- Isha Foundation Lunar Calendar including program and event schedule at the Isha Yoga Center, with dates of various lunar phases such as Pournami, Amavasya and Shivarathri.
- Penumbral Lunar Eclipse visible in New York on Jul 4 – Jul 5; Black Moon: Aug 18 (third New Moon in a season with four New Moons) Micro Full Moon: Oct 1; Super New Moon: Oct 16; Blue Moon: Oct 31 (second Full Moon in single calendar month) Micro Full Moon: Oct 31; Super New Moon: Nov 15; Penumbral Lunar Eclipse visible in New York on Nov 30.
ICalendar's calendar is also not compatible with some non-Gregorian calendars such as the lunar calendars used in Israel and Saudi Arabia. 7 The memo 'Calendar Access Protocol' (RFC 4324) was an initial attempt at a universal system to create real-time calendars. This protocol was eventually abandoned, possibly because of excessive complexity.
What's included above:Planets: Moon though Pluto (no Chiron or asteroids)
Aspects: Conjunct, Sextile, Square, Trine, Opposition and Quincunx (150).
Also included: Void moons (the standard Solar Fire output)
Style: Western Tropical
Timezone: Google should adjust the times for your time zone. If that fails, it's unlikely yet possible that you are viewing it in my time zone - Pacific Time.
For this calendar to display with the correct times, you must have your Google time zone settings set correctly. It's possible they are already set correctly by default. To check, see this page: Google Calendar Time Zones
To subscribe to this calendar, you need a Google Account. However, the calendar has grown extremely large (almost 300,000 lines) because it goes back to 2010. So many browsers, calendar apps, etc. choke on this large of a calendar.
To get around this, you can use the one year download file and import method. However when 2020 rolls into town, you will need to come back and get that file and import it.
To use the download and import method for just one year:
Click the following link from a browser like Safari, Firefox, etc. Press on link and hold for iPhones/iPads/Android/etc. Your calendar app will ask if you'd like to import it.
Transit Calendar ics File 2019
To try and subscribe to the larger permanent Transit Calendar:
Best to do this from a desktop or at least laptop computer because of the large file size.
1. Get your Google account and LOG INTO GOOGLE.
2. Go to https://calendar.google.com/calendar.
3. Click the down-arrow next to 'Other calendars'
Lunar Calendar Ics 2021
![Lunar Lunar](/uploads/1/1/9/8/119847336/455019162.jpg)
4. Select 'Add by URL' from the popup menu.
5. Copy and Paste one of these lines in the field provided:
![Images Images](/uploads/1/1/9/8/119847336/638829024.png)
or:
https://www.google.com/calendar/ical/qf8vj00k7jm0o7kmpu4e6b06dk%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics
6. Click the Add Calendar button.
Technical details:
Calendar ID: [email protected]
Calendar url:
https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=qf8vj00k7jm0o7kmpu4e6b06dk%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=America%2FLos_Angeles
Full 10 year ics file:
https://calendar.google.com/calendar/ical/qf8vj00k7jm0o7kmpu4e6b06dk%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics
Subscribe to a Daily Agenda of Transits
To have a daily agenda of transits emailed to you:
Sign into Google and go to https://calendar.google.com/calendar
Click on the Settings wheel, then select Settings from the popup menu. Select the Transit Calendar on the left, then scroll down to Event Notifications. Set up your email notifications there.
Weird or Duplicate Entries
If you find your Android Calendar app has duplicate entries, or other weird problems, you can reset it by unlinking to the main Transit Calendar. Then clear the cache like this:
Go to Settings > Applications > Manage applications
Press the menu button and choose 'filter'
Select 'ALL'
Go to 'Calendar Storage' click on it
Press 'Clear data'
This should delete all the calendar data on your device. Now relink to the Transit Calendar.
See this page for more info: https://support.google.com/calendar
The data for this calendar is calculated with Solar Fire 8 on Windows 7.
Lunar Calendar 2020
ICS subscription for iPhone, iCal (Mac OS X), Google Calendar, etc.
Full moons and meteor showers for your calendar
Lunar Calendar Ics 2016
Subscribing to this public calendar (.ics file) will insert dates and times of events of astronomical significance into your iPhone / iCal / other calendar program / cybernetic mutant brain chip. This calendar is something I curate by hand at the beginning of each year to highlight full moons, new moons, eclipses, solstices, equinoxes, mercury retrogrades, plus a meteor shower or two and some other surprises. This calendar has been running continuously since 2007 and has over 110,000 subscribers.
Not sure if you want these items added to your calendar? You can preview what items will be inserted here.
iPhone / Macintosh OS X users, use Safari to click here to subscribe to these events using iCal.
The ICS URL (for google or yahoo calendar, etc.) is:
https://cantonbecker.com/astronomy-calendar/astrocal.ics
https://cantonbecker.com/astronomy-calendar/astrocal.ics
Q: Does this work with Google Calendar or Yahoo Calendar?
A: Yes! Here are the instructions for Yahoo, and here are the instructions for Google. The URL you will subscribe to is:
https://www.cantonbecker.com/astronomy-calendar/astrocal.ics
https://www.cantonbecker.com/astronomy-calendar/astrocal.ics
Lunar Calendar Ics 2019
Q: Why do events such as the Full Moon have both a date and time?
A: Because the time shows the exact moment when the the moon will appear most full. Depending on where you are in the world, you will want to plan your full moon adventure on the night that is closest to the full moon. For example, the September 26, 2007 full moon happened at 3:45 pm Eastern Time. If you were in Europe, that was 7:45 or 8:45 pm. If you were in New Zealand, that was 7:45 am on the following day – September 27th. So if you were in London, you’d want to howl at the moon on the night of the 26. But if you were in New Zealand, it’s the night of the 27th when the moon appeared brightest.* Event times in this calendar are entered as UTC or Mountain Time – but your software should automatically convert to your local timezeone.
Q: How do I unsubscribe?
A: That depends on your device or software.Just try googling for something like, “how to unsubscribe calendar iPhone”.
Contact
Found an incorrect date or time? Need to dispute the date or spelling of an astro-pagan holiday? Have some additional advice to contribute?
You can contact Canton at [email protected].
Lunar Calendar Ics Calendar
The author of this calendar, relaxing on the surface of the moon wearing his earthrise goggles and dust-retardant rave-wear.
I came here to say “Thank You”
YOU’RE WELCOME! I love putting together this calendar each year. Everyone needs a reminder to look up at the sky from time to time. If you’d like a way to say “thank you”, then buy YOURSELF a present! If you purchase anything from amazon.com after following this link then I get a 5% kickback from whatever you’ve added to your cart. (It doesn’t cost you anything extra.) Use this link to start ALL your holiday shopping!
Here are some gift ideas for yourself:
- THE MOST AMAZING STAR TOY IN THE UNIVERSE. (I own two, no kidding.) Not at all cheesy like the picture would leave you to believe. Quite stunning, with minuscule laser dots wandering around in every which direction…
- Seveneves by Neal Stephenson. Rip roaring science fiction. It starts off with the moon blowing up. (Not a spoiler, it happens on page two.)
- A great starter telescope for under $100. Great for looking at our planets, the moon… I used this to look at the transit of Mercury in 2019 (with a sun filter of course.) Kids love refractor telescopes because they don’t invert the image… which means they can use them to spy on their neighbors!