Tina Georgitsis's Blog, page 7
March 18, 2023
Hekate Devotion: Mabon/Autumn Equinox
Mabon or the Autumnal Equinox is the second harvest festival in the Southern Hemisphere calendar which is a vernal equinox meaning the hours of the day and night are approximately the same length. This year it falls on the 21st of March at 7.24am. Mabon is named after the god of the same name in Welsh mythology but its a modern adaptation from the 1970’s. Other gods such as Pamona, the Green Man, Bachus, Dionysus, Artemis, Carpo, Hestia, Persephone, Demeter and Hekate can all be honoured during this time of year.
My mother was a wildcrafter and I have very distinct memories of her taking me foraging during this time of year. We would forage for various herbs, plants, nuts and flowers. The area I grew up in was surrounded by farmland and so there was a plethora of nature’s gifts to be found and used. On occasion we would also take day trips to forage seasonally.
I like to take long walks and see the changing of the leaves (yes I am one of those people) and I do this locally as well as around my beautiful state. I also go out foraging during this time of year and I have engaged in various foraging expeditions and would recommend the following books for those living in Melbourne (Victoria, Australia) to assist you as you need to be VERY careful with what you collect and use (and if in doubt leave it be and don’t risk poisoning yourself):
The Weed Forager’s Handbook: A Guide to Edible and Medicinal Weeds in Australia by Adam Grubb and Annie Raser Rowland.Wild Food Plants of Australia Paperback by Tim Low.
I feel that Demeter resonates with this time of the year. This is the time when Demeter withdraws her creative powers from the earth as Persephone descends into the underworld. I also feel that Hekate also resonates with this time of year especially since its a liminal time – a day of equal day and night and Hekate’s ability to dwell within those times.
I personally like to honour Demeter as well as Hekate during this time and make offerings of wine, grapes, bread, grains: corn, oats and barley, nuts, acorns, apples, pomegranates, onions, poppies, mushrooms, dandelions, nettles, marrow, chickweed, black berries, oak leaves, vine leaves and herbal teas.
I also like to cook with seasonal foods and for Hekate and Demeter I like to bake and offer Cheese Garlic and Thyme Bread , Garlic and Saffron Risotto (I substitute the rice for barley and the butter for Nuttlex) and Apple Tea Cake (I substitute milk with soy/almond/oat milk and butter with Nuttlex).
Some things you can do yourself to honour and mark the Mabon/Autumn Equinox can be:
Rituals and spells involving balance within or outside of yourself such as removing an addiction and replacing it with a healthy lifestyle change.Rituals and spells involving mourning something lost – to be able to better accept this loss.
Honouring the dual nature of life and accepting its beauty. This includes honouring the darkness and the light as both are equally as important.
Prepare food for the God/s you honour during this time and thank them for their gifts.
Cleanse and purify your home and garden.
Gardening such as blessing and sowing autumnal seeds specific to your region and/or fertilising and turning the earth.
Go foraging with friends (ensuring you are very careful and don’t collect anything poisonous or which has been sprayed with chemicals) or alternatively book a local guided wild forager tour (such as mushroom or herbs/plants) or go apple picking at a local orchard.
Like Demeter go for a wander – take a long walk in the woods or somewhere where you feel close to the gods and spirits of your local land.
As is my style, I like to craft during this time of year making abundance pouches which I fill with various items which symbolises abundance to me, along with cleansing washes, blessing oils, and seasonal God/dess incense.
I would like to share with you a Hekate Incense I came up with which I love and resonates with this time of year and which I urge you to try your hand at making:
Hekate’s Autumnal Incense by Setjtaset1 Part Dehydrated (or oven dried) Apple Peel
1 Part Dehydrated (or oven dried) Pomegranate Peel
1 Part Pine Resin
1-3 Sprinkle of Cinnamon (or crushed cinnamon stick).
Since I love to perform rituals to honour Hekate, I like to mark the date with a ritual in her name. Here is a hymn I wrote to Demeter and Hekate for my devotional rites which I would also like to share with you:
Autumnal Hymn to Demeter and Hekate by Setjataset“Great Goddess Demeter
I thank you for your bounty
You who separates the chaff from the grain
I pray to you so that my life be full of boons
Madam of the Sacred Law
Encourage and protect me as I work its mysteries“
“Great Goddess Hekate
I thank you for your guidance
You who perceives the cycles of life and death
I pray to you so that my life be full of blessings
Madam of Magick
Encourage and protect me as I walk its path”
So work your magick this equinox and engage in some activities which can bring you in closer connection to your Gods and the cycle of the earth.
