Daily Archives: January 1, 2016

What follows is a list (in alphabetical order) of the names given to the January moon. Also listed is the tradition and/or origin of that moon name:

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  • Avunniviayuk ~Inuit
  • Big Cold Moon ~Mohawk
  • Chaste Moon ~other
  • Cold Meal Moon ~Natchez
  • Cold Moon ~Cheokee
  • Cooking Moon ~Choctaw
  • Dark Moon ~Janic
  • Disting Moon ~other
  • Flying Ant Moon ~Apache
  • Great Spirit Moon ~Anishnaabe
  • Her Cold Moon ~Wishram
  • Ice Moon ~San Juan, Neo-Pagan
  • Icicle Moon ~Medicine Wheel
  • Joyful Moon ~Hopi
  • Little Winter Moon ~Creek
  • Man Moon ~Taos
  • Moon After Yule ~Cherokee
  • Old MoonAlgonquin
  • Quiet Moon ~Celtic, Janic
  • Snow Moon ~other
  • Storm Moon ~other
  • Strong Cold Moon ~Sioux, Cheyenne
  • Whirling Wind Moon ~Passamaquoddy
  • Winter Moon ~Algonquin
  • Wolf Moon ~Medieval English, Janic

Source

meteor-shower-2016

The Quadrantids is an above average meteor shower, with up to 40 meteors per hour at its peak. It is thought to be produced by dust grains left behind by an extinct comet known as 2003 EH1, which was discovered in 2003. The shower runs annually from January 1-5. Best viewing will be from a dark location after midnight. Meteors will radiate from the constellation Bootes, but can appear anywhere in the sky.

Source: SeaSky

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To celebrate the New Year fireballs swing in Stonehaven, Scotland.

The ceremony consists of mainly local people of all ages swinging flaming wire cages, around their heads. Each cage is filled with combustible material (each swinger has their own recipe) and has a wire handle two or three feet long, this keeps the flames well away from the swinger, but spectators can be vulnerable! At the end of the ceremony, the fireballs are tossed into the bay.

The event starts at midnight and is watched by thousands. The idea behind the ceremony is to burn off the bad spirits left from the old year so that the spirits of the New Year can come in clean and fresh.

From current research the ceremony would seem to go back from a hundred to a hundred and fifty years, but it could easily be much older.

The ceremony today lasts only around twenty to thirty minutes but in the past it could last an hour or more. Then, some of the swingers would swing their fireball for a few yards and then stop outside a house that was occupied by someone that they knew. They would drop their fireball at the curbside and pop in for their ‘New Year’! After a while they would come out, pick up their ‘ball’ and swing on down to the next house, and so on. As quite a number of the swingers would have had many relatives and friends staying in area it could take some time to get from one end of the street to the other!

In the early years, according to the newspaper reports, it would seem that it was mainly the male youths of the older ‘fisher’ town that were involved in the custom but once into the sixties the newspaper reports are of older men and women being involved as well.

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I think it's time to go shopping... maybe even buy some really cool stuff at my online shops!!

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