Book Review: The Witchy Homestead - Spells, Rituals, and Remedies for Creating Magic at Home by Nikki Van De Car
Illustrations: Zoe Ingram
Genre: Mind, Body, Spirit / Religion and Spirituality
Publisher: Running Press
Release Date: 17th August, 2021
About the Author and Illustrator
Nikki Van De Car lives in Hawaii with her family. She is a blogger, writer and crafter with a love of knitting. Her previous book releases include; Practical Magic, Calming Magic, Magical Meditations, Wellness Witch and The Junior Witch’s Handbook.
The illustrator, Zoe Ingram is from Edinburgh, Scotland and her designs and illustrations have been featured on stationery, cards, magazines, book and home decor. She has a lovely artistic style. I love her use of colours and that a lot of her work features animals. Her website or instagram has some beautiful representations of the tarot cards. I’m not sure if she currently has plans to release a tarot deck, but I imagine it would be stunning.
About the Book
The blurb says...
"Whether we live on a farm or in a high-rise, we can always create a life that is entwined with the natural world. A homestead is a way of being, a life lived with the intention of returning to our roots and tapping into the essential elements of fire, water, air and earth.
The Witchy Homestead is your guide to finding, creating, and living this essential magic. Learn to build a wellspring of magical self-sufficiency and cultivate enchanted resilience through crystal rituals, simple spells, natural remedies, and more, as you hnor the eart and protect all that you have created."
The book is organised in to three parts:
- Enchanting Your Food - all about growing your own fruit, vegetables and herbs. With tips for foraging.
- Enchanting Your Health - features things that you can make: body care, face care and hair care (scrubs, creams, toners cleansers). This section also has things for colds, pain relief and sleep.
- Enchanting Your Home - bits and pieces about houseplants, house-cleaning and creating an indoor and outdoor altar.
The book is about working with the natural elements, particularly the element of earth and incorporating natural ingredients into your everyday life.
My Thoughts
Firstly, I want to address the idea that the book is not ‘hearth witch’ or ‘kitchen witch’ focused, which some people may think when talking about the witchy home.
A homestead or the term ‘homesteading’ has become popular recently. Technically, it means a house, usually a farm with land that is used for agriculture. Homesteading as an idea is about being self-sufficient; producing and preserving your own food, homemade products and living on what you can grow and produce.
It is this idea that the book is playing on, but on a much smaller scale, because everyone has different living situations, and although living on a homestead may sound nice it’s not possible for everyone.
The book brings a little of that homestead magick in to different areas of your home: the garden (growing your own fruit, vegetables and herbs), the bedroom (getting a good nights sleep), the bathroom (home-made recipes for body and hair care), and a small section on house-cleaning. Which, no matter how much I try or how nice these homemade products sound, I just can’t seem to embrace the idea of cleaning as part of my witchy practice!
I think there is a part of all of us that likes the sound of getting back to nature and the simplicity of it. The modern world is busy and chaotic. Sometimes we need to take a step back and reconnect with the earth and that’s what this book allows you to do.
The section that I appreciated the most was, 'Enchanting Your Health'. I’m really into beauty products, so it was nice to have those recipes for creating products with all natural ingredients. The book is organised in a really nice way with the ingredients you need, the recipe to follow and an illustration by Zoe.
One thing that would have been nice is to have a magickal element to the making of the products. There is the list of ingredients you need to make something, the instructions of how to put it together or create it, but I would have liked to have a spell or ritual element to it. After all it’s called 'The Witchy Homstead'. Some people may find the process of making their own products from scratch a ritual within itself, but I would incorporate a blessing or set some intentions when combining the ingredients just for an extra magickal touch.
Nikki has done this in the gardening section. There is a boundary spell and an enchantment for your garden, which were really nice witchy touches to the otherwise practical advice for testing your soil, composting and beginner herb gardens. However, like i said it would have been nice to have a little ritual or enchantment when creating the natural things through out the rest of the book.
Coming back to the idea of self-sufficiency, there are just a few things that I wanted to mention. For a lot of witches, and people in general, being self-sufficient sounds great but it’s not always possible. With a lot of the products that are featured in the book you would probably have to buy most of the ingredients to make them. Some things you may have: honey and olive oil. However for the beauty products in particular I generally don’t have coconut oil, argan oil, bees wax and shea butter in my home. And I know there are not going to be many people that keep their own bees.
It’s also important to consider the cost. I know that this will be a factor for a lot of people. The featured recipes for cleaning products include Isopropyl alcohol, which is obviously the main cleaning ingredient. However, at the moment it is quite expensive to get hold of as it is the main ingredient in hand-sanitiser, so you can imagine why it’s in demand. For a lot of people it wouldn’t really be cost-effective to make these products at home.
I did also mention that some of the recipes include bees-wax so just a note for the vegans out there that some of the recipes are not vegan friendly, but I am sure things can be substituted.
Personally, I prefer the idea of supporting small businesses. Businesses that are creating sustainable, vegan, cruelty free and all natural products. If you want to make sure you are using products that are not causing harm to the environment or to animals, products that use natural products and are sustainable then a little bit of research is all you need. A lot of homesteads do sell the products they make.
Saying all of that, I know that people will enjoy making the products at home and it might be something that you do every now and again as a spell or ritual for yourself, rather than a permanent replacement for the current products you use. Remember that using particular products themselves can be made into a spell or ritual. I know a lot of Witches out there already do bath and shower rituals for cleansing and self-care.
I was also slightly disappointed that the author hadn’t really put much about her personal craft or homestead in to the book. I just have this image of Nikki living with her family in Hawaii with her own lovely little homestead and I think I wanted a bit more of that in the book. For example: what she grows or makes at home and how she incorporates that into her craft. I think it’s always nice when authors draw on and talk about their personal craft.
The book is really beautifully illustrated and organised and it’s probably something that I will come back to occasionally when I want to incorporate a spell or ritual with a homemade product for self-care.
Final Thoughts
Overall, I think this is a really lovely book and it allows for a connection to the earth for everyone, no matter where they live. As someone who practices green witchery I know how fulfilling it is to grow your own herbs and then use them in your spells and rituals. It’s an easy way for anyone to reconnect with the earth element. If you are interested in starting that aspect of your practice then the book has some good beginner steps for that.
Similarly, the book has some nice ideas for making your own products to use and helps you consider the impact you currently have on the environment.
Remember to consider what works best for you. The homestead is about being self-sufficient, but like I mentioned, to be completely self-sufficient is not possible for everyone. Instead just think about a small change you can make or incorporate into your life. This book may give you some ideas of where to start.
Thank you to Running Press books for sending my an advanced copy of this book in exchange for a review.