(c) T. Georgitsis 2021
March 12, 2023
Temple of Boom: Parthenon Reimagined
The Temple of Boom, at the National Gallery of Victoria is an art installation which is a reimagining of the Greek Parthenon on the Acropolis in Athens. Temple of Boom is so named after the vibrations of music. The Temple of Boom is currently located on the ground floor in the back gardens of the gallery until the 1st of October 2023 and entry is free.
The Temple of Boom consists of artwork collaborations from local artists which evolved over the summer with the layering of their contributions over the existing building replica. This interactive piece encourages viewers to ponder time and how it affects architecture and its evolving identity through perspective whilst acknowledging the Parthenon as a beacon of cultural and architectural significance.
The Parthenon situated on the Acropolis in Athens Greece was built as a temple to the Goddess Athena. It is an iconic form and an architectural symbol of Greece for hundreds of years. It took 15 years to build in 447BC and was designed by Iktinos and Kallikrates and stood for thousands of years until various natural and man made disruptions ruptured its structure.
I have visited the Parthenon numerous times. Several times when I visited and lived in Greece as child, teen and then as an adult and each time I found it as breathtaking and awe inspiring as the first.
As a Greek Australian I love that the NGV have created the Temple of Boom which I visited recently and was struck by its beauty of modern interpretation and classic inspiration.
Athena is a Goddess which has special significance in my life due to my magic practising mother being especially enamoured by Her and wearing Her pendant throughout her life in a talismanic way. I have inherited this pendant and any mention of Athena connects me to my mother in a very deep and profound way. Walking around and through the Temple of Boom evoked memories of my mother and workings conducted in Athena’s name. I paused to take a moment and offer a silent prayer in connected complementation to Athena:
Homeric Hymn 11 To Athena
I begin to sing of Pallas Athena,
the dread Protectress of the city,
who with Ares looks after matters of war,
the plundering of cities,
the battle-cry and the fray.
It is She who protects the people,
wherever they might come or go.
Hail, Goddess,
and give us good spirits and blessed favor!
If you get the chance to visit The Temple of Boom I would highly recommend it. Although it’s a reimagined interpretation I feel art like ancient architecture holds vibrations of magick which can elicit connection to the Gods.
Blessings
Setjataset
(C) T. Georgitsis 2023
March 5, 2023
Greek Folk Magick: Food Craft Grimoire
My mother who practiced magick was heavily influenced by the hearth where many of her lessons took place. Both when she was dispensing the knowledge as well as partaking of them herself. It is where I was taught how to make many traditional Greek village recipes – for daily consumption, festivals, special occasions and as offerings to the ancestors. I would watch my mother for hours toiling over recipes where she would make me repeat and recite specific instructions, enabling me to memorise the little intricacies of her creations which made them unique.
In my family, many Greek recipes have been passed down throughout the years. Many were passed down orally, as their secrets were preserved in their minds – not on paper. However due to me wanting to keep them from vanishing, due to the passages of time, I started keeping a recipe book which I consider a food crafting grimoire aka my book of recipes. To this collection of recipes, I have also added my own creations which I have made in honour of my Gods, Spirits and Ancestors for various festivals, moon and seasonal cycles as well as specific magical workings.
For me, I personally feel a recipe book is a type of magical grimoire. Recipes like magic take preparation and certain steps are involved in executing them to fruition. Recipes like spells can be forgotten if they aren’t passed on or shared with others and due to not wanting to lose them, I ensure I write down detailed notes on said recipes within my food craft grimoire and on occasion share them with others.
Creating a food crafting grimoire is as easy as keeping a notebook and pen in the kitchen, where you can note down successful recipes you have connected with. Personally I keep both a handwritten note book with my recipes as well as a display book where I add my typed out recipes which I have printed out. I find it useful to make adjustments to recipe instructions by way of making handwritten notes when the need arises. I’m always fine tuning recipes, therefore keeping a good crafting grimoire is a a good way to keep track of what works and what doesn’t. Also these grimoires have been created with sections indexed for easily sourcing specific recipes, as well as both being decorated to reflect my own personal style. Today it’s also quite simple to create a virtual food craft grimoire using tools from blogs to software programs which can be viewed on electronic devices and then printed, filed or transformed into hard copy bound copies, which I have also done.
