Forget the gentle ocean witchcraft of moonlit coves and pastel shells. The Southern Hemisphere coast is a different beast entirely. It is a realm of harsh, bleaching sun, Antarctic fed depths, and relentless, planet encircling winds. In Sea & Salt Magick: Ocean Witchcraft for Southern Coasts , occultist Dyrk D'Raven presents a raw, unflinching guide to a craft forged not in comfort, but in confrontation. This is not a book of pretty rituals. It is a manual for survival and sorcery on the world's most demanding shores. Built on four foundational pillars Tide, Salt, Bone, and Shadow this path demands resilience, patience, and a willingness to embrace the cold, deep truths of both the sea and the self. D'Raven dismisses romanticized Northern traditions, grounding every technique in the specific, brutal ecology of the Southern coast, from the mangrove swamp to the kelp forest, from the roaring forties wind to the spectral tide of the winter solstice. Within these pages, you will learn to: identify and work with the distinct spirits of place; craft tools from shell, volcanic stone, and found bone; create and charge potent Southern waters; perform rituals aligned with the inverted solar and lunar cycles; navigate profound isolation and Shadow work; and engage with the raw, "demonic" forces of the sea like the rip current and the crushing depth. The book provides clear, severe rituals for protection, banishing, healing, and deep revelation, culminating in advanced practices of fetish making and weather petitioning. Sea & Salt Magick is for the serious practitioner who feels the call of the empty beach and the cold abyss. It is for those who understand that real power is not taken, but earned through direct, often uncomfortable, communion with an elemental force that is magnificently indifferent. This is the definitive text for Southern Hemisphere coastal witchcraft. It offers no solace, only strength. It provides no fantasies, only the grim, beautiful, and essential tools for building a practice as enduring and resilient as the coastline itself.