Today Is Friday, June 23rd

midnight of the witch

Today Is Friday, June 23rd

Friday is the day of Venus. It takes it name from Frigg, the Goddess of love and transformation. She rules the spiritual side of a person that manifests in the physical. Because of this, Friday is often thought of as dangerously unpredictable. This is expressed in an old East Anglian adage:

 

Friday’s day will have its trick
The fairest or foulest day of the week.

 

Deity: Frigg

Zodiac Sign: Taurus/Libra

Planet: Venus

Tree: Apple

Herb: Vervain

Stone: Sapphire/Chrsolite

Animal: Bull/Serpent

Element: Earth

Color: Yellow/Violet

Number: 7

Rune: Peorth(P)

 

 

Celtic Tree Month of Duir(Oak) – June 10 – July 7.

Oak month is a time for protection and strength, fertility, money and success, and good fortune.

Runic Half-Month of Dag(day) – June 14 – June 28

Goddess of the Month of Rosea – June 13 – July 10

 

Source

The Pagan Book of Days
Nigel Pennick

And Just In Case You Haven’t Heard Enough About the 2017 Solar Eclipse…..

Wiccan

And Just In Case You Haven’t Heard Enough About the 2017 Solar Eclipse…..

25 facts you should know about the August 21, 2017, total solar eclipse

Posted by Michael Bakich

When I first wrote this blog, the event was more than three years away. Not anymore! Each day now seems to bring a new announcement of a talk, a workshop, or an event related to the eclipse. With tens of millions of people headed for the zone of totality, it’s going to be the biggest science event in history. In this blog I list 25 of the eclipse’s important details for our readership, the general public, and the media. Read them, and learn about the event. But for sure plan to experience totality. You’ll remember it for the rest of your life as the greatest thing you ever saw!

1. This will be the first total solar eclipse in the continental U.S. in 38 years. The last one occurred February 26, 1979. Unfortunately, not many people saw it because it clipped just five states in the Northwest and the weather for the most part was bleak. Before that one, you have to go back to March 7, 1970.

2. A solar eclipse is a lineup of the Sun, the Moon, and Earth. The Moon, directly between the Sun and Earth, casts a shadow on our planet. If you’re in the dark part of that shadow (the umbra), you’ll see a total eclipse. If you’re in the light part (the penumbra), you’ll see a partial eclipse.

3. A solar eclipse happens at New Moon. The Moon has to be between the Sun and Earth for a solar eclipse to occur. The only lunar phase when that happens is New Moon.

4. Solar eclipses don’t happen at every New Moon. The reason is that the Moon’s orbit tilts 5° to Earth’s orbit around the Sun. Astronomers call the two intersections of these paths nodes. Eclipses only occur when the Sun lies at one node and the Moon is at its New (for solar eclipses) or Full (for lunar eclipses) phase. During most (lunar) months, the Sun lies either above or below one of the nodes, and no eclipse happens.

5. Eclipse totalities are different lengths. The reason the total phases of solar eclipses vary in time is because Earth is not always at the same distance from the Sun and the Moon is not always the same distance from Earth. The Earth-Sun distance varies by 3 percent and the Moon-Earth distance by 12 percent. The result is that the Moon’s apparent diameter can range from 7 percent larger to 10 percent smaller than the Sun.

6. It’s all about magnitude and obscuration. Astronomers categorize each solar eclipse in terms of its magnitude and obscuration, and I don’t want you to be confused when you encounter these terms. The magnitude of a solar eclipse is the percent of the Sun’s diameter that the Moon covers during maximum eclipse. The obscuration is the percent of the Sun’s total surface area covered at maximum. Here’s an example: If the Moon covers half the Sun’s diameter (in this case the magnitude equals 50 percent), the amount of obscuration (the area of the Sun’s disk the Moon blots out) will be 39.1 percent.