I like to magically add a little energetic charge to my food crafting grimoire by reciting a magical blessing for it. I created this blessing using the elements and the things I use in the kitchen, which also resonate with these elements. This blessing can be used on a Full, New or Waxing moon or on a harvest focused sabbath.
You can also evoke a God or ancestor such as Hestia who rules over the hearth, Circe who was well skilled in the transformational culinary arts or Hekate whom you can make regular offerings to on her Deipnon and Noumenia in the form of the recipes you have made. Alternatively you can substitute one of your patron God/dess before the magickal working below on their shrine or altar.
Food Crafting Grimoire Blessing by Setjataset
Preparation
Your magickal space should be created and placed on a dedicated shrine or working altar and should include:
Note Book embellished with your own decorations to reflect your styleRock SaltOlive OilRose or Orange WaterBundle of Herbs
Magical Working
Take some salt and sprinkle it over your book in a circle and say:
“Protect this grimoire and ground it in the energies of sustenance, healing and prosperity”
Take some olive oil with your index finger and draw circle over your book and say:
“Energise this grimoire and may it fan the flames of creativity within my heart and hearth”
Take some rose or orange water and with your index finger and draw circle over your book and say:
“Purify this grimoire and may it bless the recipes and those who work with its words of wisdom”
Take a bundle of your favourite herbs and draw a circle over your book and say:
“Inspire this grimoire to create the desire to manifest my ideas into reality”
Place your hands up to the sky and then make a sweeping motion down onto your book and lean down and blow a breath over it and say:
“I imbue this grimoire with the blessings of my ancestors and deity – may it always bring health, happiness and wholeness to those who peruse and partake from its pages”
After the Blessing
Place the grimoire in your kitchen with a writing instrument to add or make notes whenever your are preparing recipes for offerings or festival, seasonal, moon or magickal celebrations.
In her name
Setjataset
(C) T. Georgitsis 2013, Updated 2022
February 25, 2023
Etsy Store: Devotional Jewellery
I’m beading devotional jewellery again but this time instead of taking commissions, I’m making unique pieces for specific Gods in the Hellenic and Kemetic pantheon which I’m devoted to.
These pieces will be made from crystal, silver, shell, wood, glass and brass beads which have been meticulously picked due to their pure and high quality.
They will be created, consecrated and devoted in a ritualistic sacred space to their namesakes.
These beaded necklaces can be used to connect to the Gods they are dedicated to via ritual, spell work, meditation or by simply adorning yourself or your shrines, altars or statues with them.
They will be listed in my Etsy store:
February 17, 2023
Super New Moon Magick: 20th February 2023
What, When and Why of the Super New Moon
We have a Super New Moon coming up on the 20th February 2023 at 6.05pm.
A Supermoon is a New or a Full moon which coincides with the closest distance to the earth in its orbit. This means the moon appears larger than usual from the perspective from earth.
Magick of the Super New Moon
This Super New Moon falls in the astrological sign of Pisces therefore the energies heightened during this time is the Pisces star sign.
Pisces is a Water sign which is ruled by Neptune/Jupiter. It is a sign which can appear to have its attention divided between fantasy and reality. Pisces have emotions which are sensitive yet aware with certain grace. This sign is full of creative imagination who are devoted and tender.
The kind of magick you can perform during the Super New Moon:
1. Cast spells for supercharged effects.
2. Create some magickal crafts.
3. Charge your magickal items.
4. Clean and cleanse your shrine/altar.
5. Leave new offerings on your shrine/altar.
6. Plan things for the future.
7. Set specific goals to manifest.
8. Focus on bringing things you want into your life.
9. Perform a divination.
10. Dream and love magick.
11. Workings which focus on desires becoming reality.
12. Creativity involving the imagination.
13. Hold a rite in honour of a Moon God/dess such as Hekate.
Sorcery of the Super New Moon
This Super New Moon in *Pisces is all about spirituality which is reborn, renewed or awakened. It is full of new possibilities filled with beauty and an ideal time to open or charge your psychic abilities.
Below I have outlined a ritual you can perform in any tradition you resonate to, with the guidance of Hekate which works with the energies of this moon:
Super New Moon Rite by Setjataset
Preparation
Chose a liminal time and place for the ritual to be set, preferably around sunset.
Purify body by showering.
