Episode 3: Beltane - The Fire That Has to Be Earned
In this episode I go looking for Beltane not in its ancient origins (which are thinner and more contested than we might wish) but in the folklore of the British Isles, where May Day left its deepest and most vivid impressions. Three stories, from three different parts of Britain: the 'Obby 'Oss of Padstow in Cornwall, the sacred fire-kindling traditions of Scotland, and the mock battle of Summer and Winter from Wales.
Each tradition has its own character and mood. But the longer I spent with them, the more clearly I could see the same insistence running beneath all three — that the turning of the year asks something of us. That summer has to be sung in, earned, fought for.
A note on sources and honesty
The folklore in this episode is real, but its age is not always what it might appear. The 'Obby 'Oss tradition in Padstow is documented from 1803, and the earliest written evidence does not predate the eighteenth century, though it clearly draws on older currents of May Day custom. The connection to Beltane is plausible rather than proven. The Scottish fire-kindling traditions come from seventeenth-century accounts rather than ancient records. The Welsh Summer and Winter battle is similarly early modern in its documented forms.
This matters, not to diminish the stories, but to respect them. Folklore does not need to be ancient to be powerful or meaningful. These traditions have their own integrity without requiring us to project them back into a past we cannot see clearly. Where I have told them, I have tried to tell what is there rather than what might be wished for.
The 'Obby 'Oss, Padstow, Cornwall
Padstow's May Day celebration is one of the most atmospheric folk customs in Britain, and one of the few that remains genuinely communal rather than performed for visitors. The Night Song begins at midnight on April 30th outside the Golden Lion Inn. The two Osses: the Old Oss and the Blue Ribbon Oss, process through the town all day on May 1st, each led by a Teaser in white, accompanied by accordions and drums, and surrounded by crowds singing the May Song.
Historian Ronald Hutton described the 'Obby 'Oss as "one of the most famous and most dramatic folk customs of modern Britain" and "a tremendous reaffirmation of communal pride and solidarity."
For more: the unofficial Padstow Obby Oss site at padstowobbyoss.wordpress.com [http://padstowobbyoss.wordpress.com/] has photographs, videos, and recordings of the May Song. The Wikipedia article on the festival is also unusually thorough and balanced: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%27Obby_%27Oss_festival [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%27Obby_%27Oss_festival]
The Beltane fires, Scotland
The Scottish fire-kindling traditions described in this episode are drawn primarily from seventeenth and eighteenth-century accounts, collected and examined in detail by Ronald Hutton in The Stations of the Sun. The requirement that the men kindling the fire be morally upright, the nine sacred trees, the use of agaric fungus, the twin fires and the driving of cattle between them; all of these appear in historical sources from this period, though their deeper roots are impossible to trace with certainty.
Summer and Winter, Wales
The mock battle tradition described in this episode appears in several Welsh sources from the early modern period, and is discussed by Ronald Hutton among others. The two captains, their armies, the ritual weapons, Summer's inevitable victory and the crowning of the May King and Queen, these details are well attested in the historical record, even if the tradition's ultimate origins remain uncertain.
Further reading
Ronald Hutton, The Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain (Oxford University Press, 1996) — the essential starting point for anyone wanting to go deeper into British seasonal customs, approached with genuine scholarly rigour.
The Folklore Society — the UK's principal organisation for the study of folklore, with a journal and archive reaching back to 1878: folklore-society.com [http://folklore-society.com/]
Original Music: Rise Up, The May. (© Rowan Lund 2026)