In our tradition we divide the year not only by eight solar and 
agricultural holidays, but also by the Kalends. We celebrate twelve 
months of the year by the common calendar, plus a special thirteenth 
month for Samhain.  These month cycles are associated with different 
totemic spirits. Each month is assigned an animal, a bird (or other 
flying creature), and a tree. May's totems are Cow, Hawthorn, and Bee.
The totemic associations are as follows:
Cow (Tarbh/Bò) – fertility, prosperity, protection, nourishment
Hawthorn (Huathe) – fertility, cleansing, protection, joy
Bee (Beach) – fertility, community, sweetness, celebration, organization
Bull (Tarbh)
The
 bull is associated with health, potency, beneficence, fertility, 
abundance, prosperity,  and power. The number of cattle owned were an 
indicator of wealth, a fact that is carried over in the term “Bull 
market” = rising stock market. The bull also appeared frequently on 
Celtic coins. Oxen (castrated bulls) were early power supply.
 Bronze
 horns and bronze rattle (in the shape of bull’s testes) spoke to the 
sacredness of the bull. Its horns are used as ceremonial drinking cups 
even today. An early Irish ritual (“bull sleep”) told of the new king 
when the old one died. “Gateway ceremonies” involved ritual sacrifice of
 bulls.
Cow (Bò)
The
 cow represents nourishment, motherhood and the Goddess. Certain herbs 
are associated with cows, such as cranberry (cowberry), cowslip, and 
milk-wort. 
In Celtic lands, cows have long been 
considered sacred. In Britain there were sacred herds of white cattle. 
Ireland was gifted with cattle when three cows emerged from the sea – 
one red, one white, and one black. Brighid was reared on the milk of an 
Otherworld cow and is considered the patroness of cattle. Three of the 
four sacred festivals were related to cows (Samhain, Beltaine and 
Imbolc) Many Eastern traditions also hold the cow as sacred.
The
 cow is also a source of nourishment on many levels – milk, leather, 
meat, horn. The fact that is contributes to much to daily life is part 
of what makes it so sacred and special.
In folklore, 
the Milky Way is also called the Cow Path, and there are Fairy Cows 
called the  “Crodh Shith.”  Many offerings are made of milk, and the 
breath and milk of the cow are considered healing.
 
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