The Calendar year 2020 features 13 Full Moons with two Full Moons October 1 and 31. This is NOT the original definition of a Blue Moon as described below though many do refer to the second Full Moon of any month including the 2020 October 31 Full Moon as a Blue Moon.
In 2021 there are two full Moons in the sign of Aquarius on Jul 24 and Aug 22 creating 4 Full Moons in the season from the June Solstice to the September Equinox on Jun 24, Jul 24, Aug 22, and Sep 20. This is the original definition of a Blue Moon as described below.
The idea or concept that two Full Moons in a month is what defines a Blue Moon is a mistake, according to this article from the Smithsonian. The article tells us the original definition of a Blue Moon referred to 4 Full Moons in one season and a season is defined as the time between a Solstice and Equinox or an Equinox and Solstice. (See Table below)
From the perspective of Solstices and Equinoxes, there are four seasons in a year and generally three Full Moons occur in each season. This means there are usually 12 Full Moons per year. This is why the word month comes from the word Moon or Moonth, because it take 29.5 days for the Moon to return to another Full Moon phase (or any Moon phase for that matter). This suggests that our secular calendar actually does recognize that they are at least 12 Full Moons each year. Looking at this from the perspective of the Gregorian Calendar that was instituted in 1582 the years that have two Full Moons in a month are the years that also have 13 Full Moons in a calendar year.
There are three types of Blue Moons discuss below:
Calendric, Seasonal, and Environmental
In more recent times, the term Blue Moon has been used to describe the occurrence of two Full Moons in a calendar month. This way of defining a Blue Moon comes from a 1940’s article that appeared in Astronomy magazine suggesting the definition of a Blue Moon was the second Full Moon in a calendar month, an event that occurs approximately every three years.
Interestingly, two Full Moons in a month, or four Full Moons in a season, occur with the same frequency about every 2.7 years. (See the tables below) However, four Full Moons in a season has greater astronomical significance than two Full Moons in a calendar month.
This is because the months as outlined in our Gregorian Calendar are NOT astronomically based but rather begin arbitrarily on a date called January 1 so our calendar begins at a time that is not connected to either a Solstice or Equinox. It is also not connected to the lunar cycle.
The Gregorian calendar does however fixate our awareness on a linear way of tracking time through days, weeks, months and years. These dates have been assigned names and numbers and it works brilliantly as a linear way of tracking time but it essentially downplays a more cyclical way of tracking time through the seasons.
The Blue Moon seen through Smoke
There is another speculation that the original term Blue Moon may have come from the bluish tinge the Moon gets when viewed through smoke. In this case, the theory is – someone saw the Moon appearing quite blue through the smoke of a large distant fire (forest fire?) and therefore the term Blue Moon was a literal description of how the Moon looked. Naturally that would also be a rare occurrence. In fact, it would be the rarest occurrence of all the definitions of a Blue Moon.
Here is a 2012 YouTube from Nasa on Blue Moons with the cultural definition and also why the Moon is Red and sometimes Blue when volcanos and fires are involved. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4HRKl0fa2dg
Two Consecutive Full Moons in the Same Sign
There is another way the Full Moon (or any phase of the Moon for that matter) fits the 2.7 year pattern. This configuration isn’t talked about as much but is just as significant as the other patterns, and that is when there are two consecutive Full Moons in the same sign. This only occurs when the first Full Moon is in Zero or One degree of the sign and the next Full Moon is in 28 or 29 degrees of the same sign.
As already mentioned above, July 22, 2013 there is a Full Moon at 00 degrees and 16 minutes of Aquarius. The following month on Aug 21 there was another Full Moon at 28 degrees and 11 minutes of Aquarius. This exact configuration happened one day later in July and August of 2002 with the Moon very close to the same degrees that occurred in 2013.
Note: This nearly exact recurrence is tracking the 19 year nodal cycle at its half way point. (A topic for another article)
From December Solstice 2018 to December Solstice we will had 13 Full Moons with 4 Full Moons in a Season on December 22, 2018, January 21, 2019, February 19, 2019 and March 19, 2019 featuring the original definition of a Blue Moon. 2019 also featured two Full Moons in the same sign March 19, 2019 at 00Libra 29 and April 19, 2019 at 29 Libra 27. This is also sometimes thought to signify a Blue Moon but was not four Full Moons in a season though often four Full Moons in a season does feature two Full Moons in the same sign.
