2016+ GEOSOLUNA: March 20, 2015 through March 20, 2017 Omkareshwar India Solar-Lunar Calendar with 25 Moon Cycles

Introducing GEOSOLUNA, a calendar running simultaneously with the familiar Gregorian dates. Geo-days begin at midnight, the solar year begins on the solstice, and lunar months begin with each dark new moon.

GEOSOLUNA

Earth rotates around its own axis once a day. Earth revolves around the sun once a year. The moon revolves around Earth once every 29.5 days, and rotates its own axis in the same period.

EQUINOX THIRD QUARTER

WANING MOON GIBBOUS

CRESCENT

Earth’s axis gyrates every 26,000 years, called the procession of the equinoxes*.

6:00 A.M. SUMMER FULL MOON

12:00 MIDNIGHT

LUNAR ECLIPSES OCCUR AT FULL MOON

EARTH

12:00 NOON

SOLSTICE

SOLAR ECLIPSES OCCUR AT NEW MOON

WINTER 6:00 P.M.

GIBBOUS

SUN

NEW MOON

* CRESCENT

Since Earth’s axis WAXING MOON tilts relative to its revolutionary plane FIRST QUARTER around the sun, north and south hemispheres *cycle not in Geosoluna experience opposite Ex.X.2 Geosoluna Orbs I = McB seasons. 160

EQUINOX

Geosoluna: Combining a Solar Calendar with a Lunar Calendar Geosoluna aligns our Earth time and space measurements with the sun and moon in a way currently neglected. Calendars have been changing through all human history. Ancients predicted seasons using pyramids and stone-circles as calendars.

What is a solar calendar?





One solar year is the time it takes the Earth to revolve around the sun from position zero relative to the sun, back to the same position. The solar calendar that we all know is the Gregorian. It measures its years with the passage of the sun from one December solstice to the next, though not acknowledging a solstice for the starting date. The Gregorian calendar ignores the moon, even though we have a division called “month”, from the same root word as “moon”. Since precise lunar cycles are not used for actual months, then the Gregorian solar year’s division into twelve unequal months is simply arbitrarily chosen—a year could be divided into 100 or 4 units, evenly spaced or not. Gregorian New Year’s Day is January first, but that is arbitrarily chosen. As the Earth’s axis around which it rotates is tilted from the perpendicular relative to the revolutionary plane, we experience seasons. The seasonal cycles are punctuated by four solar-geo events: solstice A, equinox A, solstice B, equinox B. One of these four events makes the best solar New Year’s Day. Which one chosen is arbitrary. January first New Year’s Day follows about eleven days after northern hemisphere’s winter solstice on about December 21st. December 21st ish

March 21st ish

June 21st ish

September 21st ish



December 21st ish

Solstice A  Equinox A  Solstice B  Equinox B  Solstice A One solar year lasts 365.242 days. A Geo-day is one rotation of the Earth from position zero facing the sun, back to the same position. A solar year that last 365 days has .242 days left over each year. After four years this accumulates almost an extra day (.242 day x 4 = .968 day). We experience this as leap year day, February 29, inserted approximately every four years into our Gregorian calendar. More than 6,000 years ago, around 4241 BC, the Egyptians had been observing the annual flood cycles of the Nile River. They realized that during this flood, Sirius, the Dog Star, the brightest star seen from the northern hemisphere, rose from the same horizon point once a year in direct alignment with the sun’s rising. Disregarding the moon’s cycles, they made their calendar to be twelve months of thirty days each, with five days at the end of the year. The New Year began as Sirius rose with the sun. In Egypt, much later, Julius Caesar borrowed this calendar from Cleopatra and took it for modifying in Rome, resulting in the Julian calendar. Pope Gregory XIII, leader of the Vatican from 1572 to 1585, had been advised that the Julian calendar was not precise. The actual solar year is defined by the duration of time taken by Earth to orbit completely around the sun; 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds. At 365 1/4 days, the Julian calendar was too long by 11 minutes and 14 seconds per year, meaning that the New Year day would cycle through all the seasons in 1,460 years. Gregory was informed that over the centuries the equinox had slid by 10 days away from the appointed 21st day of March. This date was fixed as the vernal equinox by the first council of Nicaea in the year 325, the same council that had decided to accept the doctrine of the Holy Trinity. To fix the problem, Pope Gregory XIII introduced the Gregorian calendar, named for him. Folks in Spain and Portugal went to bed on October 4, 1582 and woke up the next morning on October 15, 1582. To reconcile future differences, the Gregorian calendar omitted leap year day, February 29, from the years ending in two zeros, except for every fourth hundredth year. For example, in the years 1600 and

