Tortoise Moon

~MOON FESTIVAL~

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin September 11, 2008 @ 4:35 pm

The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, is a popular East Asian celebration of abundance and togetherness, dating back over 3,000 years to China’s Zhou Dynasty. In Malaysia and Singapore, it is also sometimes referred to as the Lantern Festival or Mooncake Festival. The Chinese Lantern Festival is held on the 15th day of the first lunar month. This year’s festival is celebrated on September 13, 2008 PST… Happy Moon Festival!!

Happy 1st birthday to our youngest hatchlings born September 16, 2007, what a surprise party that was!!! And for all the tortoise and turtle lovers on your gift list this year check out “Animal World” online.

Shine on, shine on Harvest Moon

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin August 11, 2008 @ 5:21 pm

Welcome Augusts’ Harvest Moon aka Dog Day’s Moon, Fruit Moon, Woman’s Moon, Lightning Moon, Moon when all things ripen, Moon when cherries turn black… wow what a perfect name for the summer of 2008, the cherries have been particularly yummy and larger than I have ever seen. In China the cherry blossom symbolizes feminine beauty, the feminine principle, or love in the language of herbs. How fitting that the 2008 Summer Olympics are going on in China while we enjoy sweet cherries under a harvest Moon.

An old English harvest Moon ritual was to gather a key, a ring, a flower, a sprig of willow, a small piece of cake, a crust of bread, 10 of clubs, 9 of hearts, ace of spades, and ace of diamonds. Wrap these in a handkerchief and place it under your pillow. Saying upon going to bed: “Luna, every woman’s friend, to me they goodness condescend. Let me this night in visions see, emblems of my destiny.” If you dream of storms, it means coming trouble; if the storms end, a calm fate after strife. If you dream of a ring or the ace of diamonds, marriage: bread, a good job; cake, prosperity; flowers, joy: willow, treachery in love: spades, death: clubs, living in a foreign land: diamonds, money: keys, great power; birds, many children; and geese, more than one marriage.

 

Tortoise news:

Thirty-six years ago this month the adoption of the California State Reptile was signed into law… on August 10, 1972, Governor Ronald Reagan signed the legislation provided by Assembly Bill No. 1089 and the California desert tortoise (Gopherus agasizzi) was designated the “official state reptile” of the State of California.

The bill was sponsored by Assemblyman Richard D. Hayden of Sunnyvale. He related that the idea was proposed to him by students at the Benjamin Bubb School in Mountain View.

The students had been studying the state’s bear flag and other California symbols and were interested in ecology. During their studies, the students found that the state had no official reptile and a project was born.

The students, from kindergarten through sixth grade, studied a number of prospects and settled on the desert tortoise because it was native to only California and was on the endangered species list.

Mojave Max Dies

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin July 5, 2008 @ 8:04 pm

July 1, 2008 · 6:09 PM Mojave Max, the face of Southern Nevada’s Mojave Desert tortoise population, has died of apparent natural causes on Monday, said Kirsten Cannon, spokeswoman for the Bureau of Land Management.

The 65-year-old male tortoise lived in a special habitat at Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area. That’s within the normal life span of a desert tortoise, which ranges from 60 to 80 years. Cannon said a wildlife biologist examined Mojave Max before he was buried and found no signs of trauma.
For the past nine years Clark County school students were encouraged to estimate the time that he would first appear from his burrow after a winter’s brumation, the reptillian form of hibernation, Cannon said.
Mojave Max became a cultural icon who predicted the coming of spring — much like groundhog Punxsutawney Phil on the East Coast.
Max normally emerged from his burrow in mid-March but this year he appeared April 14 because of cooler weather.The successful event drew thousands of students in the Las Vegas Valley to research species, temperatures and cycles of the Mojave Desert.

More than 100,000 school children were introduced to the Mojave Desert ecosystem through the Clark County Desert Conservation Program, which includes a cartoon version of Mojave Max.

RIP Max… I hope they bury you under a full moon… July Full Moon Names: Hay Moon, Wort Moon, Moon of Claiming, Moon of Blood (because of mosquitoes), Blessing Moon, Maedmonat (Meadow Month), Hewimanoth (Hay Month), Fallow Moon, Buck Moon, Thunder Moon.

June’s Sweet Honey Moon

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin June 14, 2008 @ 2:49 pm

Through the ages, regions all over the world have applied  names that best fit their lives to the full moon. There are assortments of names to choose from. Locally appropriate or commonly used names are listed for full moon dates and times in most almanacs.

June = Graduations, Father’s Day, Weddings and My birthday =]

June is also a month to begin to gather honey from the hive. This fits the many weddings that are followed by Honey Moons. Honey Moon is the Bay Crossings pick for the June Full Moon because of the difference in the growing season for many regions. A universal name for every Algonquin American Indian tribe is Strawberry Moon, however in California, strawberries ripen for harvest in April. Commonly called the Rose Moon in Europe, in California, May is the peak time for roses. Other names include: Green Corn Moon, Flower Moon, Windy Moon, Lotus Moon by Chinese, Moon When June Berries Are Ripe by Sioux, Moon of Horses by Celtics, and in Medieval England, June’s full moon was known as the Dyan Moon.

Because we live in California and June is my birthday month as well as the month that our female tortoise lays her eggs I’m going to call June’s full moom “The Tortoise Moon.” So on June 18th look up and marvel at her beauty… and on the 22nd sing a little birthday song… I’ll be listening.

“You can travel anywhere with a smile and a piece of string.” –A.C. Haddon

May Moon Facts

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin May 16, 2008 @ 9:56 am

Distance From Earth:

225,745 miles

Length of a Day:

27.3 days

Radius:

1,080 miles

Diameter:

2,160 miles

Weight:

81 Quintillion Tons

Surface Temp (Day):

273° F

Surface Temp (Night):

– 244° F

Gravity At Surface:

0.1667 g (1/6 Earth’s)

Orbital Speed

2,287 mph

Driving time by car (@70 mph):

135 days

Flying time by rocket:

60 to 70 hrs.

No. of Men Who Have Walked on Surface:

12

Age of Oldest Rock Collected:

4.5 Billions yrs.

Rocks Collected By Apollo:

842 pounds

Widest Craters:

140 miles (dia.)

Deepest Craters:

15,000+ (ft.)

Highest Mountains:

16,000+ (ft.)

May 19, 9:11 p.m. EDT — Full Flower Moon

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