Blue Moon Mystique
The common factor to all these variations of a Blue Moon, either as seen through smoke, or the number of Full Moons in a season, or two Full Moons in a month, or two consecutive Full Moons in the same sign, is they captivate and inspire our imagination.
When we understand the pattern of what is happening then we can intentionally tune into the magic, getting the most out of the opportunity these Timings represent. One of the opportunities any Full Moon provides is a chance to experience greater illumination of our essential divine nature regardless of whether or not it is a so-called Blue Moon.
From the perspective that we inform the mysteries as much as they inform us, what we put our attention and intention on becomes meaningful. Since there is a lot of collective attention on the phenomenon of two Full Moons in a month, (even though its not astronomically significant) it has the effect of taking on greater significance as a result.
Noticing the Pattern
Below are tables of the various types of Blue Moon dates to ponder. These tables clearly show the pattern of about 33 months for all the above variations, except for the one that has to do with seeing the Moon through smoke.
One way to work with this information and the dates below is to notice if any of these Timings were especially significant in your personal experience. Also worth noticing is if there were significant events in the world that happened around any of the prior so-called Blue Moon times?
In tracking this personally, I had a profound experience with a group down in Peru during the December 2002 Full Moon – Blue Moon of four Full Moons in a season (see table below) that was beyond the beyond of anything I had experienced previously. (Here is a more mytho-poetic version of that time )
In July 2004, there were two consecutive Full Moons in a calendar month. At the time of the second Full Moon during another Full Moon ceremony I was a part of, I had an illumination about a personal situation that had been especially challenging. This Timing also coincided with a powerful Pluto transit to my natal Moon, so the Full Moon activation was a part of that cycle and it turned out to be a further catalyst for an initiatory process I was already experiencing, meaning the two factors were working together to help support my journey and may not have had anything to do with the fact that it was the second Full Moon of the month.
Knowing your cycles and participating in Full Moon ceremonies can help further what ever initiation cycles are going on for you. I have noticed if the Full Moon activates a personal part of my own chart regardless of whether it is a so-called Blue Moon it is extra powerful for me.
The Full Moon Effect Lasts at least Three Days and 3 Nights
Experientially the Moon appears full for three nights, the day before, the day of and the day after the exact Full Moon. Shamanically speaking this suggests the potency of the Full Moon Window lasts for at least three days. Many cultures including the Hawaiians (Hawaiian Moon Calendar article) worked with every possible phase of the Moon in its 29.5 day cycle before it returns to a particular Moon phase and they considered the Moon to be in its full phase for 4 days and nights.
The Hawaiians use 29 and sometimes 30 phases of the Moon, giving each phase its own special name and indications like when it was a good time to fish, or to plant, or to get married, or to stay home.
Is 12 or 13 the Most Sacred Number of the Moon?
In recent years, there have been many articles and books claiming that the number 13 is the most sacred number for the Moon. However, the Moon actually intimately connects with the numbers 12, 13 and 19.
If you are tracking the Moon return to a certain zodiacal degree, say zero Capricorn, it will return to that degree every 27.3 days. If you divide 27.3 into 365 days in a year – the closest whole number is 13. That means the Moon will cross that point or any other starting point 13 times each year.
If you are tracking the Moon phases from Full Moon to Full Moon or any other phase (i.e. New Moon to New Moon or First Quarter Moon to First Quarter Moon) it returns every 29.5 days. If you divide 29.5 into 365 the closest whole number is 12. That is why there are 12 months (moonths) in a year.
It is important to realize the number 13 for the Moon is NOT what most people think it is. There are NOT 13 Full Moons every year regardless of whether you are tracking a calendar year, or a seasonal year – from one December Solstice to the next. Actually more often than not there are only 12 Full Moons a year. That is why both 12 and 13 are sacred numbers, or sacred patterns for the Moon.