2000 we did not omit February 29 but they will in the year 2100 as they did in 1900. A child born on February 29, 1896 did not celebrate a birthday again on February 29th until eight years later. France, the Netherlands, and Scandinavia adopted the Gregorian calendar in December of 1582. In 1582, New Year’s Day came on March 25th as it did in previous years. Until this time, the Catholic Church had rejected January first as the first day of the New Year because that date was a Roman choice based on pagan beliefs, though the pagan names for days and months were still assimilated in the Gregorian calendar. Starting 1583, the Pope began January 1 as New Year’s Day. Protestant England did not want to do what the Pope said in 1582. People in London woke up to October 5th the same day that citizens of Rome woke up to October 15th. Almost two centuries later, in 1751, the fourth Earl of Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, introduced a bill to the English Parliament to adopt the New Style calendar. He avoided calling it Gregorian. In 1752, England, as well as the colonies in America, switched their Old Style calendar to the New Style calendar, thus aligning with the equinox and the Catholic nations. On September 2, the English and the Americans went to bed and awoke the next morning to September 14. The public protested in the streets of London, yelling, “Give us back our eleven days!” Britain and America now also switched their New Year’s Day from March 25 to January 1, which had some interesting effects on birthday celebrations. For example, George Washington let us believe he was eleven days older that he actually was. New Year’s Day shifted from after his birthday to before, plus the eleven days, then George celebrated his birthday on February 22, 1732, as we do today. But he was born February 11, 1731 under the Old Style calendar. Easter’s date is calculated using both sun and moon cycles, and the seven day week. Roman Catholic Easter is celebrated the first Sunday after the first full moon, on or following the March 21st vernal equinox. About seventeen weeks each year of the Gregorian calendar are structured around the church holiday of Easter, thus the whole calendar is. There are a variety of political and religious reasons for keeping our Gregorian calendar, but not enough natural scientific reasons. Changing a society’s calendar would be a major paradigm shift, and affecting holidays would be the most offensive to the people most affected. The ancient Greeks had no weeks. Roman weeks had eight days, which changed to seven. In 1792, the French began using a calendar with only three weeks per month, called “décades”, each of ten day lengths. Each year they added five or six extra days to keep in alignment with the sun. On January 1, 1873, as Japan once more began the policy of religious tolerance, they accepted the Gregorian calendar. Shortly before the ending of World War I, January 31, 1918, Russia adopted the Gregorian calendar. In Greece, people went to bed February 15, 1923 and woke up March 1, 1923. Romania accepted the Gregorian calendar on October 1, 1924. In 1929, the Soviet Union threw off the influence of the Christian world by establishing a calendar with five day weeks, four of those days being for work. They used six weeks per month, with five or six extra days added to finish the year. In 1949, China adopted the Gregorian calendar. A proper solar calendar would include New Year’s Day placed arbitrarily upon one solstice or equinox. Gregorian does not do this. In the numerical reckoning of each day, the solar day, being the number of days since the New Year’s Day solstice, should be included, which it is not in the Gregorian. Also, the solar year needs to be recognized within each day’s numerical reckoning, being how many years that particular calendar has been running since the chosen “Year Zero”, as in 2014 for the Gregorian.

What is a lunar calendar?





The Gregorian uses the word month, which comes from the same root word as moon, so naming this Gregorian cycle to be a month is an etymological-scientific lie. The Gregorian calendar has about 30.4 days per month on the average, which is not equal to an average of 29.53 days per lunar cycle. A scientifically accurate lunar calendar has months equal one lunar cycle, arbitrarily beginning from one phase, like the new moon—called dark moon in some cultures. If this cycle is divided into four weeks, each week would be an average of

7.3827 days, not possible since one day must count as only “one”. A lunar cycle does have natural divisions, though not even. A calendar can start each week with each of the four lunar phases: {new moon, 1st quarter moon, full moon, 3rd quarter moon}. Jews, Chinese, Muslims, Hindus, and other cultures use a variety of lunar calendars that start and end months according to the moon, either starting on the dark moon or from the first visible sliver of the new moon, a couple days after the dark moon. Since an even number of lunar months does not align with Earth’s single revolution around the sun, we could adapt by using the same philosophy as the leap year day being added about once every four years. This creates a numerical wobble on the calendar compared to the accepted inaccurate way. If a calendar does not wobble to coordinate lunar months with solar years, then the lunar calendar cannot be qualified as a solar-lunar calendar. The error would reveal itself as after accumulated years the seasons would wander all the way around the calendar. Because of this, cultures with lunar calendars often need both their traditional calendar as well as the Gregorian solar calendar to cooperate within local and international systems.

