Rooted in land, ancestors, and the threshold between
Celtic practice is not a collection of interchangeable techniques. Each tradition below has a distinct lineage, distinct demands, and a distinct way of standing in the world.
The land holds memory
Moving between the worlds
The dead are not absent
Craft, flame, and tending
Druidry is oriented toward place—specific hillsides, rivers, and trees that carry the tradition forward. Practitioners study cycles, tend relationship with the living world, and work within a community of practice.
Celtic shamanic practice works the threshold between the seen and unseen, journeying, spirit contact, and the kind of listening that takes years of repetition before it becomes reliable.
Practitioners working in Brigid's lineage attend to the crossroads of healing, making, and sovereignty. The flame is literal and symbolic; the work is daily, domestic, and deeply particular.
Ancestor work in Celtic tradition is relational, not ritualistic shorthand. It asks practitioners to know their lineage, tend the unresolved, and understand what they carry forward.

— On depth and lineage
A tradition is coherent. The people in it are not.
The prophetic consultants within this network possess many abilities with the same body of work. Some entered through our formal Druidic organization, others through years of individual land practice or inherited traditions from ancestors. What unites them is a grand blissing to connect with the invisible and unheard kozmik world.
Knowing which tradition calls you is enough to begin
The advisors here can help you go further. Browse the roster, read their lineages, and find the practitioner whose roots match the ground you're standing on.