Jan
26
Mon
âš« New Moon
Jan 26 @ 12:56 am – 1:56 am
Feb
9
Mon
⚪ Full Moon
Feb 9 @ 7:49 am – 8:49 am

February’s Full Moon is the “Snow Moon”, “Hunger Moon”, “Storm Moon”, “Candles Moon” or “Magh Poornima”

Partial lunar eclipse visible from western Canada and USA. See: http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/OH/OH2009.html

Feb
24
Tue
âš« New Moon
Feb 24 @ 6:36 pm – 7:36 pm
Mar
10
Tue
⚪ Full Moon
Mar 10 @ 8:37 pm – 9:37 pm

March’s Full Moon is the “Lenten Moon”, “Worm Moon”, “Crow Moon”, “Crust Moon”, “Sugar Moon”, “Sap Moon”, “Chaste Moon”, or “Holi”.

Mar
21
Sat
Vernal Equinox (Spring)
Mar 21 @ 5:44 am – 6:44 am

The date (near March 21 in the northern hemisphere) when night and day are nearly the same length and Sun crosses the celestial equator (i.e., declination 0) moving northward. In the southern hemisphere, the vernal equinox corresponds to the center of the Sun crossing the celestial equator moving southward and occurs on the date of the northern autumnal equinox. The vernal equinox marks the first day of the season of spring.

http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/astronomy/VernalEquinox.html

Mar
26
Thu
âš« New Moon
Mar 26 @ 10:08 am – 11:08 am