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The Feral Folklorist

Podcast af Papa Gee

engelsk

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Læs mere The Feral Folklorist

The Feral Folklorist is a podcast that blends strange history, old-world witchcraft, and hands-on folk magic. Each episode explores a real haunting, folktale, or magical belief—then digs deeper into the spellcraft, superstition, and shadow work buried underneath. From witch bottles and death omens to crossroads myths and Southern curses, this show uncovers the folklore people whisper about but rarely explain.Hosted by author and folklorist Papa Gee, The Feral Folklorist combines storytelling with practical magic, revealing how ancient beliefs still shape the way we protect, hex, heal, and haunt. Whether you’re into ghost stories, rootwork, or ritual, this podcast invites you to explore the eerie, the enchanted, and everything that still smells like smoke.New episodes every other Monday.

Alle episoder

40 episoder

episode Feral Folktales: A Short Tale - The Red Shoes cover

Feral Folktales: A Short Tale - The Red Shoes

This time, I’m sharing “The Red Shoes” by Hans Christian Andersen, a dark old tale about vanity, obsession, and what happens when desire turns into punishment. Like a lot of Andersen’s stories, it reads like a fairy tale on the surface, but underneath it is much sharper and harsher than many modern retellings. What begins with a simple pair of beautiful shoes turns into a story about pride, temptation, and losing control of something that first seemed harmless. What makes this tale stand out is how severe it is. “The Red Shoes” is not just about wanting something pretty. It is about fixation, disobedience, and the old moral idea that indulgence can carry a terrible price. Even now, it remains one of Andersen’s most unsettling stories because it takes something ordinary and desirable and turns it into the source of dread. Feral Folktales are the shorter stories that appear between the full episodes of The Feral Folklorist. They’re meant to be heard the way folktales were always told: simply, spoken aloud, and carrying the quiet wisdom that kept these stories alive for generations. These bonus episodes are just a little something extra between the full installments of The Feral Folklorist, which is where you’ll find the deeper dives into history, folklore, magic, hauntings, and the stranger corners of human belief. A new folktale appears between the regular podcast releases—just a short story to keep the world of folklore moving. Want more from The Feral Folklorist? Dive deeper into each episode, explore merch, and get all the latest updates at:  https://feralfolklorist.com [https://feralfolklorist.com/] Become a patron to unlock Feral Footnotes (our exclusive after-show), get early sneak peeks, weekly folk magic articles, and downloadable spells featured in each episode: https://patreon.com/papagee [https://patreon.com/papagee] Stock up on your magical supplies from our metaphysical shop that’s been serving the public for over 25 years:  https://aromags.com [https://aromags.com/] Papa Gee's personal website, Folkloreum, showcases his books, blog, podcast information, and more: https://folkloreum.com/  [https://folkloreum.com/%20] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/papagee]

I går - 7 min
episode 24. Married in Red: Ghostly Brides and Wedding Curses cover

24. Married in Red: Ghostly Brides and Wedding Curses

Ghost brides, wedding curses, haunted bridal objects, and the old wedding customs meant to protect marriage from envy, death, bad vows, and trouble at the threshold. In this episode of The Feral Folklorist, we explore the darker side of wedding folklore: ghost brides, cursed marriages, haunted bridal objects, and the old belief that marriage was a crossing that had to be protected. From the Mistletoe Bride hidden in an old chest, to Bride’s Pool in Hong Kong, to wedding veils used against the evil eye, corpse-bride legends, forced marriages, bridal garments, rings, vows, and the strange power of objects kept from unhappy unions, this episode looks at why weddings were never treated as simple celebrations in older folk belief. A wedding could bless a house, but it could also carry grief, coercion, envy, death, or an unsettled promise through the door. These stories remind us that veils, rings, colors, charms, and warnings were not just decorations. They were ways of protecting one of life’s most dangerous crossings. ---- Want more from The Feral Folklorist? Dive deeper into each episode, explore merch, and get all the latest updates at:   https://feralfolklorist.com [https://feralfolklorist.com/] Become a patron to unlock Feral Footnotes (our exclusive after-show), get early sneak peeks, weekly folk magic articles, and downloadable spells featured in each episode: https://patreon.com/papagee [https://patreon.com/papagee] Stock up on your magical supplies from our metaphysical shop that’s been serving the public for over 25 years:   https://aromags.com [https://aromags.com/] Browse Papa Gee’s books, tarot readings, and more at:   https://folkloreum.com/  [https://folkloreum.com/%20] and be sure to checkout our new podcast if you love spooky storytelling - Feral by Night [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2615145] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/papagee]

18. maj 2026 - 39 min
episode Feral Folktales: A Short Tale - The Lion's Whisker cover

