Thursday, August 21, 2025

Review: Gaian Tarot 2nd Edition

Gaian Tarot 2nd Edition 
Author: Joanna Powell Colbert
Red Feather/Schiffer Publishing, 2025

Description: 78 cards, 191-page guidebook, box with magnetic closure lid.

Card Size: 3 1/4 x 5

A little history: Gaian Tarot first appeared in 2010 as a self-published deck. Its popularity drew Llewellyn into the scene, but then the deck disappeared. Schiffer Publishing brought it back to the scene in 2016. 

"Gaia is the primal Greek goddess who embodies the earth. The ancients saw her as the Mother Goddess who gave birth to the sky, sea, mountains, and the rest of creation. The sense that "the earth is our mother" is not unique to the Greeks but is found in Indigenous cultures worldwide. In modern society, we know her colloquially as "Mother Nature.""

The Gaian Tarot is a tradition 78-card tarot deck, with a few changes in card names and image perspectives.

Within the Major Arcana there are quite a few changes. The Fool becomes The Seeker, The High Priestess - The Priestess, The Empress - The Gardener, The Emperor - The Builder, The Hierophant - The Teacher, The Chariot - The Canoe, Wheel of Fortune - The Wheel, The Hanged Man - The Tree, The Devil - Bindweed, The Tower - Lightening, Judgment - Awakening, and 21-Gaia, the World.


The Court Cards become People cards: the Child, Explorer, Guardian, and Elder, reflecting the four stages of life: childhood, early adult, mid-life and old age. "Children symbolize the qualities of discovery and birth." "Explorers seek challenges and embody the principle of growth." "Guardians represent the time of ripening or fruition." "Elders stand for dissemination and release." This is explored further in the People section of the guidebook.


In the Minors, the suits correspond with their elements: Air, Fire, Water, and Earth. The representations for these elements vary from card to card. Below, you see three pens for Three of Air, while the Guardian of Air uses a mallet to produce a song from a singing bowl. The Ace of Fire shows sparks from a hidden flame, while the Child of Fire is delighted by the flames of a campfire.


The cards in The Gaian Tarot are gorgeous. I especially love the fact that the card size has reduced with this 2nd edition, and it did not take away from the details of the images. It is still a thick deck because of the cardstock, but much more manageable. The cards have gold edging.

The Guidebook changed slightly, but all improvements. The font is bigger, and the layout is cleaner. The words and descriptions are mostly the same. The affirmations for each card have changed to Remember, with a short sentence of reminder of what the card advises you to take into consideration.

After a short Thank You from the creator, you are Introduced to the Gaian Tarot: the meaning of 'Gaian', the Tarot Structure, and the use of the Deck and Book.

"The new design on the back of the cards shows our planet, a swallowtail butterfly, and blessing herbs from the "Gaia the World" card, set against a birds-eye view of treetops. The wreath of herbs encircles the globe, creating a vortex where healing and transformation can happen."

Entering the Soul Lessons of the Major Arcana, each card is presented by its image, Name, essence, an overview of the card, meanings for a reading, the Shadow side of the card, Themes, Symbols, Journal Questions, and a short sentence to Remember.

The essence of 15-Bindweed (The Devil) is Life Out of Balance. "The Bindweed card depicts a life lived desperately out of balance." 

When you get this card in a reading..."Ask yourself: What holds you in bondage?

When you read the Shadow side of the card..."This is either a situation in which addiction and denial are becoming even more deeply entrenched, or you are breaking free."

Themes include Addiction, Limitations, and Oppression.

Symbols focus on the figure's posture, bindweed, starlings, and the dead shrub.

Journal Questions include: "What holds me bondage?", "What gets too much of my time and attention?", and "What trauma is at the root of my malaise?" 

Remember: Break free of that which keeps you bound.

Diving into the Minor Arcana, "The teachings of the Minor Arcana aren't really minor at all.", we look at Elements, Numbers, and People.

The Minor Arcana section is divided into sections by number and person. Each Number or Person has an essence, themes, and an overview. Each card is presented by the image, a description, meaning, shadow side and remember.

The Essence of Tens is Transition. Themes are Transition, Transformation, Endings and Beginnings. Part of the Overview - "The ten in each suit is a card of endings, with an implicit new beginning encoded within."

The Ten of Earth begins, "In the deep forest, we come across a nurse stump or nurse log, a tree that has fallen during a storm or been cut down."

When you get this card in a reading ... "Something you thought had ended in your life is beginning to burst forth with new shoots."

When you read the Shadow side of this card... "Have you allowed overwork and feeling overwhelmed to trap you?"

Remember: Compost cradles new life.

Working with the Cards section goes through the basics of reading the Tarot and shares many spreads. There is a "Gaia and You: A One-Card Awareness Process" by James Wells. Journal Prompts for the Wheel of Year are included. "These prompts are intended to be done in season." The guidebook closes with Endnotes and an Author Bio.

If you don't have this deck, I recommend it to any Tarot reader or collector. The images are gorgeous and intriguing, and the guidebook is exceptional.

If you have the first edition through Schiffer Publishing, you may want this version. The cards are smaller, easier to handle. The size does not affect the image, nothing is lost. The box is bigger, as is the guidebook. The guidebook is written in a different layout and fonts. It's much more appealing to the eye.




(Review Product supplied by Schiffer Publishing)

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