Breidablik Temple                                     &nbs
  • A Home on Midgard
    • The Gods We Serve>
      • Odin
      • Baldr
      • Ingvi Freyr
      • Freya
      • Loki
      • Hela
      • Juoksakka
  • What We Do
    • The Temple
    • Q and A Page
  • Community Involvement
    • HOW YOU CAN HELP>
      • Financial Expenditures and Disclosure
    • Temple Development Projects
  • Visiting
    • Policy for On-Site Activities
    • Policy for Runic Readings
  • The Four Keepers
    • The Keepers' Blogs
  • About Cultural Appropriation---PLEASE READ

How You Can Help

Horse-keeping is an expensive undertaking in the best of times, even in Kentucky horse country as this recent NPR news item illustrates.  The Ancients  recognized the burden of Temple maintenance by instituting a regular fee system for their upkeep, akin to the concept of tithing.

In the modern era, we have to rely on individual commitment.  In order to be the best possible creation, monetary and material support are crucial.  As mentioned elsewhere, we do not have non-profit status but we do manage a shoestring budget and would certainly account for all contributions on request.

We welcome your donation, whether by monetary means, material goods, or sincerely tendered commitment to manual labor.  Not all labor is strenuous--sewing, errand-running, networking  are three examples of less arduous but very valuable contributions.

Donate to Breidablik Temple: a Northern Tradition Sacred Space



Our wish list,  with approximate pricing
Grass hay (no alfalfa) from Feed Warehouse , preferred provider for all our feed needs,  and a mere fifteen minutes away
$5.50-$7.00/bale , depending on first or second cutting.  We have a forty bale storage limit


Crimped oats  from Feed Warehouse
About $13.00  per 40 lb bag

(Gluckwunsch and Maple eat  this)

Beet pulp from Feed Warehouse
About $15.00 per 40 lb. bag
(all the animals eat this)

Diesel fuel for the tractor
inquire for gas station locations and prices, we have road-safe five gallon fuel receptacles  you can fill for transport


cedar or black locust fence posts
naturally rot-resistant, non-toxic, safer for the land than pressure-treated