Feral Folktales: A Short Tale - The Lion's Whisker

In this episode of Feral Folktales, I’m sharing “The Lion’s Whisker,” a traditional teaching story told in several parts of Africa and later carried into folktale collections around the world. It’s the story of a woman who struggles to find peace in her home with a temperamental husband, and the unexpected advice she receives from a village elder. She tells her that if she truly wants to solve her problem, she must bring him a whisker from a living lion. What follows is not a hunt or a battle, but something quieter. The woman returns to the same place day after day, learning how to approach the lion slowly, patiently, and without fear. Over time the animal grows used to her presence, until one day she is able to take the whisker she was sent to find. When she brings it back, she learns something that never occurred to her before. Stories like this have traveled through many cultures because the truth inside them is simple and lasting. Some problems cannot be forced, and some hearts cannot be reached through authority or anger. They change the same way wild creatures do—slowly, through patience and respect. Feral Folktales are the shorter stories that appear between the full episodes of The Feral Folklorist. They’re meant to be heard the way folktales were always told: simply, spoken aloud, and carrying the quiet wisdom that kept these stories alive for generations. These bonus episodes are just a little something extra between the full installments of The Feral Folklorist, which is where you’ll find the deeper dives into history, folklore, magic, hauntings, and the stranger corners of human belief. A new folktale appears between the regular podcast releases—just a short story to keep the world of folklore moving. Want more from The Feral Folklorist? Dive deeper into each episode, explore merch, and get all the latest updates at:  https://feralfolklorist.com [https://feralfolklorist.com/] Become a patron to unlock Feral Footnotes (our exclusive after-show), get early sneak peeks, weekly folk magic articles, and downloadable spells featured in each episode: https://patreon.com/papagee [https://patreon.com/papagee] Stock up on your magical supplies from our metaphysical shop that’s been serving the public for over 25 years:  https://aromags.com [https://aromags.com/] Papa Gee's personal website, Folkloreum, showcases his books, blog, podcast information, and more: https://folkloreum.com/  [https://folkloreum.com/%20] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/papagee]

11. maj 2026 - 9 min
episode 23. The Book in the Drawer: Grimoires, Family Bibles, and Magical Spell Books cover

23. The Book in the Drawer: Grimoires, Family Bibles, and Magical Spell Books

Spell books, grimoires, family Bibles, charm books, and Books of Shadows all belong to the same old habit: writing down what people did when ordinary help ran out. In this episode, we open the drawer on the private working books people kept in kitchens, bedrooms, church pews, rootwork shops, and hidden boxes. We’ll look at family Bibles filled with names and funeral cards, old receipt books that mixed remedies with charms, printed works like The Long Lost Friend and The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, hoodoo formula books, grimoires, and the modern witch’s Book of Shadows. Then we break down how these books actually work in folk logic—why a written charm could carry authority, why a Bible might become more than a Sunday book, why grimoires made people lower their voices, and why a real working book needs more than pretty pages. These books held prayers, cures, seals, names, candle records, remedies, warnings, and the hard-earned notes people made after a working succeeded, failed, or cost more than they expected. We’ll also talk about the practical side of keeping a working book today: how to record your work honestly, how to protect private names, how to handle an inherited book, and why some pages should be marked, retired, copied, buried, or kept closed. If you’ve ever wondered why an old Bible, charm book, grimoire, or Book of Shadows can feel heavier than ordinary paper, this episode will make that feeling easier to understand. Because sometimes the most powerful thing in the house is the book nobody was supposed to open. Want more from The Feral Folklorist? Dive deeper into each episode, explore merch, and get all the latest updates at:   https://feralfolklorist.com [https://feralfolklorist.com/] Become a patron to unlock Feral Footnotes (our exclusive after-show), get early sneak peeks, weekly folk magic articles, and downloadable spells featured in each episode: https://patreon.com/papagee [https://patreon.com/papagee] Stock up on your magical supplies from our metaphysical shop that’s been serving the public for over 25 years:   https://aromags.com [https://aromags.com/] Browse Papa Gee’s books, tarot readings, and more at:   https://folkloreum.com/  [https://folkloreum.com/%20] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/papagee]

4. maj 2026 - 45 min
episode Feral Folktales: A Short Tale - The Raven Who Walked the Road cover

Feral Folktales: A Short Tale - The Raven Who Walked the Road

This time, I’m sharing “The Raven Who Walked the Road,” a folktale about old warnings, strange signs, and the danger of ignoring what people before you already knew. In stories like this, trouble does not always announce itself in some dramatic way. Sometimes it starts with a bird behaving oddly, a path that feels wrong, or a house that seems a little too prepared for your arrival. It is the kind of tale that shows how folk belief was built from watching for small things that meant something bigger. What makes this story stick is the way it brings together two old pieces of caution: do not follow what seems to be leading you, and do not eat in a place that was waiting for you before you meant to arrive. Feral Folktales is where I step aside from the main show and tell a straight folktale—simple, spoken, and exactly as it’s meant to be heard. These bonus episodes are just a little something extra between the full installments of The Feral Folklorist, which is where you’ll find the deeper dives into history, folklore, magic, hauntings, and the stranger corners of human belief. A new folktale appears between the regular podcast releases—just a short story to keep the world of folklore moving. Want more from The Feral Folklorist? Dive deeper into each episode, explore merch, and get all the latest updates at:  https://feralfolklorist.com [https://feralfolklorist.com/] Become a patron to unlock Feral Footnotes (our exclusive after-show), get early sneak peeks, weekly folk magic articles, and downloadable spells featured in each episode: https://patreon.com/papagee [https://patreon.com/papagee] Stock up on your magical supplies from our metaphysical shop that’s been serving the public for over 25 years:  https://aromags.com [https://aromags.com/] Papa Gee's personal website, Folkloreum, showcases his books, blog, podcast information, and more: https://folkloreum.com/  [https://folkloreum.com/%20] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/papagee]

27. apr. 2026 - 10 min
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En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
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