Additionally, the 19 year pattern or cycle of the Moon is significant to our personal experience especially when we are turning 19, 38, 57, 76, and 95. This 19 year Moon cycle is related to the Nodes of the Moon and the Eclipses. The point here is that there is more than one sacred number for the Moon, as the Moon has many patterns that are worth knowing and understanding, because these patterns do play out in our personal and collective experience.
The Tables Below show the patterns of the Full Moon occurring about every three years no matter what pattern you are tracking.
2000 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Mar 20, Apr 18, May 18, Jun 17 |
2002 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Sep 21, Oct 21, Nov 20, Dec 19 |
2005 | 4thFull Moon in a Season | Jun 22, Jul 21, Aug 19, Sep 18 |
2008 | 4thFull Moon in a Season | Mar 21, Apr 20, May 19, Jun 18 |
2010 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Sep 23, Oct 23, Nov 21, Dec 21 +eclipse |
2013 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Jun 23, Jul 22, Aug 19, Sep 19 |
2016 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Mar 23, Apr 22, May 21, Jun 20 |
2018/2019 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Dec 21, Jan 20, Feb 19, Mar 19 |
2021 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Jun 24, Jul 24, Aug 22, Sep 20 |
2024 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Jun 22, Jul 21, Aug 19, Sep 18 |
2027 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Mar 22, Apr 20, May 19, Jun 18 |
2029 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Sep 22, Oct 22, Nov 21, Dec 20 |
2032 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Jun 23, Jul 22, Aug 21, Sep 19 |
2035 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Mar 23, Apr 22, May 22, Jun 20 |
2038 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Mar 21, Apr 19, May 18, Jun 17 +eclipse |
2040 | 4th Full Moon in a Season | Jun 24, Jul 24, Aug 22, Sep 20 |
FULL MOON DATES BASED ON TWO FULL MOONS IN A CALENDAR MONTH
Nov 2001 | 2 Full Moons | November 1 and 30 |
---|---|---|
Jul 2004 | 2 Full Moons | July 2 and 31 |
May 2007 | 2 Full Moons | May 2 and 31 |
Dec 2009 | 2 Full Moons | December 2 and 31 |
Aug 2012 | 2 Full Moons | Aug 2 and 31 |
Jul 2015 | 2 Full Moons | July 2 and 31 |
Jan 2018 | 2 Full Moons | January 2 and 31 No Full Moon in February March 1 and 31 |
Oct 2020 | 2 Full Moons | October 1 and 31 |
TWO CONSECUTIVE FULL MOONS IN THE SAME SIGN
(No Taurus, Gemini, Leo, or Cancer)
2000 | Feb 19 | 00 Virgo 51 | 2000 | Mar 20 | 29 Virgo 53 |
2002 | Jul 24 | 00 Aquarius 18 | 2002 | Aug 22 | 29 Aquarius 39 |
2005 | Jun 22 | 00 Capricorn 51 | 2005 | Jul 21 | 28 Capricorn 47 |
2008 | Apr 20 | 00 Scorpio 43 | 2008 | May 20 | 29 Scorpio 27 |
2010 | Sep 23 | 00 Aries 15 | 2010 | Oct 23 | 29 Aries 33 |
2013 | Jul 22 | 00 Aquarius 06 | 2013 | Aug 21 | 28 Aquarius 11 |
2016 | May 21 | 01 Sagittarius 14 | 2016 | Jun 20 | 29 Sagittarius 33 |
2019 | Mar 21 | 00 Libra 29 | 2019 | Apr 19 | 29 Libra 27 |
2021 | Jul 24 | 01 Aquarius 26 | 2021 | Aug 22 | 29 Aquarius 37 |
2024 | Jun 21 | 01 Capricorn 07 | 2024 | Jul 21 | 29 Capricorn 09 |
2027 | Apr 20 | 00Scorpio 37 | 2027 | May 20 | 29 Scorpio 14 |
2029 | Aug 24 | 01 Pisces 12 | 2029 | Sep 22 | 29 Pisces 57 |
2032 | Jul 22 | 00 Aquarius 30 | 2032 | Aug 21 | 28 Aquarius 34 |
2035 | May 22 | 00 Sag 57 | 2035 | Jun 20 | 29 Sag 20 |
2038 | Mar 21 | 00 Libra 33 | 2038 | Apr 19 | 29 Libra 29 |
2040 | Jul 24 | 00 Aquarius 48 | 2040 | Aug 22 | 29 Aquarius 53 |
The Number of Full Moons in a Calendar Year from 2019 to 2030.
