Wordless Wednesday: Reflecting on the July Solar Eclipse
The total solar eclipse last month was our first since 2017, and it was stunning, as this NASA Astronomy Photo of the Day taken in Argentina shows.
The total solar eclipse last month was our first since 2017, and it was stunning, as this NASA Astronomy Photo of the Day taken in Argentina shows.
The Sun’s corona captured in exquisite detail during the 2017 total solar eclipse, the last time we had a total eclipse since yesterday’s.
Although spreading shade has curtailed her numbers, our beloved sister Bee Balm has begun her sweet blooming precisely at Solstice as she always does.
It’s Midsummer’s Eve, so make merry; dance tonight with the blessings of Faery! Magickal fire in the cauldron burns, now the Wheel of the Year turns.
Our galaxy makes a stunning backdrop for the “Arizona Toadstools.” Which is older — the stones or the Milky Way light particles? Both are our home.
Blessed May Eve! Tonight, enjoy the lovely finery that our beloved Gaia has cloaked Herself in, and surrender yourself to Her luscious seductions.
Blessings to you and yours! Ostara is a time of great fertility, new growth, and newborn animals. This is our celebration of the resurrection of life.
In the dead of Winter, despite adversity, life and beauty persist. This rosemary is blossoming across from the Cancer Center at Duke University.
Scanning deep space, these extraordinary telescopes scan for supernova remnants, dark matter, and galaxies that contain supermassive black holes.
Thank goodness the government shutdown has not put the APOD website on hiatus – yet. These solar ice halos were captured over Sweden. Natural magick!