What is a solar-lunar calendar? A solar-lunar calendar must reckon the solar cycle with 12.37 lunar cycles per year—averaging 29.5 days per lunar cycle. The .37 in the 12.37 is a bit more than 1/3 of a month (.333…), so about every three years a 13th month must be added. Occasionally the 13th month must be added after only two years following the previous 13th month. Around 432 BC, the Babylonians, understanding this basically, but not precisely, adopted the Metonic cycle, named for Meton the astronomer from Athens, Greece. This calendar varied through a nineteen year cycle between twelve and thirteen months, which each started and finished on the new moon. Since that calendar’s predictions did not properly align year lengths with the solstices, the seasons would cycle through all of the months and make farming more confusing. The idea of adding of a 13th month to make a solar-lunar calendar was passed on between cultures. After including “Nasi”, the occasional 13th month influenced by the Jews, for a decade, confusion reigned in the tenth year of Muhammad’s Islamic calendar due to no uniformity of understanding when to place the extra month. So Muhammad fixed the problem by effectively proclaiming “Thou shalt not Wobble”. He said God made exactly twelve months a year to be sacred and that anything else is evil [Qur'an (sura 9:36–37)]. This is referred to as, “The Prohibition of Nasi”. In a God centered reality, God created all of nature and God did not create exactly 12.0 lunar cycles per solar cycle for observers on Earth—in this age we experience an average of 12.37 moons per year. An accurate solar-lunar calendar necessarily wobbles. If Muhammad spoke the truth, then God is schizophrenic and evil. Using almanac predictions, Geosoluna yokes Earth, Sun, and Moon cycles together. I I I I I I I I I I GEOS YEAR: -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 Gregorian date: 12.21.2010 Date Geosoluna started

To change to this more accurate accounting of nature would be a radical worldwide paradigm shift.

What is the Geosoluna calendar?

(Superscript #s 1-6 show the fundamentals guiding Geosoluna.)

Geosoluna’s name is from Geo + Sol + Luna, translated as Earth + Sun + Moon. This calendar is actually two in one. Gregorian calendar days and dates are included at the bottom of each day of this Geosoluna calendar. The top two numerals on each day are the number of days since the last new moon1 and the number of days since the last December solstice2. In a Geosoluna calendar, most years we can celebrate our birthday anniversary twice; the solar and the lunar birthdays. Relative to the days and months of the Gregorian calendar, nature and Geosoluna wobble more. So things had to change. New names are used for days and months to avoid confusion. Geosoluna’s new month names are based on one harmonic octave of the color spectrum: Rainbow Moon (RM, the occasional 13th month before northern hemisphere’s winter solstice3), Rainbow Way (RW4 always includes winter solstice N, summer solstice S), Violet (VI), Way Blue (WB), Moon Blue (MB), Green Blue (GB), Way Green (WG), Moon Green (MG), Yellow (YE), Orange (OR), Moon Red (MR), Way Red (WR), and Purple (PU). The new day names are tonal names within one harmonic octave, an eight tone chord, names in the wave set of {8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15}: {Doe, Rae, Mee, Fu, So, Mu, Ah, Tee}. Note: Tee is the 8th day for mostly three weeks of each two months. Names first used in Search for Ah… by Mark and Joe Flynn. Geosoluna’s Year Zero lasted from solstice December 2010 to solstice December 2011. Geosoluna Year One ended and Year Two began at the same moment the Mayan calendar ended: December 21, 2012 at 11:11 a.m. UTC (Universal Coordinated Time). This box shows dates for two different calendars. Gregorian references on the bottom are familiar; 20th of March, 1 89 a Friday, in the year 2015 (year on each month’s top right). This is familiar in the United States as 03.20.2014; in India as 20.03.2013. Four numbers are needed to reckon each Geosoluna date: lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year. The box’s top two Geosoluna numbers are displayed after the Geos month number, before the Geos year number (found on top of each month’s page): 05.01.89.04. This refers to the fifth month, named Green Blue, the first day of the new moon, which falls on Doe Day (noted above each day), the 89th day since the previous solstice, being winter in the northern hemisphere, and the fourth number refers to four completed years 20 Mar F December that have passed since Geosoluna began. Note that the 01 lunar month number may occur at the beginning of any year (reckoned with 30 solar days or less) or the end (with 335 solar days or more). The most natural division of a month has four weeks, each beginning with a moon phase. These time periods are not equal, as nature varies in reality. The goal is that each lunar phase occurs on a Doe Day, the exception being when adjusting the week to save the seventh day5, resulting in Lavender Weeks (lunar phases to start and end the week) and White Weeks (no lunar phases at all in that week). When saving a week’s seventh day, one lunar phase may fall off the preferred Doe Day position. Which Doe Day lunar phase to sacrifice follows this sequence of priorities6: the new moon should always be on Doe Day. Full moon gets second priority to not be changed. The first quarter moon (we see it as a half of a circle) is third priority, and the third quarter moon (also seen as half-circle) is the preferred phase to move away from Doe Day if needed to save the seven day week. Good data of lunar and solar phases, such as from U.S. Naval Observatory, is required to set up Geosoluna. A single lunar cycle from new moon to new moon averages 29.53 days. Geosoluna is made up of four weeks of seven days each, totaling 28 days, being 1.5 days short of 29.5. This means that each two months needs to add three extra days, forcing some months to have one eight-day week with the three seven-day weeks. Other months have two eight-day weeks. This makes it so that 5 out of eight Tee Days do not exist. About one in 33 months needs an extra eight-day week. When leap year day is added is arbitrary. Here it is added as February 29. If the Gregorian calendar is rendered obsolete, it may be best to add the leap year day at the end of the solar year.