Jan 20 2019 | Full Moon | 9:16 PM | PST | 00°Le52′ D |
Feb 19 2019 | Full Moon | 7:53:28 AM | PST | 00°Vi42′ D |
Mar 20 2019 | Full Moon | 6:42:45 PM | PDT | 00°Li09′ D |
Apr 19 2019 | Full Moon | 4:12:04 AM | PDT | 29°Li07′ D |
May 18 2019 | Full Moon | 2:11:14 PM | PDT | 27°Sc39′ D |
Jun 17 2019 | Full Moon | 1:30:33 AM | PDT | 25°Sg53′ D |
Jul 16 2019 | Full Moon | 2:38:06 PM | PDT | 24°Cp04′ D |
Aug 15 2019 | Full Moon | 5:29:09 AM | PDT | 22°Aq24′ D |
Sep 13 2019 | Full Moon | 9:32:39 PM | PDT | 21°Pi05′ D |
Oct 13 2019 | Full Moon | 2:07:45 PM | PDT | 20°Ar14′ D |
Nov 12 2019 | Full Moon | 5:34:17 AM | PST | 19°Ta52′ D |
Dec 11 2019 | Full Moon | 9:12:09 PM | PST | 19°Ge52′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2019 Calendar Year |
||||
Jan 10 2020 | Full Moon | 11:21:11 AM | PST | 20°Cn00′ D |
Feb 8 2020 | Full Moon | 11:33:09 PM | PST | 20°Le00′ D |
Mar 9 2020 | Full Moon | 10:47:37 AM | PDT | 19°Vi37′ D |
Apr 7 2020 | Full Moon | 7:34:58 PM | PDT | 18°Li44′ D |
May 7 2020 | Full Moon | 3:45:06 AM | PDT | 17°Sc20′ D |
Jun 5 2020 | Full Moon | 12:12:15 PM | PDT | 15°Sg34′ D |
Jul 4 2020 | Full Moon | 9:44:16 PM | PDT | 13°Cp38′ D |
Aug 3 2020 | Full Moon | 8:58:38 AM | PDT | 11°Aq46′ D |
Sep 1 2020 | Full Moon | 10:21:56 PM | PDT | 10°Pi12′ D |
Oct 1 2020 | Full Moon | 2:05:07 PM | PDT | 09°Ar08′ D |
Oct 31 2020 | Full Moon | 7:49:01 AM | PDT | 08°Ta38′ D |
Nov 30 2020 | Full Moon | 1:29:32 AM | PST | 08°Ge38′ D |
Dec 29 2020 | Full Moon | 7:28:04 PM | PST | 08°Cn53′ D |
13 Full Moons in 2020 Calendar Year |
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Jan 28 2021 | Full Moon | 11:16:05 AM | PST | 09°Le06′ D |
Feb 27 2021 | Full Moon | 12:17:11 AM | PST | 08°Vi57′ D |
Mar 28 2021 | Full Moon | 11:48:02 AM | PDT | 08°Li18′ D |
Apr 26 2021 | Full Moon | 8:31:23 PM | PDT | 07°Sc06′ D |
May 26 2021 | Full Moon | 4:13:43 AM | PDT | 05°Sg26′ D |
Jun 24 2021 | Full Moon | 11:39:32 AM | PDT | 03°Cp28′ D |
Jul 23 2021 | Full Moon | 7:36:45 PM | PDT | 01°Aq26′ D |
Aug 22 2021 | Full Moon | 5:01:48 AM | PDT | 29°Aq37′ D |
Sep 20 2021 | Full Moon | 4:54:32 PM | PDT | 28°Pi14′ D |
Oct 20 2021 | Full Moon | 7:56:31 AM | PDT | 27°Ar26′ D |
Nov 19 2021 | Full Moon | 12:57:18 AM | PST | 27°Ta14′ D |
Dec 18 2021 | Full Moon | 8:35:20 PM | PST | 27°Ge29′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2021 Calendar Year |
||||
Jan 17 2022 | Full Moon | 3:48:16 PM | PST | 27°Cn51′ D |
