Summer didn’t even say goodbye!

Fall leads straight into: candy month, pie month, and cookie month

“The weather just went from 90 to 55 like it saw a state trooper.”



Autumn Superstitions

https://appalachianfreepress.com/fall-folklore-signs-of-a-harsh-winter/


19 pieces of mountain folklore for everyday life

When two people of the same name live in a house, ghosts will stay away.

Never carry an axe or hoe into a house, it means death.

Ghosts hate new things. If you have a persistent ghost, hang something new over your door.

A baby born at midnight will have the power to see and talk to ghosts.

If a rooster crows after dark, it is a sure sign that death is in the neighborhood.

Death always travels in three’s—if a person dies in your community, there will soon be two more to follow.

A ghost will beat on the wall of a house if someone therein is about to die.

Ghosts enjoy hearing people sing and will gather from afar to listen.

Christmas Eve is a favorite time for ghosts to walk the Earth.

Wind chimes will call up the dead.

Horses and Pigs can see death and ghosts.

If a bird comes inside your house, it is a sign that death will soon befall the household.

If someone see’s a ghost, look over their left shoulder and you will be able to see that ghost too.

Never let a swing stop on its own. Stop it yourself or someone you care about will die.

After someone dies, their pictures begin to fade.

If a dog howls while looking at the ground, he senses death is very near.

If three people look in the same mirror at the same time, the youngest of the three will soon die.

Graveyards at night are peaceful places to visit at night if you are quiet. But if you talk, you will be haunted for a week.

Don’t walk on someone’s grave or else you will be haunted by their ghost.

Don’t pick up a broom that is laid over a doorway. If you do, it is a sign that you are a witch or that you have been witched.

Bury your hair after you cut it, if you don’t and the birds pick it up, you will have headaches for months afterward. You can also be witched if your hair falls into the wrong hands.

A Star Quilt on your bed will protect you from evil spirits.

Clocks in a house will stop at the exact moment of death of someone in that household. If clocks do not stop, you must stop them or else the spirit will remain in that house.


APPALACHIAN SUPERSTITIONS

by-Amy Lewis
  1. Never close a knife you didn’t open, or you’ll have bad luck for 7 years.
  2. Keep a penny in your washer.
  3. Always go out the same door you came in.
  4. Eat black eyed peas or collard greens with hog jaw on New Year’s Day.
  5. Don’t wash clothes on New Year’s Day or you will wash a family member out.
  6. Don’t sleep on New Year’s.
  7. Don’t do any canning or gardening on your period.
  8. Plant your crops under the full moon.
  9. Don’t walk under a ladder. If you find yourself under one, don’t turn around– back up.
  10. Don’t let anyone sweep under your feet.
  11. Never give someone a set of knives as a gift. If you give them to newlyweds, it will cut their love!
  12. If a black cat crosses your path, turn and go a different way.
  13. Never repay salt that you have borrowed.
  14. If a bad storm is coming, put a 2-edged axe into a stump facing the storm to ensure the storm goes around you.
  15. If you spill salt, throw a pinch over your left shoulder so you won’t have bad luck.
  16. When you drop your fork, it means a woman is coming to visit. If you drop a knife, a man is coming to visit.
  17. Don’t cut your baby’s hair before their first birthday.
  18. Your baby has to fall off the bed before their first birthday.
  19. Run a chicken over your baby to keep if from getting chicken pox.
  20. Don’t let a pregnant woman see a dead person or the baby will have a birth mark.
  21. If cows are laying down, or leaves are upside down, it’s going to rain.
  22. Hang a horseshoe upside down to keep good luck from running out.
  23. Wear a buckeye in your bra to ward off rheumatism.
  24. Hold your breath when you pass a cemetery, or you’ll be the next to die.
  25. If you see a white horse, you’ll have good luck.
  26. Hold your feet up when you’re crossing a railroad track, or you’ll lose your boyfriend.
  27. If you’re walking with someone you have to go on the same side of a post or obstacle, or it will break your friendship.
  28. Don’t wash clothes on Sunday.
  29. If your nose is itching, it means company is coming.
  30. Open the window when someone dies and cover the mirrors so that their soul can leave.
  31. Hang a mirror by the door to protect against evil.
  32. Never leave a rocking chair rocking, or you will invite spirits.


We encourage anyone who loves the Blue Ridge region to learn about the Leave No Trace principles of responsible environmental stewardship. 

Stay on marked trails, take only pictures, pack out your trash, and be considerate of others who share the trails and parks you explore. 

Remember that waterfalls and rocky summits can be dangerous. Never try to climb waterfalls or get close to a ledge to get a selfie.

When you're exploring the wilderness, it's better to be safe than to be a statistic!


Some Appalachian Superstitions

By Manda Wallace~~Banjo~~

The other day, a friend came to visit. She knocked on the back door, and my dog Miss Emmie rushed to the door barking, excited to have some company around here, I’m guessing. Miss Emmie and I are suffering from cabin fever. 