Geosoluna is one chapter in Mark C Billington’s book Zero One HUT; Harmonic Unifield Theory. The phase alignment of lunar and solar cycles is what grants the scientific-poetic freedom to call it harmonic. This theory uses the math of harmonics as the common denominator for all fields of study, including; music, string theory, prime numbers, brain waves, DNA, comparative religion, etc. During February and March 2011, Mark and Joe Flynn, in San Blas, Mexico, typed up the first Geosoluna calendar. Mark typed the second one for San Juan Island, WA. The third and fourth ones Mark made in Omkareshwar M.P. India. One remaining goal is to design the computer program following the six fundamental rules, to be able to spit out Geosoluna into the future and back into history. This would include back to the 1970s in order to help orca whale scientists at the Center for Whale Research and Whale Watch Park on San Juan Island to correlate their gathered data of the whales’ behaviors and compare this data with the lunar cycles in order to seek patterns. The following diagram is of what would be a slider if the solstice/equinox strip would move left and right. Pretend it does & just examine:

The Rainbow Moon Year: 13 months rather than 12.368

  RW

VI

WB

SOLSTICE 1

2

 Align  solstice to lunar phase

MB

GB

WG

MG

EQUINOX 3  New   moons 

YE

OR

SOLSTICE

4

5 

6 

 = new moon

 = 1st 1/4

WR

EQUINOX

7 

MR

8

9





10 

 = full moon

11 

       PU RM  Cross line to use SOLSTICE  Rainbow Moon. 13 12 

 = 3rd 1/4



Pass this new moon to add the 13th month

© Mark C Billington, USA, 2015. Today is Geos: 02.18.18.04 & Greg: 01.08.2014. Photos by Mark except those of Mark: with boy and Om bowl by Sylvain, in Surya Temple by Nathan.







To wobble or not to wobble, that is the question. Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind to suffer unknowingly the wobbles of nature or to acknowledge and align with the thousand natural shocks the flesh is heir to; Ay, there’s the rub, for who would disregard the current’s turns to bear the wobbles of time and lose the name of action? Be all wobbles remembered. —Shakes Fear— We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all humans are created wobblers; that they are endowed by their Creator with inherent and inalienable wobbles; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of wobbliness. —Declaration of Interdependence— Four suns and seven moons ago our brother brought forth on this calendar a new wobble, conceived in Liberty & dedicated to the proposition that all humans are created wobblers.  —Abel Inken— 

Omkareshwar is a town in the district of Khandwa, the state of Madhya Pradesh, in the middle of India. Omkarishwar is both on the mainland and on an island called Mandhata or Shivapuri within the Narmada River. Traditionally, long before technology could grant humans a bird’seye-view, the shape of the island has been said to be the shape of the Sanskrit symbol Om:

Two walking bridges, as well as boats, take the pilgrims to the trails for walking the island. The old bridge was built in 1979.

 International standard time in Omkareshwar is UTC +05:30 and global coordinates are 22°14’59”N and 79°9’6”E.

The 2001 India census showed Omkareshwar with a population of 6616, with 54% males, 46% females, average literacy rate of 52%, with national average being 59.5%, male literacy being 63%, female being 39%. Population under six years old was 17%.

5: Green Blue Geosoluna 4… …March April 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

Geos: 1

89 2 New Moon 09:36  UTC Equinox 22:45 Greg: 20 Mar F 21 8 96 9 First Quarter 07:43 

MEE 90

Sa 22 97 10

27 16 Full Moon 12:06 

F 28 104 17

4 23

Sa 5 Su 111 24 112 Third Quarter 03:44 

11

3

Sa 29 105 18

FU 91

4

Su 23 98 11

SOL

MU

92

5

93

M 99

24 12

6

AH

TEE

94

7

95

Tu 25 100 13

W 101

26 14

Th 102 15

Su 106

30 19

M 107

31 20

Tu 1 Apr 108 21

W 109

2 22

Th 110

6 25

M 113

7 26

Tu 114

8 27

W 115

9 28

Th 116

10 29

F 117

13

M

14

Tu 15

W

16

Th

17

F

Easter

Sa

12

Su

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 05.16.104.04 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

3

103

F

The Narmada River is Shiva’s daughter, the goddess born from the outflow of her father’s sweat. Many claim her to be the cleanest & holiest river in India. Out of her natural love, NarmaDaeHar asked her father to be able to nourish humanity forever. The beloved goddess is portrayed surfing on a crocodile.