Your magickal space should be created and placed on a shrine or working altar and should include:
A dried bay leaf,A bowl of Khernips (ocean water or purified water with salt is best),A ritual oil such as a New Moon blend, Pisces blend, Hekate blend or pure essential oil such as lavender, mugwort, rose, sandalwood or even extra virgin olive oil or almond oil,A candle (preferably bees wax but any will do especially in green),A honey or sugar offering to Hekate,A coin; and An image/statue of Hekate.Welcoming and Opening
Open sacred space or the shrine/altar and welcome Hekate by simply calling to her or reciting a hymn, poem or evocation in her name.
Light your bay leaf and waft over sacred space.
Sprinkle purified khernips over sacred space.
Offer Hekate some honey or sugar which has been sprinkled over a coin.
Magical Working
On a piece of paper write down some things which are hidden you want answers to. On the back of the paper write down some dreams you have which you want to bring into the real world.
Take your divination method whether it be a scrying bowl/mirror, tarot cards, crystal ball, dice, pendulum, runes etc and place it in the centre of your sacred space and sprinkle some barley seeds around and on it and say:
Let it be purified!
Light the candle and hold it over your divination method and say:
Let it be illuminated!
Blow on your divination method and say:
Let it be charged!
Now use your divination method asking the questions you have and taking any notes after performing said divination method.
After this is done take the paper with your questions and over them say:
“Whilst I sleep I seek clarity
Hekate I ask you to help me see
Bring me dreams of purpose
Hekate I do this in your service
Disarm any nightmares which come
Hekate to your protection I succumb”
Now flip the paper over showing the dreams you want to bring into reality and over them say:
“Hekate help me with premonition
Manifesting my higher intuition
Hekate use your skilled labour
To bend reality to my favour
Hekate with your potent magickal capacity
Bring my fantasy into worldly reality”
Take the paper and fold it three times.
Next anoint the paper with a circle going around its circumference 3 times with the oil.
Take the coin and in the middle of the circle tap the coin 3 times allowing some sugar or honey to fall onto paper.
Thanks and Closing
Thank Hekate and close sacred space or the shrine/altar.
Ritual is now complete and any grounding work can take place. I would suggest a swim if the weather permits or ritually washing your head, hands and feet.
After the Ritual
Place the paper under your pillow overnight to gain further insights in dreams during your sleep. When you wake, place the paper in your journal or in a place for self-keeping to reflect on at a later date.
Bury the coin in your garden beneath or before a favoured tree, plant or herb or alternatively in a potted plant in your home.
In her name
Setjataset
(C) T. Georgitsis 2023
February 1, 2023
Hekate Devotion: Lammas/Lughnasadh
Lammas or Lughnasadh is the first autumn festival in the Southern Hemisphere calendar. Gods such as Lugh, Mercury, Dagon, Demeter, Ceridwen, Ceres, Brigid and Dionysus can be honoured during this time of year. Historically it’s a Celtic festival which celebrates the First Harvest of the Fruits such as apples, grapes, tomatoes, peaches, plums but also celebrates the harvest of the first grain, wheat, oats and corn. Therefore traditionally the fruit gathered is made into preserves and the grains and corn made into bread or cakes.
I was introduced to this festival when I studied Wicca back in my teens and then was exposed to a celebration of it when I was in my first Wiccan coven in my early 20’s. We would make corn dollies, bread and cakes and share it with one another.
I grew up with an immigrant Greek family and during this time of year they would make large stores of Passata due to it being used so often in their cooking. My father also made home-made moonshine using whatever was abundant and in season as well as his own wine and beer. My mother made Pita from home grown spinach and/or horta (wild grass) and fennel, stuffed vine leaves and also various Greek shortbreads and cakes. They would both share what they made with family and friends as it was common practice where they grew up and brought that tradition here to Australia when they immigrated.
These days I continue a version of their traditions as I infuse store bought wine with homegrown Greek herbs, make passata from the tomatoes out of my garden, as well as bake traditional Greek village bread and Greek biscuits using organic ingredients. I have also used this time for years to make plum jam from my garden’s Victorian heirloom organic plums (due to the trees originally being part of a farm in the area before it was sub-divided into housing). These items created from the seasonal harvest are offered to my Gods, Ancestors and loved ones where appropriate.