Feb 16 2022 | Full Moon | 8:56:21 AM | PST | 28°Le00′ D |
Mar 18 2022 | Full Moon | 12:17:24 AM | PDT | 27°Vi40′ D |
Apr 16 2022 | Full Moon | 11:54:52 AM | PDT | 26°Li46′ D |
May 15 2022 | Full Moon | 9:13:58 PM | PDT | 25°Sc18′ D |
Jun 14 2022 | Full Moon | 4:51:35 AM | PDT | 23°Sg25′ D |
Jul 13 2022 | Full Moon | 11:37:27 AM | PDT | 21°Cp21′ D |
Aug 11 2022 | Full Moon | 6:35:34 PM | PDT | 19°Aq21′ D |
Sep 10 2022 | Full Moon | 2:58:52 AM | PDT | 17°Pi41′ D |
Oct 9 2022 | Full Moon | 1:54:47 PM | PDT | 16°Ar33′ D |
Nov 8 2022 | Full Moon | 3:01:57 AM | PST | 16°Ta01′ D |
Dec 7 2022 | Full Moon | 8:07:59 PM | PST | 16°Ge02′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2022 Calendar Year |
||||
Jan 6 2023 | Full Moon | 3:07:42 PM | PST | 16°Cn22′ D |
Feb 5 2023 | Full Moon | 10:28:22 AM | PST | 16°Le41′ D |
Mar 7 2023 | Full Moon | 4:40:09 AM | PST | 16°Vi40′ D |
Apr 5 2023 | Full Moon | 9:34:19 PM | PDT | 16°Li07′ D |
May 5 2023 | Full Moon | 10:33:51 AM | PDT | 14°Sc58′ D |
Jun 3 2023 | Full Moon | 8:41:31 PM | PDT | 13°Sg18′ D |
Jul 3 2023 | Full Moon | 4:38:29 AM | PDT | 11°Cp19′ D |
Aug 1 2023 | Full Moon | 11:31:27 AM | PDT | 09°Aq16′ D |
Aug 30 2023 | Full Moon | 6:35:25 PM | PDT | 07°Pi25′ D |
Sep 29 2023 | Full Moon | 2:57:19 AM | PDT | 06°Ar00′ D |
Oct 28 2023 | Full Moon | 1:23:49 PM | PDT | 05°Ta09′ D |
Nov 27 2023 | Full Moon | 1:16:05 AM | PST | 04°Ge51′ D |
Dec 26 2023 | Full Moon | 4:32:59 PM | PST | 04°Cn58′ D |
13 Full Moons in 2023 Calendar Year |
||||
Jan 25 2024 | Full Moon | 9:53:47 AM | PST | 05°Le15′ D |
Feb 24 2024 | Full Moon | 4:30:12 AM | PST | 05°Vi23′ D |
Mar 25 2024 | Full Moon | 12:00:06 AM | PDT | 05°Li07′ D |
Apr 23 2024 | Full Moon | 4:48:45 PM | PDT | 04°Sc18′ D |
May 23 2024 | Full Moon | 6:52:54 AM | PDT | 02°Sg55′ D |
Jun 21 2024 | Full Moon | 6:07:39 PM | PDT | 01°Cp07′ D |
Jul 21 2024 | Full Moon | 3:16:55 AM | PDT | 29°Cp09′ D |
Aug 19 2024 | Full Moon | 11:25:34 AM | PDT | 27°Aq15′ D |
Sep 17 2024 | Full Moon | 7:34:13 PM | PDT | 25°Pi41′ D |
Oct 17 2024 | Full Moon | 4:26:09 AM | PDT | 24°Ar35′ D |
Nov 15 2024 | Full Moon | 1:28:16 PM | PST | 24°Ta01′ D |
Dec 15 2024 | Full Moon | 1:01:26 AM | PST | 23°Ge53′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2024 Calendar Year |
||||
Jan 13 2025 | Full Moon | 2:26:39 PM | PST | 24°Cn00′ D |
Feb 12 2025 | Full Moon | 5:53:09 AM | PST | 24°Le06′ D |
