Showing posts with label pois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pois. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 November 2025

When witches take flight: Flying Ointment

When Witches Take Flight:
Flying Ointment 



Few elements of European witchcraft are as evocative, mysterious, or misunderstood as the witches’ flying ointment—a potent salve said to allow witches to traverse the night sky, attend sabbats, commune with spirits, or leave their bodies in ecstatic trance. While flying ointments are wrapped in legend, they also have deep historical roots in herbalism, shamanic practices, and the pharmacology of baneful plants like henbane, belladonna, datura, and mandrake.


This article explores their origins, ingredients, cultural symbolism, and how they are interpreted today.

WARNING:,true flying ointment contains herbs and plants that can be very toxic and cause serious illness or even death. We do not endorse the making of or use of it. Please don’t ask us for the recipe. We will not disclose it.


The Origins of the Flying Ointment Tradition


Pre-Christian Roots


Long before the word witch existed in its later form, European shamans, cunning folk, and seers used plants to enter altered states. Archaeological and ethnobotanical evidence suggests:

henbane seeds in Iron Age ritual sites

mandrake in ancient Mediterranean magic

datura in Indo-European shamanism


These herbs facilitated dream-travel, spirit-flight, and ecstatic visions—experiences later framed as “witch-flight.”



Early Medieval Period


The earliest Christian records condemn women who believed they “rode out at night with Diana or Herodias.” These spirit-rides may reflect:

ancestral worship

trance-journeys

goddess cults

folk shamanism


Though ointments are not specifically mentioned in these earliest texts, the idea of night flight is already present.




The  Emergence of the Ointment Mythos


By the late Middle Ages and early modern period (14th–17th centuries), witchcraft accusations expanded. Scholars, inquisitors, and physicians describe ointments used to:

fly to sabbats

shapeshift

communicate with demons or spirits

enter trance


These accounts appear in the works of:

Andres Laguna

Giovanni Battista Della Porta

Paolo Grillandi

Johann Weyer


While these writers mixed genuine observations with superstition, they consistently mention similar baneful herbs.


Ingredients: The Baneful Plant Allies


Historical records often include a combination of tropane alkaloid–containing plants, all of which are powerful and toxic.


Henbane (Hyoscyamus niger)


One of the most universally cited ingredients.

Effects:

vivid hallucinations

sensations of flying or floating

trance

dreamlike dissociation

spirit-communication


Henbane’s scopolamine content produces the classic “dream-flight” sensations.


Belladonna (Atropa belladonna)


Known as deadly nightshade.

Effects:

visions, altered perception

amnesia

delirious euphoria

bodily numbness


Mandrake (Mandragora officinarum)


Surrounded by myth and folklore.

Effects:

sedation

dream enhancement

trance states


Datura (Datura stramonium)


Wildly potent.

Effects:

out-of-body experiences

hallucinations

intense, often dangerous visions


Other herbs sometimes included

Hemlock (Conium maculatum)

Aconite (Aconitum napellus)

Poppy

Ergot


Animal-fat base


Most ointments were blended into pork or goose fat, which absorbs alkaloids well.


So, How the Ointments Work


Transdermal Absorption


These alkaloids absorb through the skin, producing:

vivid hallucinations

dissociation

tactile illusions

dream-flight sensations


Application


Historical sources describe application to:

the temples

wrists

underarms

genitals

broom handles or staves


The last method connects directly to the broomstick myth, interpreted not as literal flight but as:

trance

astral travel

spirit-journeys


Female witches, according to folklore used to apply flying ointment onto their broomstick ( besom) and then sit astride it to rub their genitalia onto the ointment. The blood filled genitalia allows for a greater amount and faster delivery of the ointment into the bloodstream.  This created the folklore of witches flying through the air on broomsticks to meet each other and the devil on Sabbats.

This is why witches still have a besom today although it has many other purposes and it is highly unlikely that a modern witch would use this method of using flying ointment. 

A far less dangerous method of metaphysical travel is more often used now such as transcendental meditation.


So that is the Meaning of “Flight” in this case?


Physical vs. Spiritual Flight


Witches were not believed to be physically flying through the sky. Instead, “flight” represented:

spirit transformation

altered consciousness

hedge-crossing (moving between worlds)

mystical travel in trance

attending sabbats in dreams


This mirrors shamanic traditions globally.


What’s a Sabbat?


The nocturnal sabbat—feasting, dancing, meeting deities or spirits—may reflect:

ancestral festivals

ecstatic rites

communal dream rituals


Folklore and Demonology


Demonologists believed ointments:

summoned demons

allowed witches to shapeshift into animals

transported them to Devil’s gatherings


Folklore added:

night-flying hare witches

women riding wolves or goats

witches transforming into owls or cats


These motifs often echo ancient goddess traditions (Hecate, Artemis, Holle), who travelled with animal spirit-companions.


More on The Witch, the Broom, and the Ointment


The classic image of a witch astride a broom originates from:

a staff or broom anointed with ointment

a ritual object used in trance

ointment applied to sensitive skin during mounting

accounts distorted by inquisitors


In folklore, the broom is both:

a household tool of women

a liminal magical staff

a symbolic vehicle of spirit-flight


Modern Interpretations and Practice


Today, witches’ flying ointments fall into several categories:


1. Symbolic or Ritual Ointments


No toxic herbs—used for:

astral work

hedge-crossing

dream magic


Homeopathic-style or external-only preparations


Minimal extracts used for:

meditation

liminality


Botanical Devotion


Honouring the spirit of the baneful plants through:

altar offerings

dried herbs

artwork

incense (non-inhaled, symbolic)


Poison Path Practice


Some occult herbalists study historical flying ointments academically or ritually (without internal use). The poison path focuses on:

plant spirits

shadow work

ancestral witchcraft

transformational symbolism


Note: Modern practitioners do not ingest or apply toxic flying ointments. They are unsafe and potentially fatal.




Flying Ointments in Culture


Flying ointments have influenced:

Gothic literature

fantasy stories

horror films

contemporary witchcraft

botanical folklore


The idea remains powerful because it speaks to:

liberation

transcendence

nighttime mystery

feminine power

rebellion against authority


Witches’ flying ointments represent the meeting of magic, medicine, trance, and folklore. Though surrounded by sensationalism, they have deep roots in European herbalism and ecstatic tradition. Henbane, belladonna, and mandrake remind us of the ancient bond between humans and plants—a bond capable of healing, harming, inspiring visions, and transporting the spirit into realms beyond the ordinary.


Flying ointments are not merely potions of old witch-lore; they are symbolic gateways to the mysteries of consciousness, the shadow-self, and the wild, ecstatic side of magical tradition.