
Scorpio season runs from roughly October 22 to November 22 and is most notorious for housing the pagan festival of Samhain. Halloween originates with Samhain, celebrated on November 1. The association with death comes from the fact that the night-time hours in the Northern Hemisphere begin to outweigh the daylight hours at this time of year.
Scorpio Season Meaning
The Sun gets lower in the sky day by day. The nights are drawing in. There will be a celebration of the harvest that will see us through the long, cold winter months. But if the harvest was bad, then you could starve to death. So this time of year was very much about life and death. It’s no wonder the sign of Scorpio is associated with sorcery, death, and transformation. Most of what applies to this time of the year is covered in the spiritual meaning of Halloween.
The Body and the Humors
In medical astrology, Scorpio rules the reproductive organs, bladder, colon, and lower intestines — the parts of the body responsible for elimination, regeneration, and rebirth. It governs processes of purification, sexual vitality, and hormonal balance. These systems embody Scorpio’s essential nature: to purge the old and renew from within.
In humoral theory, Scorpio corresponds to the melancholic humor — cold and dry, dominated by black bile — which promotes depth, seriousness, and introspection. Yet Scorpio’s ruler Mars brings hidden heat and intensity beneath the cool exterior. This is the body’s and psyche’s descent into its own depths, where unseen processes of renewal take place.
The Season in Nature
Between late October and late November, the Northern Hemisphere experiences the final act of autumn. The trees shed their last leaves, revealing their skeletons against grey skies. Frost begins to touch the mornings; mushrooms and fungi bloom, thriving on decay and returning nutrients to the soil. The wind grows colder, the earth damp, the nights longer and quieter. Animals retreat into hibernation, while humans once gathered to preserve and ferment the year’s harvest — acts of transformation through decay that echo Scorpio’s symbolic realm.
This is a fixed water season: cold, moist, and inward-turning. Circulation in both nature and body slows. The energy draws deep within, preparing for winter’s stillness. Warmth, spice, and movement — the touch of Mars — balance the season’s cold depth, just as firelight and fermented foods sustain the spirit and the gut alike.
Scorpio Crystals & Colours
Crystals that resonate well with Scorpio energy are stones associated with Mars but also the element of water. Scorpio crystals include Snakeskin Agate, Bloodstone, Garnet, Ruby, Aquamarine, Malachite, Tourmaline, Obsidian, and Peridot.
Scorpio’s Mars energy is more refined and concealed than that of Aries. The raw, impulsive fire of Aries is transformed into emotional power, passion, and strategy in Scorpio. The red of Mars becomes darker, cooler, and deeper — mahogany, burgundy, crimson, and blood red. Black, dark blue, and graphite grey also belong to Scorpio’s palette, reflecting its mysteries and depths.
Scorpio Herbs & Flowers
Scorpio carries a fermented and spicy energy, so scents such as allspice, ginger, myrrh, patchouli, clove, and cumin appeal to its nature. Herbs, fruits, and flowers under Scorpio’s domain include Pomegranate, Anemone, Ivy, Valerian, Basil, Blackberry, Heather, Lily, and Geranium.
Scorpio’s mythic figures are the gods and goddesses of the underworld and regeneration: Ereshkigal, Hekate[1], Isis[2], Persephone[3], Anubis, Mars, Osiris, Set, and Pluto[4] — deities who rule transformation, descent, and rebirth.
Christian Feasts and Saints of the Season
While Scorpio season is steeped in ancient pagan imagery, its essence carries forward into the Christian calendar. The period opens with All Hallows’ Eve (October 31), followed by All Saints’ Day (November 1) and All Souls’ Day (November 2) — the triduum of Hallowtide, when the faithful remember the dead and contemplate resurrection.
Midway through the season comes St. Martin’s Day (Martinmas, November 11), marking the end of the agrarian year with feasting, bonfires, and the first tasting of new wine. It is both a thanksgiving and a farewell to the growing season. Other saints connected to this time include St. Jude (October 28), patron of hope in desperate times, and St. Cecilia (November 22), patroness of music and spiritual harmony — each reflecting Scorpio’s enduring themes of transformation, faith, and the soul’s renewal through trial.
In nature, medicine, and myth alike, Scorpio season is the great alchemy of decay. It teaches that the descent into darkness is not an end but a necessary passage. What withers now becomes the soil of future growth. To live in tune with this season is to trust that renewal begins with surrender — to let the old self fall away so that something deeper and more enduring can take root in the quiet of the dark.
Hekate Image[5] by Marina Marchione at Heavenly & Holy on Etsy
More Seasons
References
- ^ Hekate (darkstarastrology.com)
- ^ Isis (darkstarastrology.com)
- ^ Persephone (darkstarastrology.com)
- ^ Pluto (darkstarastrology.com)
- ^ Hekate Image (heavenlyandholy.etsy.com)