Mar 13 2025 | Full Moon | 11:54:24 PM | PDT | 23°Vi57′ D |
Apr 12 2025 | Full Moon | 5:22:00 PM | PDT | 23°Li20′ D |
May 12 2025 | Full Moon | 9:55:41 AM | PDT | 22°Sc13′ D |
Jun 11 2025 | Full Moon | 12:43:35 AM | PDT | 20°Sg39′ D |
Jul 10 2025 | Full Moon | 1:36:32 PM | PDT | 18°Cp50′ D |
Aug 9 2025 | Full Moon | 12:54:48 AM | PDT | 17°Aq00′ D |
Sep 7 2025 | Full Moon | 11:08:38 AM | PDT | 15°Pi23′ D |
Oct 6 2025 | Full Moon | 8:47:21 PM | PDT | 14°Ar08′ D |
Nov 5 2025 | Full Moon | 5:19:02 AM | PST | 13°Ta23′ D |
Dec 4 2025 | Full Moon | 3:13:48 PM | PST | 13°Ge04′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2025 Calendar Year |
||||
Jan 3 2026 | Full Moon | 2:02:38 AM | PST | 13°Cn02′ D |
Feb 1 2026 | Full Moon | 2:08:58 PM | PST | 13°Le04′ D |
Mar 3 2026 | Full Moon | 3:37:37 AM | PST | 12°Vi54′ D |
Apr 1 2026 | Full Moon | 7:11:41 PM | PDT | 12°Li21′ D |
May 1 2026 | Full Moon | 10:22:53 AM | PDT | 11°Sc21′ D |
May 31 2026 | Full Moon | 1:44:55 AM | PDT | 09°Sg56′ D |
Jun 29 2026 | Full Moon | 4:56:24 PM | PDT | 08°Cp15′ D |
Jul 29 2026 | Full Moon | 7:35:26 AM | PDT | 06°Aq30′ D |
Aug 27 2026 | Full Moon | 9:18:14 PM | PDT | 04°Pi54′ D |
Sep 26 2026 | Full Moon | 9:48:45 AM | PDT | 03°Ar37′ D |
Oct 25 2026 | Full Moon | 9:11:31 PM | PDT | 02°Ta46′ D |
Nov 24 2026 | Full Moon | 6:53:16 AM | PST | 02°Ge20′ D |
Dec 23 2026 | Full Moon | 5:27:56 PM | PST | 02°Cn14′ D |
13 Full Moons in 2026 Calendar Year |
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Jan 22 2027 | Full Moon | 4:17:05 AM | PST | 02°Le14′ D |
Feb 20 2027 | Full Moon | 3:23:21 PM | PST | 02°Vi06′ D |
Mar 22 2027 | Full Moon | 3:43:29 AM | PDT | 01°Li35′ D |
Apr 20 2027 | Full Moon | 3:26:51 PM | PDT | 00°Sc37′ D |
May 20 2027 | Full Moon | 3:58:42 AM | PDT | 29°Sc14′ D |
Jun 18 2027 | Full Moon | 5:44:02 PM | PDT | 27°Sg33′ D |
Jul 18 2027 | Full Moon | 8:44:36 AM | PDT | 25°Cp49′ D |
Aug 17 2027 | Full Moon | 12:28:22 AM | PDT | 24°Aq12′ D |
Sep 15 2027 | Full Moon | 4:03:12 PM | PDT | 22°Pi53′ D |
Oct 15 2027 | Full Moon | 6:46:41 AM | PDT | 21°Ar59′ D |
Nov 13 2027 | Full Moon | 7:25:36 PM | PST | 21°Ta31′ D |
Dec 13 2027 | Full Moon | 8:08:28 AM | PST | 21°Ge25′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2027 Calendar Year |
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Jan 11 2028 | Full Moon | 8:02:45 PM | PST | 21°Cn28′ D |
Feb 10 2028 | Full Moon | 7:03:26 AM | PST | 21°Le24′ D |
Mar 10 2028 | Full Moon | 5:05:45 PM | PST | 20°Vi59′ D |
