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. Samhain's totems are Toad, Elder, and 
Crane
The totemic associations are as follows:
Toad – (Buaf) transformation, inner visions, death and rebirth, hidden power and beauty
Elder (Ruis) – death and rebirth, change and transition
Crane – (Corr) longevity, remembrance, past lives, secret knowledge, patience
Crane
The
 Crane is an ancient and powerful symbol to many cultures. To the 
Chinese, it is a solar symbol, one of justice. It is also a modern 
symbol of wildlife conservation (and a deeper spiritual practice, too, 
of recovering what is becoming extinct within the self). The Crane 
represents longevity and creation through focus. In Celtic lore, Cranes 
are often associated with the Underworld and are thought to be heralds 
of war and death.
Cranes are protective/secretive 
parents. They lay two eggs, but raise only one, which gives them the 
connection to focus and undivided attention. They are also associated 
with perseverance due to the fact that they will stand for hours looking
 into the water and waiting for the right time to strike at fish. The 
Crane can help us to concentrate without distractions. They also 
represent longevity of life span. There is a crane, for instance, on the
 island Inis Kea who has been there since the beginning of the world, 
and it will stay there until the world’s end.
The Crane
 symbolizes “secret knowledge” which is represented by the Ogham script 
of the Celts.  This form of text is said to be based on the shapes of 
the Crane’s legs as they fly, and one can say that learning the secret 
knowledge of the Crane is learning to read the “book of nature.” The 
phrase “Crane Knowledge” indicates the knowledge of the Ogham alphabet, 
but it also implies an understanding of the world that goes deeper and 
has connections to many Realms – including past-life knowledge, 
predicting rain storms, etc.
The Crane bag is the 
Druid’s medicine bag (in which he carried his Koelbren lots – or carved 
Ogham staves). The Crane Bag is a symbol of the fetal sac or womb and 
has connections to the things we carry from one life to another. Certain
 Gods are said to have carried a Crane Bag. Manannan’s contained his own
 shirt, a strip from a whale’s back, the King of Scotland’s shears, the 
King of Lochlain’s helmet, the bones of Assail’s swine and Goibne’s 
smith-hook.
The Crane is often a guide to the 
Underworld, whether at the time of death or during an inner journey. 
These birds are often shown in groups of threes. For instance, three 
cranes protect entrance to Annwn, three cranes appear on a bull’s back 
in several drawings, and three cranes guard Midhir’s castle. 
Furthermore, cranes are said to dance and fly in circles (and are, 
therefore, said to be the basis of the triskele symbol).
 

 

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