What's going on in the night sky right now? Find out with Star Lore Historian Mary Stewart Adams, who narrates the stories written across the sky each week in order to restore the mythic grandeur of knowing the stars. Here, ancient mythologies are woven together with poetry, astrology, contemporary astronomy, and the new star wisdom astrosophy, to reveal the brilliant story of now.
October finds all of the naked-eye planets making remarkable moves.
By Thursday the Moon will have "shed her silver seasons four upon the night."
Earth and Sun align in the balance, then Mercury slips in to test us all.
This week marks the anniversary of the death of Dante Alighieri, 701 years ago on September 14th in 1321
Mars is closest to Aldebaran, while Venus sweeps past Regulus
Moon moves through the Sun's secret retreat of light for the next two weeks.
Venus is crowned by the Moon in a deep ceremony of the morning sky
This week in the sky it’s all about time, with Saturn peeking up over the eastern edge of the world just as the Sun sets.
This week's Full Moon on August 11 will diminish an outward experience of meteors, but it bears a unique opportunity for knowing what the hero finds within
As we pass through summer's cross quarter time, we pass under the thickest region fo Milky Way Stars
Our place in space, from astrology, to astronomy, to astrosophy.
The James Webb is orbiting at LaGrange 2, one of five points of equilibrium in Earth/Sun relationship. Can we find such points in human relationship?
Moonlight is the reflected light of all celestial objects, including the stars.
We’re moving furthest away from the Sun just now, and we’re also moving more slowly, which conjures images of lazy summer days and star-filled nights.
What are we inscribing into cosmic spaces this Solstice?
Tuesday's perigee Moon is cozying up for a better look, offering us all a sweet strawberry kiss
Astronomers are predicting a meteor shower overnight May 30, maybe.
Every soul is a celestial Venus to every other soul.~RW Emerson, on Love
First there was a partial solar eclipse, followed two weeks later by the total lunar eclipse, and in the midst, Mercury started its seasonal retrograde.
Eclipses come in stages, like fairy tales, or trials of initiation