. Narmada is considered a holy virgin goddess that can be very nourishing and kind, yet will still rage with anger. Pilgrims come to Omkareshwar, a natural island in the middle of the Narmada River, and call out NarmaDaeHar to honor the river goddess. People here also greet saying Hari OM, honoring the universe’s original sound. The Omkareshwar dam was built between 2001 and 2006.

6: Way Green Geosoluna 4… …April May 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

Geos: 1 118 New Moon 18:57 

2

MEE 119

3

FU 120

4

SOL 121

5

MU 122

6

AH 123

7

TEE 124

8

First Quarter 23:55 

UTC

Greg: 18 Apr 9

26 17

Sa 126

125

19 10

Su 127

20 11

M 128

21 12

Tu 22 129 13

W 130

30 21

23 14

Th 24 131 15

F 132

25 16

Sa 133

Th 1 May 138 22

F 2 139 23

Sa 140

3

Su

Su 27 134 18

M 28 135 19

Tu 136

29 20

W 137

4 24

M 5 141 25 Third Quarter 10:36 

Tu 6 142 26

W 143

7 27

Th 8 144 28

F 145

9 29

Sa 146

10 30

Su 147

11

M

Tu 13

W

14

Th 15

F

16

Sa

17

Su

Full Moon 03:42 

12

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 06.17.134.04 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

In 1893 Swami Vivekananda arrived in the USA delivering the original doctrine of the Hindu word OM. Swami Yogananda arrived in 1920, followed in the 1930’s by Krishnamurti. Children born in America at these times grew up with Om resounding from subculture, resulting in a new doctrine of Om. There are many pieces of thousand-year-old broken carved stone remnants scattered around the whole island. This eleventh century Siddhanatha temple on the east end of Omkareshwar is where locals claim that thousands of years ago the original doctrine of Om was introduced. These are the first teachings that made it into the Upanishads, an important Hindu book that is too often ignored. There are many versions of the Sanskrit OM. One has the circle on the right and locals say that circle is Omkareshwar Island.



Regarding the history of the Om/Aum symbol to the left, these Amish quotes are from Shiva Series #1, The Immortals of Meluha. “King Bharat [after conquering most of India] created this symbol of unity between the Suryavanshi [who used a sun calendar] and the Chandravanshi [used a lunar calendar].” Surya, the top half of the 3, means sun. Chandra, the bottom half of the 3, means moon. Vanshi means: “the ancestors of”. The loop out to the right of the 3 symbolizes “the common path”. “The crescent moon to the right of the symbol was the pre-existing Chandravanshi symbol. And the sun above it was the preexisting Suryavanshi symbol.”

7: Moon Green Geosoluna 4… …May June 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

Geos: 1

2

149

Greg: 18 May M 8 155 First Quarter 17:19 

19 9

25 M 16 163 Full Moon 16:19 

26 17

148 New Moon 04:13  UTC

2 23 Third Quarter 15:42 

Tu 3 170 24

9

Tu

10

3

FU

SOL

MU 6

AH 153

7

TEE

150

4

151

5

152

154

Tu 20 156 10

W 157

21 11

Th 158

22 12

F 23 159 13

Sa 24 160 14

Su 161 15

Tu 27 164 18

W 165

28 19

Th 166

29 20

F 167

30 21

Sa 31 168 22

Su 1 June 169

W 171

4 25

Th 172

5 26

F 173

6 27

Sa 7 174 28

Su 8 175 29

M 176

W

11

Th 12

F

13

Sa 14

Su 15

M

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 07.16.163.0 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

162

M

8: Yellow Geosoluna 4… …June July 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE 177

2

MEE 178

3

FU 179

4

SOL 180

5

MU 181

New Moon 14:05  UTC

6

AH

TEE

182

7

183

8

184

23 16

Tu 192

Equinox 16:38

Greg: 16 June Tu 9 185 First Quarter 11:03

17 10

W 186

18 11

Th 187

19 12

Fr 188

20 13

Sa 189

21 14

Su 190

22 15

M 191

24 W 17 193 Full Moon 02:20 

25 18

Th 26 194 19

Fr 195

27 20

Sa 196

28 21

Su 197

29 22

M 198

30 23

Tu 1 July 199

2 July 24

3 25

F 201

4 26

Sa 202

5 27

Su 6 203 28

M 204

7 29

Th 10

F

11

Sa

12

Su 13

M

14

9

Th 200

Third Quarter 20:24  Tu 205

8 30

W 206

Tu 15

W

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 05.17.115.03 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