Apr 9 2028 | Full Moon | 3:26:18 AM | PDT | 20°Li06′ D |
May 8 2028 | Full Moon | 12:48:36 PM | PDT | 18°Sc44′ D |
Jun 6 2028 | Full Moon | 11:08:29 PM | PDT | 17°Sg02′ D |
Jul 6 2028 | Full Moon | 11:10:29 AM | PDT | 15°Cp11′ D |
Aug 5 2028 | Full Moon | 1:09:29 AM | PDT | 13°Aq26′ D |
Sep 3 2028 | Full Moon | 4:47:15 PM | PDT | 11°Pi59′ D |
Oct 3 2028 | Full Moon | 9:24:39 AM | PDT | 10°Ar59′ D |
Nov 2 2028 | Full Moon | 2:17:01 AM | PDT | 10°Ta29′ D |
Dec 1 2028 | Full Moon | 5:39:53 PM | PST | 10°Ge24′ D |
Dec 31 2028 | Full Moon | 8:48:10 AM | PST | 10°Cn33′ D |
13 Full Moons in 2028 Calendar Year |
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Jan 29 2029 | Full Moon | 10:03:16 PM | PST | 10°Le38′ D |
Feb 28 2029 | Full Moon | 9:09:54 AM | PST | 10°Vi24′ D |
Mar 29 2029 | Full Moon | 7:26:03 PM | PDT | 09°Li41′ D |
Apr 28 2029 | Full Moon | 3:36:27 AM | PDT | 08°Sc26′ D |
May 27 2029 | Full Moon | 11:37:09 AM | PDT | 06°Sg45′ D |
Jun 25 2029 | Full Moon | 8:21:59 PM | PDT | 04°Cp50′ D |
Jul 25 2029 | Full Moon | 6:35:24 AM | PDT | 02°Aq54′ D |
Aug 23 2029 | Full Moon | 6:50:52 PM | PDT | 01°Pi12′ D |
Sep 22 2029 | Full Moon | 9:28:57 AM | PDT | 29°Pi57′ D |
Oct 22 2029 | Full Moon | 2:27:12 AM | PDT | 29°Ar16′ D |
Nov 20 2029 | Full Moon | 8:02:36 PM | PST | 29°Ta08′ D |
Dec 20 2029 | Full Moon | 2:46:08 PM | PST | 29°Ge21′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2029 Calendar Year |
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Jan 19 2030 | Full Moon | 7:54:00 AM | PST | 29°Cn37′ D |
Feb 17 2030 | Full Moon | 10:19:27 PM | PST | 29°Le38′ D |
Mar 19 2030 | Full Moon | 10:56:07 AM | PDT | 29°Vi11′ D |
Apr 17 2030 | Full Moon | 8:19:39 PM | PDT | 28°Li09′ D |
May 17 2030 | Full Moon | 4:18:46 AM | PDT | 26°Sc37′ D |
Jun 15 2030 | Full Moon | 11:40:38 AM | PDT | 24°Sg43′ D |
Jul 14 2030 | Full Moon | 7:11:36 PM | PDT | 22°Cp41′ D |
Aug 13 2030 | Full Moon | 3:44:01 AM | PDT | 20°Aq45′ D |
Sep 11 2030 | Full Moon | 2:17:33 PM | PDT | 19°Pi11′ D |
Oct 11 2030 | Full Moon | 3:46:28 AM | PDT | 18°Ar10′ D |
Nov 9 2030 | Full Moon | 7:29:55 PM | PST | 17°Ta47′ D |
Dec 9 2030 | Full Moon | 2:40:04 PM | PST | 17°Ge54′ D |
12 Full Moons in 2030 Calendar Year |
article created by Cayelin K Castell in 2012 and updated in 2020
This article is also posted and updated often on Cayelin’s website
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