The spleen is consistently underused in haruspic practice, yet spleenfold mechanics — the systematic reading of fold patterns and structural asymmetry — offers a reliable corroborating layer for experienced practitioners. This article examines why the technique has been overlooked and how to begin incorporating it into your readings. A working method for spleenfold assessment is included.
Month
Month: March 2025
Unreliable Organs: When the Heart Gets in the Way
The cardiac organ can overwhelm a haruspicy reading with misleading intensity, particularly under emotionally charged conditions. This guide covers how to identify when the heart is presenting unreliably, how to recentre the reading on more stable organs, and when preparation can prevent cardiac dominance from arising in the first place.
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.
Making Peace With the Food Standards Agency
The FSA was not written with entrail divination in mind, but its requirements are not incompatible with professional practice. This guide covers sourcing, premises hygiene, inspection visits, and registration — so that regulatory compliance becomes a background matter rather than an ongoing concern.
Building a Safety Case for a Grant Application
Securing grant funding for haruspicy practice depends heavily on the quality of your safety case. This guide covers risk assessment, biological and operational hazards, mitigation strategies, and how to present your documentation to funding bodies with confidence.
Dealing With Police Calmly and Respectfully
Police encounters are an occupational reality for many practising haruspices, arising most often from bystander misunderstanding rather than any genuine legal concern. This guide covers how to explain your practice clearly, what documentation to have ready, and how to handle escalation should it occur.
Licensing or the Appearance Thereof
Haruspicy is not a regulated profession in the United Kingdom, but that does not mean credentials are irrelevant. This article sets out what qualifications and memberships exist, what practitioners can legitimately claim, and the legal risks of overstating professional standing.
Working With Butchers: Contracts and Permissions
A reliable supply of organs is the practical foundation of any haruspicy practice, yet most butcher arrangements are never properly formalised. This guide covers contracts, handling standards, pricing terms, and the permissions conversation — everything needed to put the relationship on a professional footing.
Signs That May Be Considered Offensive Under Planning Law
Planning regulations govern what practitioners may display outside their premises, and the standards around amenity and public decency apply regardless of the nature of the business. This guide covers which sign content is likely to attract objection, when express consent is required, and how to respond if a complaint has been made.
How to Word Flyers Without Causing Alarm
Getting the wording right on a haruspicy flyer is less about explaining the practice and more about tone, specificity, and knowing your distribution context. This guide covers what to say, what to leave out, and how to present your services professionally across a range of settings.