I opened the back door and welcomed my friend to come in. We had a good visit and when she went to leave she started towards the front door. I’m thinking to myself, “surely she knows she cannot go out the front door cause she came in through the back door!” Just as she grabbed for the doorknob I yelled, “No, you can’t do that”. I smiled and explained “It’s just a superstition. Bad luck to go out a different door than you come in.” Needless to say, we went out through the back door. 

These and other beliefs are deeply rooted in Appalachian folklore. If you are from these mountains, hills, and hollers you were more than likely raised up on some superstitions and probably were taught to apply them in your life. 

Do you own an Apple tree? Remember to leave a single apple hanging from the tree at the end of the harvest, lest you attract the Devil. Pass a cemetery and you might wanna hold your breath, to avoid inhaling the soul of someone whose body was recently interred. If a rooster crows at a burial, the one who’s buried is a sinner. Don’t forget that when a person dies in a home, open a door for their spirit to pass. 

As you carry the body out of the house (feet forward, of course), don’t be surprised if a gust of wind hits as you step out. Appalachian death superstitions have it that a mighty wind will appear to escort the soul and help it on its way. If you touch a dead person, you won’t dream of them. If a picture falls off the wall for no reason, someone will die (or the house is haunted). Death comes in threes. If the person is dead because of a murder, you can use the body as a witness. It works like this – have the accused person touch the fatal wound on the body. If it suddenly bleeds, then you have found your murderer. 

When it comes to taking a family photo with two of your cousins, try to be the one on either side. When you have a picture of exactly three people, the one in the middle is going to die first. It doesn’t say how much longer the two on either side will live beyond that, so you might want to avoid any road trips with them for a while. If I were a rabbit hunter, I’d wait until the sun rose a little high in the sky cause unhappiness will hang over the day of those who encounter a hare or rabbit before sunrise. 

An owl seen during the day or looking into a window is known as an omen foretelling early death; the ringing of an unattended church bell forewarns that someone in the parish will die, and the presence of a bat in a home means its occupants will have no choice but to leave soon, let alone one of them die. 

In the early days in these parts, midwives from Scotland were said to give a newborn a pinch of ash while breastfeeding for the first time to give infants lifelong protection against witchcraft, and Irish immigrants were known to spit on their babies to bring good luck. 

Another notion was that leaving washed diapers on a clothesline overnight could attract evil forces. Dream of a baby, someone you know will die. If a baby is born with a “veil,” he or she will have the gift of prophecy. If a pregnant woman is scared by something, the baby will have a birthmark shaped by what scared her. Here in Appalachia, many superstitions suggested that hair should be cut on a particular day and never after sundown. Disposal of hair was also important; many believed it was to be burned. Hair was/is sacred and could be used against you. 

If a bird used your hair to create or add to its nest, lore implied that you would be stricken with headaches. The tighter the nest was weaved the worse off you could be. One granny tale suggests that if a child is ailing with asthma, you must drill a hole in a black oak or sourwood tree just above the head of the victim, and put a lock of his/her hair in the hole sealing it with wax afterward. 

Once the child is taller than this spot, they will be cured. This tale also warned caretakers to be sure not to cut down the tree — I’ll leave the result of that to the imagination. Oh and don’t ever place your shoes on a bed cause if you put shoes on the bed, it heralds death for someone close to you. 

Never take an old broom to a new house – old energy and dirt will follow. Salt placed in four corners and all window sills of the house will keep out evil. It’s bad luck to sweep dirt out your door. If your second toe is longer than your big toe, you will rule your partner. A woman has more ribs than a man (think Adam and Eve.) When an eyelash falls out, pinch it lightly between your thumb and forefinger, then make a wish and blow. If it sticks, the wish will come true. 

The seventh daughter of the seventh daughter or the seventh son of the seventh son will be a healer, fortune teller, preacher, or prophet. Rubbing the head of a person with red hair is good luck (come see me all my red-headed friends!). 

If you recite this verse, it stops bleeding: “And when I passed by thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea, I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live. ”Ezekiel 16:6 – King James Version (KJV) 

To cure a headache, apply brown paper soaked in vinegar to the head. To cure thrush, take a child to a person who’s never seen his/her father. That person will blow breath in the child’s face three times for three days, and the thrush will disappear. Brown eggs are better and more nutritious than white eggs* 

Put a spoon in your mouth while chopping onions to prevent crying. 

And one last superstition, Lavender only grows for strong women. When our ancestors arrived in these spooky and sometimes dark mountains, they found many new things. These people believed that everything mysterious was the work of a spirit or of the devil.

They didn’t have the science and technology we do today to explain things. These mysterious things, coupled with their fears gave way to practices and chants as a way of self-protection from the unknown. I am a spiritual person, but honestly, being raised with some of these so deeply rooted in me that, well, let’s just say, “Better off safe than sorry”. I’m still going to cross an “X” on my car’s windshield if’n a Black Cat crosses in front of me!

*Editor’s note, contemporary science has shown this to be not true.

Appalachian Folklore and Tales