You are warmly invited to sit in circle and weave and listen to story with us.
Bring your stories, your hands and your heart.
You will be guided in some simple weaving techniques, listen to sacred stories and if you like share some of your own. This gentle and grounding gathering brings people together through creativity, story and connection. You will learn to weave onto a forked stick using simple natural fibres, a symbolic act that invites connection to your own roots, heritage and a deeper sense of belonging.
During the circle you will be invited to share something of your own cultural story, a tradition you hold, a journey your family has made, or a piece of wisdom you carry. You may wish to often a poem, a song or a heartfelt truth. You will be witnessed and held in a loving co created space. Together we create a living canopy of woven stories, each stick a unique expression of memory, meaning and presence. All cultures, all voices and stories are welcome.
Sarah will share a story from her lineage, The women of the wells.
The event will be co facilitated by Daniella Hogarth and Sarah Miller
Date: Saturday 8 November 2025
Time 2.00 to 5.00 pm- Please arrive from 1.45 so we can start on time.
Please feel free to bring along any nature items you want to weave into your piece such as flowers, feathers, grasses etc. We will provide materials so this is extra materials you particularly want woven in.
Danilella Hogarth guides women to reconnect with their true selves through nature, craft and the empowering wild woman archetype. published author and energetic body practitioner she specializes in trauma release, psychic development and gut health. After eight years of cold water swimming and overcoming her fear of the sea, she helps others transforms fears into strengths through nature based learning, self enquiry and spiritual growth.
Sarah Miller is an emerging playwright, storyteller and somatic ritual artist who predominantly works with women in recreating mytho-poetic and embodied stories of transition and change. She collaborates with women to co create safe and sacred rituals and embodied processes. She initiated the storytelling by the fire collective with Liz O’Leary. Her first Ply What Lies Beneath is being performed at Melbourne Fringe Festival in October. She is deeply committed to restoring, (re storying) our deep connection to nature, to earth to Country. She acknowledges First Peoples wisdom of this Land, and her own ancestral connections across England, Scotland and Ireland.