W

The ancient Hindus introduced a Sanskrit Word, later assimilated into Buddhism and sometimes spelled AUM: “That Word is OM. That Word is the everlasting Brahman.” (Upanishads, Katha, part 2) Brahman is defined as: “The essential divine reality of the universe; the eternal spirit from which all being originates and to which all returns.” American Heritage Dictionary Omkareshwar is one of many names for Shiva, meaning lord (eshwar) of the universal sound (kar) of Om.

9: Orange Geosoluna 4… …July August 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE 207

MEE

FU

SOL

2

208

3

209

4

210

5

17 10

F 216

18 11

Sa 217

19 12

Su 20 218 13

25 17

Sa 223

26 18

Su 224

27 19

31 F 23 229 Third Quarter 02:03 

1 Aug 24

Sa 230

2 25

Su 231

7

8

Sa

9

Su

MU 211

6

AH

TEE

212

7

213

8

M 21 219 14

Tu 220

22 15

W 221

23

M 28 225 20

Tu 226

29 21

W 227

30 22

Th 228

3 26

M 232

4 27

Tu 233

5 28

W 234

6 29

Th 235

10

M

11

Tu

12

W

13

Th

214

New Moon 01:24  UTC

Greg: 16 July Th 9 215 First Quarter 04:04  24 16

F 222 Full Moon 10:43

F

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 09.16.222.04 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Th

Ashrams & temples line the 8 km pilgrim road; Babas greet guests with pani, chai, & chapattis.

10: Moon Red Geosoluna 4… …Aug & Sept 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE 236

MEE

FU

SOL

MU

AH

TEE

2

237

3

238

4

239

5

240

6

241

7

242

8

243

15 10

Sa 245

16 11

Su 246

17 12

M 247

18 13

Tu 248

19 14

W 249

20 15

Th 250

21

F

Sa 251

23 17

Su 252

24 18

M 25 253 19

Tu 254

26 20

W 255

27 21

Th 28 256 22

F 257

Sa 258

30 24

Su 259

31 25

M 260

Tu 2 261 27

W 262

3 28

Th 4 263 29

F 264

30

265

6

Su

7

M

Tu 9

W

10

Th 11

F

12

Sa

New Moon 14:54  UTC Greg: 14 Aug F 9 244 First Quarter 19:31  22 16 Full Moon 18:35 29 23

1 Sept 26

Third Quarter 09:54  5

Sa

8

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 10.16.251.04 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Three districts of Omkareshwar: 1) Brahmapuri— town east of ravine, for Brahma; 2) Vishnupuri—town west of ravine, for Vishnu; and 3) Shivpuri—centered on island temple of Omkareshwar, for Shiva. The jyotirlinga for Shiva is above the ravine on the mainland. The three deities of Brahma, Shiva, and Krishna all serve OM.

Omkareshwar 

Brahma 

Jyotirlinga 

Vishnu 

11: Way Red Geosoluna 4… …Sept & Oct 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE 266

2

MEE

FU

SOL

MU

267

3

268

4

269

5

270

M 275

15 11

Tu 276

16 12

W 277

17 13

24 19

Th 25 284 20

6

AH

TEE

271

7

272

8

Th 18 278 14

F 279

19 15

Sa 20 280

F 285

Sa 286

27 22

Su 287

273

New Moon 06: 41 UTC

Greg: 13 Sept Su 14 9 274 10 First Quarter 08:59  21 16

M 22 281 17

Equinox 08:20 Tu 23 282 18

W 283

26 21

Third Quarter 21:06 

Full Moon 02:50 28 23

5

Su

M 288

29 24

M 6

Tu 30 289 25

W 290

Tu 7

W

1 Oct 26

8

Th 291

2 27

F 292

3 28

Sa 293

4 29

Su 294

30

295

Th

9

F

10

Sa

11

Su

12

M

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 11.15.291.04 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Bandars are the Rhesus Macaques, red faced with shorter tails than the longer tailed Gray Langurs with black faces. The monkeys will steal your food, even aggressively. Sharp teeth are intimidating.

Sangham is the meeting place of the Narmada River after splitting around the Island. The part of the river passing on the north side of the island is called Kaveri, a separate name even though the water has already mixed from the two rivers’ confluence above the dam.