7. Solar eclipses occur between Saros cycles. Similar solar and lunar eclipses recur every 6,585.3 days (18 years, 11 days, 8 hours). Scientists call this length of time a Saros cycle. Two eclipses separated by one Saros cycle are similar. They occur at the same node, the Moon’s distance from Earth is nearly the same, and they happen at the same time of year.

8. Everyone in the continental U.S. will see at least a partial eclipse. In fact, if you have clear skies on eclipse day, the Moon will cover at least 48 percent of the Sun’s surface. And that’s from the northern tip of Maine.

9. It’s all about totality. Not to cast a shadow on things, but likening a partial eclipse to a total eclipse is like comparing almost dying to dying. I know that 48 percent sounds like a lot. It isn’t. You won’t even notice your surroundings getting dark. And it doesn’t matter whether the partial eclipse above your location is 48, 58, or 98 percent. Only totality reveals the true celestial spectacle: the diamond ring, the Sun’s glorious corona, strange colors in our sky, and seeing stars in the daytime.

10. You want to be on the center line. This probably isn’t a revelation, but the Moon’s shadow is round. If it were square, it wouldn’t matter where you viewed totality. People across its width would experience the same duration of darkness. The shadow is round, however, so the longest eclipse occurs at its center line because that’s where you’ll experience the Moon’s shadow’s full width.

11. First contact is in Oregon. If you want to be the first person to experience totality in the continental U.S., be on the waterfront at Government Point, Oregon, at 10:15:56.5 a.m. PDT. There, the total phase lasts 1 minute, 58.5 seconds.

12. The center line crosses through 12 states. After a great west-to-east path across Oregon, the center line takes roughly nine minutes to cross a wide swath of Idaho, entering the western part of the state just before 11:25 a.m. MDT and leaving just before 11:37 a.m. MDT. Next up is Wyoming, where the umbral center line dwells until just past 11:49 a.m. MDT. From 11:47 a.m. MDT until 1:07 CDT (note the time zone change!), the dark part of the Moon’s shadow lies in Nebraska. The center line hits the very northeastern part of Kansas at 1:04 p.m. CDT and enters Missouri a scant two minutes later. At 1:19, the shadow’s midpoint crosses the Mississippi River, which at that location is the state border with Illinois. The center line leaves Illinois at its Ohio River border with Kentucky just past 1:24 p.m. CDT. Totality for that state starts there two minutes earlier and lasts until nearly 1:29 p.m. CDT. The center line crosses the border into Tennessee around 1:26 p.m. CDT. Then, just past the midpoint of that state, the time zone changes to Eastern. North Carolina has the midpoint of the eclipse from 2:34 p.m. EDT until just past 2:38 p.m. EDT. The very northeastern tip of Georgia encounters the center line from just past 2:35 p.m. EDT until not quite 2:39 p.m. EDT. Finally, it’s South Carolina’s turn. The last of the states the center line crosses sees its duration from 2:36 p.m. EDT to 2:39 p.m. EDT.

13. Totality lasts a maximum of 2 minutes and 40.2 seconds. That’s it. To experience that length, you’ll need to be slightly south of Carbondale, Illinois, in Giant City State Park. You might think about getting there early.

14. The end of the eclipse for the U.S. is not on land. The center line’s last contact with the U.S. occurs at the Atlantic Ocean’s edge just southeast of Key Bay, South Carolina. I’m pretty sure the crowd won’t be huge there.

15. Cool things are afoot before and after totality. Although the big payoff is the exact lineup of the Sun, the Moon, and your location, keep your eyes open during the partial phases that lead up to and follow it. As you view the beginning through a safe solar filter, the universe will set your mind at ease when you see the Moon take the first notch out of the Sun’s disk. Around the three-quarters mark, you’ll start to notice that shadows are getting sharper. The reason is that the Sun’s disk is shrinking, literally approaching a point, and a smaller light source produces better-defined shadows. At about 85 percent coverage, someone you’re with will see Venus 34° west-northwest of the Sun. If any trees live at your site, you may see their leaves act like pinhole cameras as hundreds of crescent Suns appear in their shadows.