Due to been heavily influenced by the way I was raised, my rituals are a mix of honouring my personal Gods, ancestors and also honouring the land I live on. I see this as a perfect blend of personal devotion as someone who works with the Gods, local spirits and venerates her ancestors in a modern way. I don’t have any strong connection to the God Lugh, typically honoured during this time of year, so I personally use it as a harvest festival and honour my household Gods: Hekate with a libation set aside to Hestia. Other Gods which I have honoured during his time include Persephone, Demeter, Mercury and Apollo.
If like me if you honour any of the above Gods, you can make Greek shortbread or cheesecake for Hekate, pomegranate infused cakes or salads for Persephone, honey or sesame biscuits for Demeter, home-made wine for Mercury and home-made beer for Apollo.
It’s also a good time to make and dedicate devotional items you have crafted yourself over the summer. I tend to make and dedicate items to specific Gods utilising items from my garden due to it resonating with the vibe of the season and festival. Growing a lot of herbs, the ones which are in season, I collect preserve and store them for future use in Hekate’s name for various magical purposes. I also collect resin, bark, leaves and branches from some of my trees to be used in items such as incense, waters, oils and magical tools.
I feel magically used crafts such as candles and incense are perfect to infuse with the energies of the season especially if we are able to harness these energies and channel them into the items. I also tend to make preserves which I use in offerings thorough the remainder of the year
Also I personally feel that it is a good time to acknowledge the ancestors and leave them some food offerings as a form of ancestor veneration. I usually leave some food they liked in life such as kalamata olives, feta, stuffed vine leaves my mother taught me to make along with some Greek coffee which I can scry and divine with.
So even though the Hekate and Ancestral traditions of spirituality and magick I work, doesn’t sound like it fits exactly within the Lammas/Lughnasadh festival – I make it work for me and you can too as the most important thing I feel is devotion and dedication to your path whatever form that takes.
Seasonal Planting Guide:
Vegetables such as beans, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, fennel, kale, leek, lettuce, potato, silverbeet, spring onion, sweet corn, brussel sprouts, beetroot, carrot, parsnip, radish, rocket and mustard greens.
Herbs such as basil, sage, oregano, chives, parsley and thyme.
Flowers such as ageratum, alyssum, cleome, cyclamen, French marigold, gypsophila, Iceland poppy, lobelia, lupin, nigella, pansy, polyanthus, primula and verbena.
Some things you can do to honour and mark this time of year in your personal practice (or with a group of likeminded individuals) can be:
Feast with loved ones. Make food usually consumed during this time and partake or share with loved ones, as well as leave as offerings to your gods or gods of the season, land spirits and ancestors. It’s the perfect time for baking and anything which can be shared and is seasonal.Bake bread and offer the first loaf to the Gods of the season. You can also take a loaf and cut it into quarters and place those quarters in each corner of your residence to bring good luck and prosperity.
Harvest herbs, flowers, plants, fruits and vegetables and create a shrine or altar in celebration of the season.
Rituals or spells involving gratitude, abundance, prosperity, luck and work.
Trade or swap handmade items with loved ones.
Make corn dollies or garlands of flowers or herbs.
Dance or drum to raise energy and direct it into the earth.
Write poetry or creative writing which could contain themes of the time of year.
Visit a holy well and make offerings of flowers, cloth or coins and then circle the well clockwise for health and wealth blessings from the Gods.
Leave grain and seeds which are safe for local birds and wildlife as offerings.
Spend some time tending to your garden or indoor pots.
Light a sacred fire in your fireplace or a bonfire in your backyard.
Revamp your shrine or altar with the colours of the festival (Orange, Red, Yellow, Gold, Brown and Bronze) and adorn it with wheat, corn, applies and produce of the season (herbs, fruits, flowers and vegetables).
So work your magick this festive season, honour and celebrate the harvest and ask for what you want to be prosperous, abundant and full of good fortune in your life.
(C) T. Georgitsis 2023
January 29, 2023
Isian News: Issue #187, Brigantia 2023
In the latest issue of Isian News by the Fellowship of Isis, features a piece by me called “Apollo – My Seer God“ describes who he is, what he does, his myths, symbols, sacred places, sacred days, festivals and offerings.
For your FREE copy follow this link:
brigantia-2023DownloadJanuary 15, 2023
2023 Sabbat Dates: Southern Hemisphere
I like to honour my Gods and Ancestors during the astrological sabbat dates.