12: Purple Geosoluna 4… … Oct Nov 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE 296

MEE

FU

2

297

3

298

4

14 9

W 304

15 10

Th 16 305 11

20 15

Tu 21 310 16 Full Moon 10:51

W 311

22 17

27 22

Tu 28 317 23

W 318

W

SOL 299

5

MU

AH

TEE

300

6

301

7

302

F 17 306 12

Sa 307

18 13

Su 308

19 14

M 309

Th 23 312 18

F 24 313 19

Sa 314

25 20

Su 315

26 21

M 316

29 24

Th 30 319 25

F 31 320 26

Sa 321

1 Nov 27

Su 322

2 28

M 323

5

Th

Su

9

New Moon 06:14  UTC

Greg: 13 Oct Tu 8 303 First Quarter 19:32 

29

324

M 10

Tu

Third Quarter 19:12  3

Tu 4

6

F

7

Sa

8

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 11.15.291.03 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Narmada River floods during summer monsoon rains. Many people temporarily abandon their homes and stores.

13: Rainbow Moon Geosoluna 4… … Nov Dec 2015 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE

MEE

FU

SOL

325 2

326

3

327 4

328

5

W 12 332 9

Th 333

13 10

F 334

14 11

Sa 15 335 12

20 17

F 21 341 18

F 349

MU 329

6

AH

TEE

330

7

331

Su 16 336 13

M 337

17 14

Tu 338

Sa 22 342 19

Su 23 343 20

M 344

24 21

Tu 345 22

346

Sa 350

Su 30 351 28

M 352

1 Dec 29

Tu 353

2 30

W 354

W

10

Th

New Moon 17:47 UTC  Greg: 11 Nov 8

First Quarter 06:27 18 15

W 339 Full Moon 22:44

19 16

Th 340

25 23

W 347

26 24

Th 27 348 25

4

F 5

28 26

29 27

Third Quarter 07:40 3

Th

Sa 6

Su 7

M

8

Tu 9

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 12.15.320.03 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Omkareshwar is the home of this one of the 12 jyotirlinga shrines throughout India dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva, lord of the dance, creator and destroyer.

Once upon a time, according to the book Shiv Mahapuran, Brahma, who is the Hindu god of creation, and Vishnu—the Hindu God of many incarnations and names responsible for maintaining creation— these two gods were arguing about which one was most supreme. So Shiva put them to a test, first piercing the three worlds with a huge endless pillar of light, the jyotirlinga. Vishnu and Brahma split off from each other, downwards and upwards respectively, to find either end of the light. Brahma lied that he had found his end and so Vishnu conceded defeat. As a second pillar of light, Shiva appeared and cursed Brahma. Vishnu would be forever worshipped while Brahma would never be honored with ceremonies. The jyotirlinga light represents the supreme unified reality, Om, out of which Shiva reproduces himself to be in the world. The 12 jyotirlinga shrines are the 12 most holy of the 64 locations where Shiva appeared as that fiery column of light.

1: Rainbow Way Geosoluna 4 & 5…Dec 2015 & Jan 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE

355 New Moon 10:29 UTC 

2

356

12 9

Sa 13 363 10

F 19 3 16

Sa 20 4 17

Greg: 11 Dec F 8 362 First Quarter 15:14  18 15

MEE 3

FU 357

4

SOL 358

5

Su 14 364 11

M 365

15 12

Su 21 5 18

M 6

22 19

MU 359

6

AH

TEE

360

7

361

Tu 16 366*/0 13 Geos New Year Solstice 04:38

W 1

17 14

Th 2

Tu 23 7 20

W 8

24 21

Th 9

Full Moon 11:11 25 23

*Note: though this solstice reads a 366th day, 2015 is not leap year. This occurred as the previous solstice was so late in the day: 23:03 and there are almost 365 ¼ 24 hour days in a solar year. 22

10

Gregorian New Year

F 26 11 24

Sa 27 12 25

Su 13

28 26

M 14

29 27

Sa 3

Su 4

M

5

Tu 6

Tu 30 15 28

W 16

31 29

Th 17

W

Th

8

F

1 Jan 30

F 18

9

Sa

Third Quarter 05:30  2

7

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 01.15.03.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Mark claims his Harmonic Unifield Theory (HUT) satisfies Einstein’s uncompleted unified field theory quest. Universal void {0} has the potential to manifest harmonics {1, 2, 3, 4…}. With harmony applied as numbers to various fields of science, this paradigm shift—from isolated individuality into the unification of harmony and holography—will enable all of us to better examine human and natural phenomena. Humanity will rethink our whole education system and dance through our next stage of conscious evolution. HUT uses a fresh harmonic focus necessary for human society to overcome an accelerating increase of disorder in our relations with ourselves, each other, and our environment.