16. This eclipse will be the most-viewed ever. I base this proclamation on four factors: 1) the attention it will get from the media; 2) the superb coverage of the highway system in our country; 3) the typical weather on that date; and 4) the vast number of people who will have access to it from nearby large cities.

17. Only one large city has a great view. Congratulations if you’re one of the 609,000 people lucky enough to live in Nashville. The city center and parts north of it will experience 2+ minutes of totality. Unfortunately, that’s the only large city with a great view. In the tally below, column 1 lists 25 other large metropolitan areas. The second column shows the amount of the Sun’s surface the Moon will cover as seen by viewers in each city.
Atlanta 97 percent
Boston 63 percent
Chicago 87 percent
Cincinnati 91 percent
Dallas 76 percent
Denver 92 percent
Detroit 79 percent
Houston 67 percent
Indianapolis 91 percent
Las Vegas 72 percent
Los Angeles 62 percent
Memphis 93 percent
Miami 78 percent
Milwaukee 83 percent
Minneapolis 83 percent
New Orleans 75 percent
New York City 72 percent
Oklahoma City 84 percent
Philadelphia 75 percent
Phoenix 63 percent
Pittsburgh 81 percent
Portland 99 percent
Salt Lake City 91 percent
Seattle 92 percent
Washington, D.C. 81 percent

Now a brief follow-up: about half of both Kansas City (pop. = 464,000) and Saint Louis (pop. = 318,000) lie within the path of totality. Unfortunately, the center line doesn’t pass through either of them. An educated guess then, tells me that most residents interested in the eclipse will drive 30 minutes or so for an extra two minutes of totality.

18. A few small cities are well-placed. Here’s a list of smaller municipalities either on the center line or near it with their approximate populations.
Carbondale, Illinois 26,000
Casper, Wyoming 58,000
Columbia, Missouri 113,000
Columbia, South Carolina 132,000
Grand Island, Nebraska 50,000
Greenville, South Carolina 61,000
Hopkinsville, Kentucky 33,000
Idaho Falls, Idaho 58,000
Jefferson City, Missouri 43,000
Paducah, Kentucky 25,000
Saint Joseph, Missouri 77,000
Salem, Oregon 157,000

19. Totality is safe to look at. During the time the Moon’s disk covers that of the Sun, it’s safe to look at the eclipse. In fact, to experience the awesomeness of the event, you must look at the Sun without a filter during totality.

20. Yes, the Sun’s a lot bigger. Our daytime star’s diameter is approximately 400 times larger than that of the Moon. What a coincidence that it also lies roughly 400 times farther away. This means both disks appear to be the same size.

21. You won’t need a telescope. One of the great things about the total phase of a solar eclipse is that it looks best to naked eyes. The sight of the corona surrounding the Moon’s black disk in a darkened sky is unforgettable. That said, binoculars give you a close-up view — but still at relatively low power — that you should take advantage of several times during the event.

22. Nature will take heed. Depending on your surroundings, as totality nears you may experience strange things. Look. You’ll notice a resemblance to the onset of night, though not exactly. Areas much lighter than the sky near the Sun lie all around the horizon. Shadows look different. Listen. Usually, any breeze will dissipate and birds (many of whom will come in to roost) will stop chirping. It is quiet. Feel. A 10°–15° F drop in temperature is not unusual.

23. Maximum totality is not the longest possible in 2017. The longest possible duration of the total phase of a solar eclipse is 7 minutes and 32 seconds. Unfortunately, the next solar eclipse whose totality approaches 7 minutes won’t occur until June 13, 2132. Its 6 minutes and 55 seconds of totality will be the longest since the 7 minutes and 4 seconds of totality June 30, 1973.

