On the brightest night of the year, a woman walks into a hill that everyone else avoids — and finds a feast, a fairy King and Queen, and a workbench where small hands shape weaponsmeant for the unsuspecting. It's a story she really told, in 1662, in the Scottish parish of Auldearn — one of the most detailed witch trial confessions ever recorded, given, as far as we know, without torture. This episode follows Isobel Gowdie's testimony from the Fairy Hill to her unexplained disappearance from the historical record, travels north into the bonfires, flower crowns, and pole-dances of Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, and Danish Midsummer tradition,makes a brief stop in Gaelic Cape Breton, and closes with the real rituals — protective herbs, threshold blessings, and a few you can still try tonight — tied to the longest day of the year. Content note: this episode discusses historical witch trial testimony and execution. Light touch on detail — see the standalone content warning card for full wording and placement. SOURCES (tiered)Peer-reviewed / academic • Wilby, Emma. The Visions of Isobel Gowdie: Magic, Witchcraft and Dark Shamanism in Seventeenth-Century Scotland (2010) — and her related work, Cunningfolk andFamiliar Spirits. • Hall, Alaric. “Getting Shot of Elves: Healing, Witchcraft and Fairies in the Scottish Witchcraft Trials.” Folklore 116 (2005): 19–36. • Davidson, Thomas. “Elf-Shot Cattle.” Antiquity 30 (1956): 149–155. • Survey of Scottish Witchcraft Database, University of Edinburgh. • National Records of Scotland — Privy Council registers, July 1662. • Scottish Parliament, Petition PE1855 — pardon and memorial for those convicted under theWitchcraft Act 1563. • National Museum of Denmark — Sankt Hans Aften and bonfire tradition history. • SmithsonianMagazine, Atlas Obscura — coverage of the Witches of Scotland campaign and the2022 formal apology. • The Copenhagen Post, The Local Denmark — reporting on Sankt Hans Aften witch-effigy tradition and its origins. • Spookyscotland.net,Willow Winsham's research blog, Hoydens & Firebrands — secondary folklore writing on Isobel Gowdie, cross-checked against academic sources above. • The Old Farmer's Almanac, The Pagan Grimoire — general Midsummer/Litha customs acrossSweden, Norway, Finland; used for cultural texture, not as primary historical authority. Website: letstalkspooky.com Email:letstalkspookypodcast@gmail.com Instagram:@letstalkspookypodcast TikTok: @letstalkspookypod Got a personal paranormalencounter, a piece of local folklore, or a Midsummer tradition from your ownfamily? Send it our way — real listener submissions may be featured in a futureepisode. Archival / institutionalRegional journalismResearched folklore resources (flagged, used forcolor/cultural detail)CONNECT