Below I have detailed the astrological sabbat dates for the Southern Hemisphere for 2023 with a brief description of what it symbolises:
Lughnasadh/LammasFebruary 4 2023
12.27pmFirst autumn harvest festival.Mabon/
Autumnal EquinoxMarch 21 2023
7.24amDay and night have same length. Days get shorter.SamhainMay 6 2023
4.13amVeil between worlds thinnest.Yule/
Winter SolsticeJune 22 2023
12.58amDay has the longest night. Sun is at its lowest elevation in the sky.ImbolcAugust 8 2023
4.21amMarks the beginning of spring.Ostara/
Spring EquinoxSeptember 23 2023
2.50pmDay and night have same length. Days get longer.BeltaneNovember 8 2023 2.18amHalfway point between spring and summer. Fertility festival.Litha/
Summer SolsticeDecember 22 2023 1.27pmDay has the longest daylight. Sun travels the longest path through the sky.
All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST) – add 1 hour for Daylight Savings Time when applicable.
(C) T. Georgitsis 2023
January 3, 2023
Special Moons of 2023
Moon magick is a practice I strongly resonate with. I love to create and venerate with the various phases of moon. I love to engage in the moon’s ebbs and flows where I can move with the energies and enact rites with and for my Gods and Ancestors. Regardless of what path I practice, regardless of what sorcery I perform, the moon is my guide through it all – a guiding presence for my workings.
This year we have various unique moons coming up where you can practice your full and new moon rituals and spell-work with added punch due to the added significance of these moons. There are different types of magick you can create during these various significant moon phases which can assist you with your practice.
Listed below I have created various pages explaining the different moons and what magick you can practice in the associated links:
Micro Full Moon: 7th January 2023 – Micro Moon Magick
Super New Moon: 22nd January 2023 – Super Moon Magick
Micro Full Moon: 6th February 2023 – Micro Moon Magick
Super New Moon: 20th February 2023 – Super Moon Magick
Lunar Eclipse: 6th May 2023 – Lunar Eclipse Magick
Black Moon: 20th May 2023 – Black Moon Magick
Super Full Moon: 2nd August 2023 – Super Moon Magick
Micro New Moon: 16th August 2023 – Micro Moon Magick
Blue Moon: 31st August 2023 – Blue Moon Magick
Super Full Moon: 31st August 2023 – Super Moon Magick
Lunar Eclipse: 29th October 2023 – Lunar Eclipse Magick
(C) T. Georgitsis 2023
January 2, 2023
2023 Moon Phases: Southern Hemisphere
As a magical practitioner I like to work with the phases of the moon. I find these useful for various rituals, devotionals, spells and other magical workings.
Some magickal workings which can be conducted on the following moon phases:
Full Moon (Psychic & Manifestation)
Waxing Moon (Invoking/Bringing In)
Wanning Moon (Banishing/Pushing Out)
New Moon (Psychic & Invoking)
Dark Moon (Banishing & Divination)
Moon Phases in Australia (EST) for 2023:
New MoonWaxing Moon
Full Moon
Waning Moon
7 Jan
10:07am
15 Jan
1:10pm
22 Jan
7:53am
29 Jan
2:18am
6 Feb
5:28am
14 Feb
3:00am
20 Feb
6:05pm
27 Feb
7:05pm
7 Mar
11:40pm
15 Mar
1:08pm
22 Mar
4:23am
29 Mar
1:32pm
6 Apr
2:34pm
13 Apr
7:11pm
20 Apr
2:12pm
28 Apr
7:19am
6 May
3:34am
13 May
12:28am
20 May
1:53am
28 May
1:22am
4 Jun
1:41pm
11 Jun
5:31am
18 Jun
2:37pm
26 Jun
5:49pm
3 Jul
9:38pm
10 Jul
11:47am
18 Jul
4:31am
26 Jul
8:06am
2 Aug
4:31am
8 Aug
8:28pm
16 Aug
7:38pm
24 Aug
7:57pm
31 Aug
11:35am
7 Sep
8:21am
15 Sep
11:39am
23 Sep
5:31am
29 Sep
7:57pm
7 Oct
12:47am
15 Oct
4:55am
22 Oct
2:29pm
29 Oct
7:24am
5 Nov
7:36pm
13 Nov
8:27pm
20 Nov
9:49pm
27 Nov
8:16pm
5 Dec
4:49pm
13 Dec
10:32am
20 Dec
5:39am
27 Dec
11:33am
(C) T. Georgitsis 2023