24. The future is bright but long. The next total solar eclipse over the continental U.S. occurs April 8, 2024. It’s a good one, too. Depending on where you are (on the center line), the duration of totality lasts at least 3 minutes and 22 seconds on the east coast of Maine and stretches to 4 minutes and 27 seconds in southwestern Texas. After that eclipse, it’s a 20-year wait until August 23, 2044 (and, similar to the 1979 event, that one is visible only in Montana and North Dakota). Total solar eclipses follow in 2045 and 2078.

25. This event will happen! As astronomers (professional or amateur), some of the problems we have are due to the uncertainty and limited visibility of some celestial events. Comets may appear bright if their compositions are just so. Meteor showers might reach storm levels if we pass through a thick part of the stream. (Oh, and the best views are after midnight.) A supernova as bright as a whole galaxy is visible now, but you need a telescope to view it. In contrast, this solar eclipse will occur when we say, where we say, for how long we say, and in the daytime, no less. Guaranteed!

 

Source

The Astronomy Magazine

The Sky This Week for June 23 to 25

Alter Ego

The Sky This Week for June 23 to 25

The longest day of the year, the Summer Triangle, and other cool things in the sky this week.
By Richard Talcott

Friday, June 23

New Moon occurs at 10:31 p.m. EDT. At its New phase, the Moon crosses the sky with the Sun and so remains hidden by our star. Because the Moon also reaches perigee, the closest point in its orbit around Earth, today (at 6:52 a.m. EDT), residents in coastal areas can expect higher than normal tides for the next few days. At perigee, the center of the Moon lies 222,412 miles (357,937 kilometers) from Earth’s center.

Saturday, June 24

The conspicuous Summer Triangle asterism dominates the eastern sky in late evening. Vega, the triangle’s brightest member, shines at magnitude 0.0 and stands highest of the three stars. To its lower left lies Deneb; at magnitude 1.3, it’s the faintest of the trio. Magnitude 0.8 Altair completes the bright asterism. Despite its name, the Summer Triangle appears prominent from late spring until winter begins.

Sunday, June 25

This week offers a good opportunity for binocular users to track down the northern sky’s brightest globular cluster. M5, whose 100,000 stars glow at a combined magnitude of 5.7, lies in the southwestern corner of the constellation Serpens the Serpent. You can locate it just 0.4° north-northwest of the 5th-magnitude star 5 Serpentis. Binoculars show the cluster as a hazy ball of light punctuated by a bright core.

 

Source

The Astronomy Magazine

Your Sun & Moon Data for Friday, June 23rd

Witch in full moon

Your Sun & Moon Data for Friday, June 23rd

The Sun
Sun Direction: ↑ 325.51° NW
Sun Altitude: -21.02°
Sun Distance: 94.479 million mi
Next Equinox: Sep 22, 2017 3:01 pm (Autumnal)
Sunrise Today: 5:35 am↑ 59° Northeast
Sunset Today: 8:17 pm↑ 301° Northwest
Length of Daylight: 14 hours, 42 minutes

 

The Moon
Moon Direction: ↑ 337.26° NNW
Moon Altitude: -32.32°
Moon Distance: 222465 mi
Next New Moon: Jun 23, 20179:30 pm
Next Full Moon: Jul 8, 201711:06 pm
Next Moonrise: Tomorrow5:17 am
Current Moon Phase: Waning Crescent
Illumination: 1.7%

 

Additional Lunar Data
New Moon: Jun 23, 2017 at 9:30 pm
(Next Phase)
Third Quarter: Jun 17, 2017 at 6:32 am
(Previous Phase)

 

Source

timeanddate.com

Good Friday Morning To All Our Dear, Sweet Family & Friends! Let the Magick Begin…..

