- Out of this world take the time out to watch this presentation, quite extraordinary
I love you, Planet Earth. What would you have me do for you today? I listen, I understand, I act, I change.
SUNSHINE and RAINBOWS
- – REST DAY –
Ishtar | Ostare | Ostara | Ostern | Eostra | Eostre | Eostur | Eastra | Eastur | Easter| Austron | Ausos ||
CELEBRATE HOWEVER YOU SEE FIT
BLESSINGS TO ALL
Drop in and say hi at the The Autumn Equinox Festival
- this Sunday March 28
- from 10am
- Ginninderra Village, Gold Creek
This festival is a fundraiser for the Indigenous Literacy Project http://www.worldwithoutbooks.org/Index.aspx
Heaps of fabulous stalls (including my Avalon Essences), tarot & psychic readers, workshops and entertainment
- James Court, Flautist (around the village from 10am until 2pm)
- The Ancient Arts Fellowship (Dark Ages Re-enactment)
- Harpists and more ….
I just enjoyed a magikal weekend of friendship, and fairy dust | Rainbow Goddesses, Witches, Wizards and amazing Faeries – singing, dancing, drumming, healing and lots of laughs thankyou Diane for presenting the Wellbeing and Spiritual Festival
Enjoy Solstice today – for those of us in the Southern Hemisphere today is Summer Solstice for those in the North you are enjoying the Winter Solstice.
The exact date of each solstice changes by a few days each year – this is because of our calendar system where we count years of 365 or 366 days, but the Earth takes 365.256 days to complete one orbit of the Sun.
The exact orbital and daily rotational motion of the Earth, such as the ‘wobble’ in the Earth’s axis, also contributes to the changing solstice dates.
The solstices occur because the rotation axis of the Earth is tilted by an angle of 23.5 degrees from the vertical. If the Earth’s rotation was at right angles to the plane of its orbit around the Sun, there would be no solstice days and no seasons.
Around 21 June, the Sun is at its most northerly declination (+23.5 degrees). This corresponds to the northern summer solstice and marks the longest day of the year for northern hemisphere observers. In contrast, this is the date of the southern winter solstice and marks the shortest day of the year for southern hemisphere observers.
Six months later {TODAY}, the Sun is at its most southerly declination (-23.5 degrees) and the solstices are reversed in each hemisphere – ENJOY XX






