2014 Pagan Calendar
January 2014
- 1: New Moon; Hag's Day, honoring the Goddess as She Who Transforms
- 6: Triple Goddess Day, honoring the Triple Goddess; also the Day of the Lord of the Dance
- 8: Waxing Moon
- 16: Full Moon - Wolf Moon
- 18: Day of Danu, celebrating the Great Goddess who Shows the Way
- 24: Waning Moon
- 27: Dark Moon
- 30: New Moon; Jan30-Feb 2: Roman celebration of Februalia
- 2: Imbolc Sabbat, Cleansing, Purification, Quickening
- 6: Waxing Moon
- 14: Full Moon - Quickening Moon; Family Day, celebrated as Valentine's Day
- 15: Pan's Day, honoring Lord of the Wilderness, Animals, Fertility
- 22: Waning Moon
- 25: Dark Moon
- 1: New Moon; Matronalia, the Festival of Women
- 8: Waxing Moon
- 9: Mother Goddess Day
- 16: Full Moon - Storm Moon
- 17: Festival honoring Dionysus, God of Vine and Rebirth
- 20: Ostara Sabbat - Spring Equinox, Goddess of Spring
- 24: Waning Moon
- 25: Lady Day, honoring the Crone as Grandmother
- 27: Dark Moon
- 30: New Moon
- 1: Dark Mother Day, honoring Black Annis, Kali; Fool's Day, God of Chaos energy
- 7: Waxing Moon
- 8: Day of Mooncakes, honoring the Moon Goddess
- 15: Full Moon - Hare Moon
- 22: Waning Moon; Earth Day
- 23: Festival of the Greenman, honoring the God of forest and vegetation
- 25: Dark Moon; Spring Festival, dedicated to the Horned God and Corn Mother
- 29: New Moon
- 30: May Eve, annual gathering of Witches and covens
- 1: Beltane Sabbat, Festival of Spring and Fertility
- 7: Waxing Moon
- 14: Full Moon - Chaste Moon
- 21: Waning Moon; Dark/Bright Mother Goddess Day, honoring Hecate/Demeter, Kali/Uma
- 24: Dark Moon
- 28: New Moon; Feast Day honoring the Goddess of the Moon, Dark Moon, Underworld, Secret Wisdom, Witches
- 5: Waxing Moon; Earth Mother Day, honoring Gaia/Mother Earth
- 8: New Moon
- 13: Full Moon - Dyad Moon; Feast Day honoring Goddess of the Horse (Otherworld Guide)
- 19: Waning Moon
- 21: Litha Sabbat, Summer Solstice , Midsummer's Eve, offerings to the Other People
- 22: Dark Moon
- 23: Day of the Lady and Lord of the Sidhe, Otherworld Aspects of the Divine
- 1: Crone Day, honoring Father Time and Old Mother Nature
- 5: Waxing Moon
- 12: Full Moon - Mead Moon
- 19: Waning Moon
- 21: Witch's Day, celebrating the Craft
- 22: Dark Moon
- 26: New Moon
- 1: Lammas or Lugnassadh Sabbat, First Harvest. Bread Harvest, grains
- 4: Waxing Moon
- 10: Full Moon - Herb Moon
- 17: Waning Moon
- 20: Dark Moon; God and Goddess Marry, Sun God enters Earth Goddess and rules the Underworld as Lord of Shadows
- 21: Festival of Hecate, invoking her protection over the harvests
- 25: New Moon
- 2: Waxing Moon
- 9: Full Moon - Harvest Moon
- 13: Fire Lighting Ceremony, honoring the spirits of the dead with candle light
- 16: Waning Moon
- 19: Dark Moon
- 21: International Day of Peace
- 23: Mabon Sabbat, Autumn Equinox, Second Harvest or Vine Harvest
- 24: New Moon
- 1: Waxing Moon
- 2: Feast of Guardian Spirits
- 8: Full Moon - Wine or Blood Moon
- 15: Waning Moon
- 18: Dark Moon; Great Horn Festival, Horned God and Lady of the Wood invoked for the fertility of game during the Hunting Season
- 23: New Moon
- 31: Waxing Moon; Samhain Sabbat, Third Harvest (Root Harvest), All Hallows Eve, Dark God and Dark Goddess united in Underworld allow spirit communication
- 1: Cailleach's Reign, honoring Riders of the Wild Hunt who search for souls to transport to Land of Shadows; Mexico's Day of the Dead
- 6: Full Moon - Hunter's Moon
- 14: Waning Moon
- 16: Night of Hecate, honoring Goddess of Moon, Magic, and Witches as the Teacher of the Craft
- 17: Dark Moon
- 22: New Moon
- 29: Waxing Moon
- 30: Festival of Hecate
- 6: Full Moon - Oak Moon
- 14: Waning Moon
- 17: Dark Moon; Beginning of Saturnalia
- 21: Yule Sabbat, Winter Solstice and Return of the Sun God
- 22: New Moon
- 24: Holly Eve, departure of Holly King who leaves gifts for children
- 25: Oak Day, celebrating birth of the Oak King, birth of the Sun
- 28: Waxing Moon
- 31: Hogmanay - New Year's Eve, Crone prepares to depart; as the old, withered year changes at midnight to a fresh, young New Year
Enter Lunabella's World.
CAT WOMEN OF THE MOON (1953)
Shot in 3-D in the middle
of the night on cheap sets by the most depth-perception-challenged
director in history
(Arthur Hilton)
On the dark side
of the moon.
There is no sunshine day.
See how they doze on lounge chairs
in their aluminum
siding-walled space ship. See how they doze amidst the columns and
splendor of the secret cat lair