The spleen is one of haruspicy's most underused divinatory tools, particularly in crossroads readings where a client's direction is genuinely unclear. This guide covers practical interpretation techniques, how to prepare, and how to communicate splenic findings accurately and responsibly.
Why I Left the Circle of Offal
After several years of active membership, one practitioner reflects on the decision to leave the Circle of Offal. This is not a polemic — it is a practical account of what membership costs, what independence requires, and what the profession might do better.
The Forgotten Entrail Guild of Lincolnshire
The Entrail Guild of Lincolnshire was one of England's few documented regional haruspical associations, active from the early seventeenth century and known for its dual liver-and-membrane reading technique. Its decline offers practical lessons about record-keeping and the transmission of interpretive knowledge. This article examines what the historical record actually supports and what remains recoverable.
A Beginner’s Guide to Becoming a Haruspex
Starting out in haruspicy involves more than enthusiasm — it requires a solid grounding in interpretive tradition, reliable organ sourcing, and a practical working environment. This guide sets out the essentials for new practitioners approaching the discipline seriously.
The Chicken Oracle of Thessaly
The chicken oracle of Thessaly represents one of the earliest and most practically grounded traditions in haruspicatory history. Centred on avian entrail reading in ancient Greece, the Thessalian practice developed sophisticated interpretive methods around readily available materials. This article examines its structure, social role, and continuing relevance to working practitioners.
Media Misrepresentation: Correcting the Record
Mainstream coverage of haruspicy rarely gets it right. This article examines the most common patterns of misrepresentation, why they persist, and what working practitioners can do — practically and professionally — to correct them.
Weekend Workshops: Observations from Attendees
Weekend workshops remain one of the most effective routes to practical development for working haruspices. This piece examines what attendees consistently take away, where current provision falls short, and how to evaluate an event before committing your time.
Misreading the Gall: When Things Go Wrong
Gall bladder misreadings affect practitioners at every level of experience. This article examines the most common causes — from specimen condition to practitioner bias — and sets out a methodical approach to reducing interpretive error and handling uncertainty professionally.
Legal Obligations During Public Demonstrations
Public haruspicy demonstrations involve licensing, street trading rules, animal by-product regulations, and a higher risk of complaints than private practice. This guide covers the legal framework UK practitioners need to understand before working in public. Preparation is the most effective form of protection.
What the Intestines Show Us About Karma
The intestines are among the most information-rich organs available for karmic interpretation, yet they remain underused in general haruspicy practice. This guide covers layout technique, key diagnostic indicators, and how to communicate karmic findings to clients in a way that is useful rather than fatalistic.