witchcraft

This Is My Will

Bless my feet to walk in balance of dark and light,
For opportunities grant me the gift of sight.
let me put to rest, the paths I no longer wish to be
that I feel are unproductive and just not good for me.
Let me sow seeds and give birth to paths of joy and harmony
things I find important and in general good for me.
Open my heart to unconditional love
so my soul my soar freely, with no limits above.
Yet grant me the strength to access the warrior within
Picking up my sword for any battles I find important to win
For as a witch, I find myself worthy and with the right
to walk in peace yet for protection to give a mighty fight.
Bless my hands to heal and spread tolerance throughout the nation
From the predjudice ideals of others that started from creation.
Bless my lips to speak words of truth and wisdom
to allow everyone their freedom of relgion
for we are all children of the lord and lady
so let us spread seeds of love and tolerance that starts with one step, one word today
Bless my actions for they are louder than words, in all that I do
To help open others hearts that just don’t have a clue
Lord and lady grant me these blessings for this is my will , so mote it be!

 

—Whispering Willow, Author

On This Beautiful & Glorious Solstice Morning, A Quick Up Date………

Litha Comments & GraphicsGood Wednesday morning, dear brothers & sisters! It was a glorious Solstice morning here today. The beautiful Sun came up shining in all His glory, the magick was coursing through the air, it was pure magick. I thought I would give you a quick up-date on what is going on….

 

Yesterday, started out to be a lovely day but…..yes, there is always that but, lol! You know we have been selling merchandise on Etsy. Well come to find out there was an issue with one of the items we sold. The buyer contacted me in regards to the issue and when I found out about it, I went through the roof. We do actually have craft people that make items and we had what this customer wanted in stock (I thought, keyword “thought”). Anyway, we had a lady that would bring me the list of items we had to sell on Etsy. This item that was causing the problem was on there. I trusted her and I listed it. Well, come to find out, we did not have the item in stock. Instead, she went to another woodworker and got the item made. The customer told me it was horrible. I don’t believe horrible even began to describe what he received. So when the lady came in, I asked her about it and she told me the truth. I don’t feel good to start with and I went off on her. To say the least, we are now one employee short and I owe this customer a refund. Then to even make matter worse, I really ought to know not to do business when I am angry, Etsy and I got into it. The men who do our woodwork did some elegant spoons, they are rare and hard to find. I listed them. When I did, Etsy suspended our account. They stated the items and some others were not hand crafted and did not meet their standards. Ha! These men worked for numerous hours carving these spoons and they are beautiful and for Etsy to have the gaul to say they didn’t make them, pissed me off! Etsy contacted me and told me our account was suspended with them. They informed me of how I could go about getting it re-instated so I took the time to do just that this morning. I went through and deleted every item in the shop. Etsy isn’t what it is cracked up to be. They trust no one. They hold the customers payments for three days to make sure they clear (yeah right, they just want their money up front). Then they forward it to us, the seller, which takes another three days for us to get the payment. Etsy doesn’t trust their buyers or sellers. With a policy like that, it makes the seller look horrible. I explained to them this fact and got no reply. I also told them we had been on the internet since 2009 and had an excellent reputation. I wouldn’t stand by and let them ruin it or anyone else. So Etsy can bite me.

 

After that fact, I had to go to the hospital and get some blood work done. With my morning being such, my blood pressure was through the roof.  Besides when I get upset or pissed, it only seems to make my condition worse. I hurt like hell all day yesterday and this morning. The doctor has me on a powerful pain pill. I had been only taken a half of it because I found out early if I took a whole one, I became a zombie. We already have coyotes and wolves around here, I don’t believe we need any zombies, lol! By the time I got through at the hospital, I came home, shut the door and went to bed. I did, however, get up to see the beautiful Solstice Sun rise and boy, was it breath-taking.

