Saturday, May 30, 2026

Confirmation of always there

Watching the stars

Before Dawn hits

They start big so early

Then they flow their

Way to meet and

Say it’s time

To be invincable

Only to return

To your eyes being on me

Dependable as my way

Of the Big Dipper

Found through telescopes

Or 

The naked eye sometimes

To just study looking

At the stars

Is a job in its self

Coming around daily

As a ponderinse

Of what if

This was for

Light to happen

While darkness overtakes

The sun

That use to be

The moon.

Another chance to become intangled into yourself being never ceasing your amazement of ever my love will be available 4 me to see. No foreal.


Step outside 45 minutes before sunrise Aug. 20 to 22. The celestial view is well worth an early wake up.

The early-bird gets a celestial treat towards the end of August 2006. Just before the eastern sky brightens with sunrise, three planets and the waning crescent moon join the starry twilight tapestry. Then, as the bright stars of Gemini and Orion fade with oncoming dawn, the planets rise and shine.

Step outside 45 minutes before sunrise Aug. 20 to 22. The celestial view is well worth an early wake up. The planets Venus, Mercury and Saturn dance on the ecliptic -- the plane of Earth's orbit and the imaginary line tracing it in the sky. The sun, moon and planets appear to move along this line.

Venus, rising an hour and a half before sunrise, is the easiest to see in the morning sky. Two hundred forty-one million million kilometers (150 million miles) distant, Venus is Earth-sized.

Mercury, at a distance of 183 million kilometers (114 million miles), is the fastest and smallest of the inner planets and appears brighter than the more distant Saturn. 

Saturn, 1,517 million kilometers (943 million miles) distant, was at conjunction with the sun just two weeks ago and now rises nearly an hour before sunrise. 

On Aug. 26 and 27, Saturn pairs with much brighter Venus at dawn. What other planets can we see in late August? Mars sets 45 minutes after sunset by month's end but is lost from view in the twilight, while brilliant Jupiter remains prominent as the only planet visible for a few hours during the late August evenings. Step outside 45 minutes before sunrise Aug. 20 to 22. The celestial view is well worth an early wake up.

The early-bird gets a celestial treat towards the end of August 2006. Just before the eastern sky brightens with sunrise, three planets and the waning crescent moon join the starry twilight tapestry. Then, as the bright stars of Gemini and Orion fade with oncoming dawn, the planets rise and shine.

Step outside 45 minutes before sunrise Aug. 20 to 22. The celestial view is well worth an early wake up. The planets Venus, Mercury and Saturn dance on the ecliptic -- the plane of Earth's orbit and the imaginary line tracing it in the sky. The sun, moon and planets appear to move along this line.

Venus, rising an hour and a half before sunrise, is the easiest to see in the morning sky. Two hundred forty-one million million kilometers (150 million miles) distant, Venus is Earth-sized.

Mercury, at a distance of 183 million kilometers (114 million miles), is the fastest and smallest of the inner planets and appears brighter than the more distant Saturn. 

Saturn, 1,517 million kilometers (943 million miles) distant, was at conjunction with the sun just two weeks ago and now rises nearly an hour before sunrise. 

On Aug. 26 and 27, Saturn pairs with much brighter Venus at dawn. What other planets can we see in late August? Mars sets 45 minutes after sunset by month's end but is lost from view in the twilight, while brilliant Jupiter remains prominent as the only planet visible for a few hours during the late August evenings.


A bunch of back and forth!


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