Sunday, March 20, 2011

Happy First Day of Spring,March,20, 2011 from Wing Chun Kali System


Tonight’s moon – fresh from being a super moon, or full moon close to Earth – is still big and bright in our sky. But tonight’s moon – like all moons around the full phase in springtime – will rise much later than last night’s moon. Watch for it to ascend over your eastern horizon an hour or more after sunset.
The equinox represents a point on Earth’s orbit, but it’s also an event that happens on the imaginary dome of Earth’s sky. It marks that special moment when the sun crosses the celestial equator going from south to north.
The imaginary celestial equator is a great circle dividing the imaginary celestial sphere into its northern and southern hemispheres. The celestial equator wraps the sky directly above Earth’s equator, and at the equinox today, the sun crosses the celestial equator, to enter the sky’s northern hemisphere. All these imaginary components . . . and yet what happens at every equinox is very real, as real as the sun’s passage across the sky each day and as real as the change of the seasons.
Our ancestors couldn’t have understood the equinoxes as we do. They didn’t understand them as events that occur in the course of Earth’s yearly orbit around the sun. But if they were observant . . . and some were very observant indeed . . . they surely marked today as being midway between the sun’s lowest path across the sky in winter and highest path across the sky in summer.
If they thought in terms of four directions, they might also have learned a fact of nature, that occurs whenever there’s an equinox . . . whenever the sun crosses the celestial equator. Since the celestial equator intersects the horizon at due east and due west, the sun rises due east and sets due west on the day of the equinox, as seen from everywhere on the globe.

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