 

On top of my illness, my pup is also sick. For the last few months, I had been taking him to the vet I used with Kiki. After the second trip there and completing all his meds, he wasn’t any better. So I found a specialist who is located about 75 miles from here and took Kade to him. I seriously thought he had the dog flu and I was going to lose him. You don’t know how many nights I have spent crying over him. Kiki hasn’t even been gone a year yet and to lose this one after losing the other one, I couldn’t stand it. But this new vet seems to know what she is doing. Kade is 100% better and I believe he is going to out live me. But we have to go back to day for a check-up and see what the vet want to continue or discontinue. I believe you all know how I feel about my familiars. When Kiki was so bad, I did blood sacrifices for her (my own blood). She was only suppose to live for 6 months after they found out what was wrong with her. But thanks be to the Goddess, Kiki lived for an additional 2 1/2 years. I love my familiars to death and there is nothing I wouldn’t do for them. So we are going to the vet this morning at 11:30.

 

Then there is tomorrow, back to the doctors I go. The delay in my treatment is because I have several complications at once, ain’t I lucky! I have the tumor on my hip, I have nodes in my liver, and I have a very large uterine fibroid tumor. I have had numerous test over the past few weeks that is why there has been practically no activity on this site. I don’t even want to talk about the podcast. But tomorrow, we decide which one should be taken care of first. Oh, to add to good news, I have had this growth on my ankle and come to find out it is also a tumor. I didn’t know people could have tumors in so many different places, gee! But it makes me wonder if this on my hip has spread all the way down my leg. Guess I will find out tomorrow.

 

So what this long conversation is meant to say is that there won’t be much activity on the WOTC for the next few days. I plan on Friday getting back at it.  I know people don’t understand why I don’t stop. It is simple, if I keep busy, I don’t think about it. I have something to occupy my mind. And then again, when I make plans they all go straight to you know where, lol! But we are going to try our best to be back Friday. So just bear with us a little bit longer and things will work out. At least one good thing, I drug out the old Ouija board, I was trying to contact my mother instead I got my father. I talked to him a bit, got a few things straight I was curious about, turned out to be a good session. When I got ready to close the portal I told him, I would be seeing him soon I guessed. His reply was “No!” The board went crazy and kept going back to “no, no, no.” I took that as he meant I wouldn’t be seeing him any time soon and he also told me to get the idea of dying out of my head. I still had a ways to go and a lot to do before my time was up. I think most of all, after all these years of carrying a bitterness toward him, he told me, “I was his baby and he loved me.” That brought tears to my eyes. You have to understand my whole life’s story and I am not going to bore you with it. But that communications with him meant the world to me. I really was surprised when he showed up and sort of disappointed. But afterwards, I felt like there was a heavy shadow lifted off of me. I know I have a rough time ahead with my health but I am going to survive it. Then I had a little voice in my head tell me, “You always knew you would survive it because you are a fighter.” I believe that little voice was the Goddess. She has been a great comfort to me during the past year. Confronted with the possibility of death does bring one closer to their faith.

 

Well, enough with all that, I just wanted to catch you up on a few things. I do hope you understand and I sincerely appreciate your patience with us. We will be back Friday in full force, I promise. I was worried about being short handed but Mystie told me, she had found someone to replace the one I fired or let go (a nicer term). So we won’t be running short after all. I will up-date you on my condition and we will see you Friday. I am very sorry that we could not spend this glorious Solstice with you but life happens. I believe there is enough information here for you in case you need it regarding Litha and the Summer Solstice.

 

Have a very blessed & beautiful Litha & Summer Solstice, my sweets….

With all my love,

Lady of the Abyss

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Wishing All Our Brothers & Sisters of the Craft, A Very Happy & Blessed Litha!


Litha Comments & Graphics

Litha Prayer to the Sun

The sun is high above us
shining down upon the land and sea,
making things grow and bloom.
Great and powerful sun,
we honor you this day
and thank you for your gifts.
Ra, Helios, Sol Invictus, Aten, Svarog,
you are known by many names.
You are the light over the crops,
the heat that warms the earth,
the hope that springs eternal,
the bringer of life.
We welcome you, and we honor you this day,
celebrating your light,
as we begin our journey once more
into the darkness.

 

-Patti Wigington, Author
Published on ThoughtCo