed by a 5-day mystery for Spring break called Teacup Trolls.

The summer 2024 season will feature a mix of old and new mysteries for children in grades 4 - 8. The Windhorse draws on Mongolian legends and myths, while Dunraven Fair taps into our November one-day events that feature the Welsh goblin markets ruled by the Raven King. Nine Fallen Suns and Twelve Moondaughters draw on Chinese calendar myths about solar suns and lunar daughters.

The Night Wanderer takes us into the realms of Greek mythology, and The Crossroads of Knowledge combines Egyptian mythology with legendary libraries from different times and places. Full descriptions and artwork for each of these pieces will be posted in January 2024, when enrollment officially opens.

Here is a link to the list of upcoming programs, where you will find dates, times, and other details.


Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Fall 2023: Plans in the Works

Fall is my favorite time of year, but never more than this year, as I move out of recovery mode into planning mode. As I write this, thiry or forty crows are sifting through the leaves in our woods, and eating the beechnuts that give our road its name. They remind me that sifting and nourishing are a part of the creative process.

I have spent my summer healing and sifting through the Dragon's Eye designs and stories, working on family ancestry and photos. This has nourished me during the healing process, and as fall sweeps over our woods, I have started the process of a return to the work world.

Dragon's Eye is on my mind -- and happily, in the works! I am laying groundwork for a return to school vacation and summer programs, and will make an announcement soon about more specifics.

With so much going awry in the world, we need programs that teach about our interconnectness to nature, to other people and to world history. We need our imaginations working on finding solutions that preserve one another's diginity and space in the world -- and we need to remember that we are one small part of a larger whole. We need to look back in order to look forward, so we can cultivate wisdom in the present.

Dragon's Eye will return, with old and new adventures. The sifting and sorting is turning to planning and building again. I hope to see my old detective friends again -- we have more myths to explore, more art to make, and more off-the-page discoveries to find.

Friday, March 10, 2023

Spring Arrival

The Summer Queen
RL McNulty 2023
Micron pen, colored pencil
  

 

Here is a peek at the Summer Queen. Her name is Brigid in Ireland or Bride in Scotland, and she represents the summer half of the year. 

St. Brigid's Day falls on Imbolc, which was the day she first peered out from her winter hiding place. She's a white serpent at that moment, representing the constellation Scorpio. 

Scotland and Ireland didn't have scorpions, so that's part of the reason they saw a snake rather than a scorpion. The other reason is that the curled tail is not as visible in the northern latitudes. Scorpio barely rises above the treeline, so it appears to slither along the lower part of the sky.

The Summer Queen wears her green plaid in this version, and holds a tiny rabbit. The plaid is what the Winter Queen washes in the Corryvreckan Whirlpool in the late fall. The plaid goes to white, causing snow to fall to earth.

The flowers of spring and summer blossom at her feet and the snowflakes turn to star-like raindrops around her head. The White Serpent holds the tiny winter sun, which will grow larger and warmer through the months.

As spring arrives, I am grateful to be here--grateful to be able to take pen and pencil to paper once again. It feels amazing to have energy again. The anemia is gone, and the cancer is, too -- and I have completed twenty five days of radiation, so the spring feels amazing to me. I am tired, yet energized--it's hard to explain.

I have been organizing the Dragon's Eye artwork, craft supplies and records of the mysteries, all the while thinking about the program. As I learn that last year's exhaustion was due to cancer and anemia, I am hoping to bring Dragon's Eye back in 2024. For the moment, I am content to organize, to rework and fill in gaps that are missing -- and some of those are drawings like this one.

As an artist, I have learned how much a fallow period can deepen work. All may appear quiet on the surface, but below is the quiet work in the darkness, of nutrients gathered, of messages sent and received. 

Blessings to my Dragon's Eye family and friends! I am thinking about you, and the memory of good times sustains me through this challenging year!



Sunday, January 1, 2023

The Winter Queen 2023

The Winter Queen
RL McNulty, 2022
Micron Pen/Colored Pencil
Happy New Year! I thought I'd celebrate the new year with a newly-finished image of the Winter Queen.

The Winter Queen comes from Irish and Scottish legends about the Cailleach Bheur, the Blue Hag that ushers in Winter. It's helpful to know that there used to be two seasons, rather than the four we recognize today. The Winter Queen is Orion, riding her battle boar into the sky in mid Autumn, when Winter used to begin on Nov.1. She's accompanied by her storm wolves (Canis Major and Minor), who create the howling winds and biting cold of winter snowstorms.

Her counterpart is the Summer Queen, who first appears (or is born) on the sunrise horizon near Imbolc in February. She is the White Serpent, or Scorpio -- and her peak over the horizon is similar to our Groundhog Day. Either she emerges for and early spring, or she dives back in leaving the old queen to rage on into March.

Undestanding the celestial nature of the dance of these two queens really helps me understand the mythology. As I've been ill this fall and winter, I have woken up mulptiple times at night, so have been able to watch this turning of the wheel overhead. Orion creeps by my window earlier and earlier, gradually giving rise to Cancer and the Beehive, which my detectives may remember as the source of bees who bring souls and the inspiration of the Muses into the world.

Leo follows, and then Virgo lounges as she passes overhead, carried on one of the many serpents in the sky. Libra is up now and Scorpio is just about to become more visible in preparation for Imbolc. If you think of this in terms of the zodiac, a constellation must be far enough away from its month behind the sun that it can be visible again in the night sky.

There are later male versions of this story, too -- the Winter King and the Summer King fighting over a beautiful maiden. The beautiful maiden gradually grows old until she becomes the hag of winter. Like the queens, the kings are associated with the Little Sun of winter and the Big Sun of summer.

After studying stories like these, I think the Baba Yaga and Koschei the Deathless represent another set of winter/summer battle myths. The Baba Yaga travels in her mortar and pestle, creating stormy winds with her broom. She lives on the border of the underworld realm, and the solar knights of sunrise, midday and sunset emerge from her house.

Koschei strives to kidnap the beautiful maiden and the firebird--and he even has the cauldron and the skeleton knights that show up in the Celtic tales. 

In the Celtic versions, the cauldron is represented in the sky by the circumpolar constellations -- the whirling forms represent the place where the Red Bird souls enter and leave the land of the living. This is the origin of our tradition about cardinals and red birds as representing loved ones who have passed away. The Red Birds find their way by climbing the World Tree into the Sky and following the Milky Way to the Cailleach's cauldron of life and death and life again.

A very blessed new year to you all! May the Red Birds watch over you as the Winter Queen does her best to bluster her way out of the rule of the passage of time. It's good to know that in time, even she will have to give way to the new birth of the tiny solar babe that will bring the blessings of spring and summer back to us.