
Method 1: Take it home and tack it up.
Method 2: Take it home in complete silence and tack it up.
Method 3: Take it home, don’t tell your neighbour and tack it up.
Method 4: Spit on it, throw it over your left shoulder, make a wish, take it home and tack it up.
Method 5: Heat the horseshoe until red hot and then tack it up.
Method 6: Heat the horseshoe until red hot, douse it in a vat of your own urine, do this three times by the light of a full moon and then tack it up.
Placing your horseshoe
Horseshoes can be placed behind the front door (or threshold), above the front door, on the front of the front door, on the doorstep with the heel facing toward the door, or on the garden gate. For maximum protection, you should tack it up using all seven holes in the shoe, or with three nails and three hammer blows. Either way, never touch it again after attaching.
Note, if you’re trying to imprison a witch in their own home, you will need to nail the horseshoe under their threshold so they can’t get out. Horseshoes can also be placed on the thresholds of bedrooms and beds to stop night hags and maras from entering.
Prong-position pros and cons
Prongs-up pros: You catch the luck; it imprisons the Devil so he can’t enter the home; it symbolises both moon and moon goddesses; it takes the shape of horns symbolising protection and power; it also protects against storms; you can hang a hag stone inside the shoe and double your luck and protection. (Note: some sources say a small tilt to the side with the prongs up is the ideal position.)
Prongs-up cons: The Devil can make a seat in the shoe; pixies can make a seat in the shoe; it takes the shape of the Devil’s horns.
Prongs-down pros: Wards off bad luck; the Devil falls out; the luck flows freely (blacksmiths only); attracts good luck as looks like a magnet; the luck falls onto you.
Prongs-down cons: The luck runs out; it brings misfortune.
You can also position your horseshoe prongs to the side, as this way luck is tipped back into the house.

This feature has been extracted from Household Lore: Folklore, Traditions and Remedies For Every Room in Your Home (£19.99, Watkins Publishing), out now.
Liza Frank is a have-a-go folklorist and author. She has written extensively about myth and folklore and spent a year living by the rules of folklore for The Everyday Lore Project. She is also the author of Everyday Folklore: An Almanac for the Ritual Year (£14.99, Murdoch Books).
Join the Academy and learn from some of the best spiritual
and wellbeing teachers in the world
Join the Academy and learn from some of the best spiritual
and wellbeing teachers in the world
Join the Academy and learn from some of the best spiritual
and wellbeing teachers in the world