Almost 20 years ago, on a visit to England, my sister and I went to the county of Kent to visit Sissinghurst Castle’s famous gardens. The gardens were created by Vita Sackville-West in 1950. I admired all the various sections, but my lasting memory is of the White Garden, which is said to be spectacular in the moonlight.
In Napa Valley, we can create our own “moon garden” — a white garden that can create an oasis of calm after a long day at work or a busy day at home. To sit on your porch or patio surrounded by the beauty that you have created can be very restorative.
Choose an area where you will be able to see and smell the white flowering plants and the shrubs with silvery foliage, grasses and trees that will accentuate the silver and white theme of the garden.
If you choose a small area, such as the one around an entryway or a patio, start with sweet alyssum (Lobularia maritima). Besides being readily available, it is easy to grow, has a lovely fragrance and is ideal for our climate. Sweet alyssum likes full sun but can also tolerate part shade.
If the area is shady, you can plant impatiens with the sweet alyssum. Another low-growing possibility for shade is lamb’s ears (Stachys byzantina). Nicotania sylvestris, which reaches 5 feet tall, could be a backdrop. Nicotania has fragrant tubular flowers and would be a great addition to your lunar garden.
If you have limited space but have room for containers, buy an attractive pot — in ceramic, clay or even plastic. Some plastic pots look exactly like the heavier clay ones but are easier to move around. Make sure that the container has drainage holes. Fill it with potting soil, flush the soil with water to remove excess salts, and then choose plants to create a miniature “white garden.”

sthelenastar.com


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Tonight’s full moon is the smallest and farthest full moon for all of 2008.
In the course of one month, the moon’s distance from Earth varies by about 50,000 kilometers – that’s 30,000 miles. Tonight, the full moon is also farthest from Earth for the month. That’s why tonight’s full moon is the smallest full moon of the year.
Around the world tonight, the full moon lights up the night from dusk till dawn. The precise moment for this full moon is 2:11 Universal Time on May 20. For the Central Time Zone in North America, that places the full moon at 9:11 p.m. this Monday evening.
Full moons recur in periods of about 29.5 days, but the moon returns to the farthest point in its orbit every 27.5 days. This variation will cause the full moons to come a bit closer to Earth and to loom a bit larger in our sky with every passing month. Seven full moons after the one tonight, we’ll see the closest and largest full moon of 2008 on December 12.
By the way, tonight’s full moon is the 3rd of 4 full moons to fall between the June solstice and the September equinox.
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earthsky.org


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Blood Moon

“Blood Moon” is the first novel by A.W. Gryphon, whose previous works include the scripts for two indie films and episodes of Sabrina the Animated Series. The story revolves around Amelia Pivens Kreutzer, a young woman with jet black hair and piercing green eyes who also happens to be a natural witch and “The One” [sic] prophesied to reunite the broken factions of witches in the world, usher in a new age, and so on. Amelia has a tragic past: she saw her mother murdered in front of her when she was seven, saw her husband (one of the youngest Classical pianists in Europe — do NOT follow that thought process out to its logical conclusion) also murdered in front of her, saw her father die of an evil spell (i.e. murdered) in front of her. (You may have noticed a pattern. It includes descriptions of how each one’s last thoughts and words are all about comforting poor Amelia, and how they breathe their last.)
Amelia’s rare insights into the works of Francisco Goya have catapulted her to a high-ranking job at London’s National Gallery. While we are told some of these “insights,” they mainly exist so the audience can think the protagonist is smart. Also, despite having been raised early on in Cunningham-based Wicca and also having been able to control immense power and forces at a tender age, Amelia heartbrokenly denied her heritage until she conveniently remembers everything a few days before her Very Special Birthday. Assisted by her
creepy old guy friend Jeremy (”the spitting image of Sir Anthony Hopkins”) she strikes against her mysterious foes, who all dress in black suits and all drive black towncars in defiance of any sensible rules of reconnaissance. Also, she writes tender letters to her dead husband as the funeral director and his wife look on and muse about what the “poor girl” is going to do. (The heroine gets called “young girl” in almost every description, despite being nearly thirty. I can’t tell if it’s a subtle use of common language to evoke a recoil at the incorrect and patronizing attitudes of unbelievers, or just bad writing.)
A sample from the Prologue, transcribed exactly as written:
Maeve was in labor. She was two months pre-mature, but the baby was coming quickly. In a matter of minutes a little girl was born. The woman assisting in the birth wrapped the child in a cloth and placed her in the proud High Priest arms, just in time for Maeve to scream again. The woman rushed back over to her. She placed her hand on Maeve’s belly and looked to The Coven, then to Domhall. There was a second child coming. A twin. She had no sooner announced it, when the child pushed through. In an unworldly and quick moment, the High Priestess gave birth to a son. Domhall and The Coven were overcome with emotion. They could not help, but know, that this was a sign not only from the God and the Goddess, but from The All.
Setting aside the ballistic approach to punctuation and capitalization, the adolescent fantasy version of Wicca and its history, and the protagonist who zooms to the top of the Mary Sue chart within the first few pages, this is still not a good book. The prose is leaden and repetitive, while the dialogue is lifted straight out of a B-movie mystery. The villains are one-dimensional, which at least means they fit in nicely with the heroes. The plot twists are by-the-numbers when they make any sense at all. The names of the characters aren’t even spelled consistently through the book.
And then there’s the pronunciation guide.
“Blood Moon” is at its core about one flavor of Celtic-derived witchcraft, and as such, the pronunciation on some names is difficult for American readers. A reader seeing the name “Budahach” for the first time might benefit from a parenthetical explaining that it is pronounced “BOO-ach” (or the reader might not benefit, as there’s no accompanying explanation of whether it’s a hard or soft “ch”). However, when the author feels required to provide a pronunciation guide for “coven” (”CUH-ven,” not to be confused with “in-DUH-vidual”), the question rapidly becomes: “Just how dumb is the target audience for this novel?”
As someone who has been out of the broom closet for over twenty years, I weep in my heart for any readers who make this their first exposure to Wicca. Popular culture already has “The Craft” and the condescending portrayals of neopagans in the Buffy-verse to give grief to followers of modern Earth-based religions. If “Blood Moon” has one good thing about it, it is that the author is clearly very earnest in her support of Wiccans and witches. Unfortunately, the book’s low quality will drive actual pagans away with cries of: “Get off our side! You’re making us look dumb!” (I suspect this must be how most Christians feel when someone mentions the “Left Behind” books.)
The single most frightening thing about this novel is that it is intended to be the first in a series. My advice is to reread the first Harry Potter book. Whatever your opinion about the later HP books, you’ll enjoy Sorcerer’s Stone / Philosopher’s Stone far more than this travesty, and at least no one (probably) will walk away thinking they’ve just learned the Secret True History of Witchcraft.
Edit: For the sake of clarity, and lest someone think the mentions of more popular works of fantasy puts this book on the level of those same works, let me state the following outright:
- If you are a fan of Buffy: The Vampire Slayer, do not read this book.
- If you are a fan of the Harry Potter series, do not read this book.
- If you are a fan of “The Craft,” do not read this book.
- If you have Views about people who intentionally spell “magic” with a “k,” do not read this book.
- If you have Views about Wicca being presented as having been around as a named religion for more than five hundred years (yes, even in fiction), do not read this book.
Or do. It’s a free country. Just don’t say I didn’t warn you.
James A. Rock & Company

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Moon Eclipse

Skygazers worried about cloudy weather may get a break during tonight’s total lunar eclipse.
A break in the clouds, that is.
Despite the so-so visibility that’s predicted, the eclipse will take long enough to boost the odds of glimpses now and then.
“The last several evenings have been projected to be cloudy, and we’ve had some favorable breaks in the clouds,” said Clyde Simpson, an astronomer at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. “It doesn’t hurt to toss the coat on, go outside and take a glance.”
Visible or not, the moon will be overhead from the time it enters the Earth’s partial shadow at 7:37 p.m. until it leaves it at 1:16 a.m. The moon will be totally eclipsed from 10:01 p.m. to 10:51 p.m.
If clouds hide the moon at first, make sure you have an open horizon to the southeast and south. Then just keep looking and hoping.

cleveland.com


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