2: Violet Geosoluna 5… …Jan Feb 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

FU

SOL

MU

AH

TEE

Geos: 1 19 New Moon 01:30 UTC 

2

20

3

21

4

22

5

23

6

24

7

Greg: 10 Jan 8

11 9

M 27

12 10

Tu 28

13 11

W 29

14 12

Th 30

15 13

F 31

16 14

Su 18 33 16

M 34

19 17

Tu 20 35 18

W 36

21 19

Th 37

22 20

F 23 38 21

Sa 39 22

26 25

Tu 27 43 26

W 44

28 27

Th 45

29 28

F 30 46 29

Sa 31 47

Th

5

F

6

Sa 7

Su

17 15 Full Moon 01:46

Su 26

24 Su 23 41 Third Quarter 03:48

25 24

M 42

1 Feb

2

Tu 3

M

W

4

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 02.15.33.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

25 First Quarter 23:26  Sa 32

40

Su

When time began, the circular dance’s harmonic vibration was God’s hum: the Word or the Name of God. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God… All things were made by Him…And the Word became flesh.” John 1:1-1:14, Bible Circles and spheres are the most common universal geometry. Gravitational, electrical, and magnetic forces, like sound, expand spherically through space from a central point, squaring with the distance, d2, weakening as 1/d2. This inverse square law is defined by the r2 in the equations for the areas of a sphere and circle, 4πr2 and 2πr2. The universal sound of OM is the sound of a circle. Om is in Hinduism and Buddhism, also spelled as Aum and Hum. As a circle spins against an external point, or vice versa, every point on the circle resists the same, releasing constant energy. Rubbing the circular rim of a crystal glass with a wet finger until the vibrating tone emits is demonstrating harmonics: a fundamental tone and overtones. This circular vibration, this fundamental tone, provides the source of constancy and harmony for beginning the universe. Religions refer to the all-encompassing source as the Word, Name, or Voice of God. Intonation of the Word, a monk chanting the hum of a circle, allows alignment of an individual with the circular fixed-point requirement, and thus with the universal reference, being the Void, being God, no matter which one of God’s many Names or Words that one chooses: Om, Jah, Amen, Allah, Yahweh or another.

3: Way Blue Geosoluna 5… …Feb March 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE

MEE

48

2

49

Greg: 8 Feb M 8 55 First Quarter 07:46 

9 9

M 62

M 70 Third Quarter 23:11

3

FU

SOL

50

4

51

5

Tu 10 56 10

W 57

11 11

Th 12 58 12

16 16

Tu 17 63 17

W 64

18 18

Th 65

23 24

Tu 24 71 25

W 72

25 26

Th 73

2

W

Th

4

MU 52

6

AH

TEE

53

7

54

F 13 59 13

Sa 60

14 14

Su 61

19 19

F 20 66 20

Sa 21 67 21

Su 68 22 69 Leap year day

26 27

F 27 74 28

Sa 28 75 29

Su 29 76 30

M 77

Sa 6

Su 7

M

Tu

New Moon 14:39 UTC

15 15 Full Moon 18:20 22 23

1 Mar

Tu

3

F 5

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 03.15.62.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

When leap year day is added is arbitrary. Here it is added as February 29. If the Gregorian calendar is rendered obsolete, it may be best to add the leap year day at the end of the year.

8

              As it emanated God’s voice, Moses asked the burning bush “What name should I tell the people to call you?” God gave Moses the answer in Hebrew, “YHWH is my name forever and this name is to be remembered through all generations.” YHWH can be translated as the first person form of the “to be” verb, being I AM. Humans say I AM in referring to their individual identifications. The God consciousness that told Moses that God’s name is I AM is also the same I AM consciousness animating each and every human on Earth. Every part contains the whole. A Hindu greeting, Namaste and Namaskar, mean; “I honor that place in you, where if you are in that place in you, and I am in that place in me, then we are one.” Truth emits from that peaceful place in each one of us, for that “place” is God. The I AM, the Hindu Atman, silently peeks out of the eyes of each and every person. God, the universal I AM, has created us for God to experience God’s own self through our diversity, through our individual I Ams.

4: Moon Blue Geosoluna 5… …March April 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

Geos: 1 78 New Moon 01:54 UTC 

2

Greg: 9 Mar 8

10 9

W 85

MEE 79

3

FU 80

4

SOL 81

MU

5

82

6

AH 83

7

TEE 84

First Quarter 17:30 Th 86

11 10

F 12 87 11

Sa 13 88 12

Su 14 89 13

M 90

15 14

Tu 91

Su 21 96 20

M 97

22 21

Tu 98 22

Su 28 104 28

M 105

29 29

Tu 30 106

Equinox 04:30

16 15

W 92 Full Moon 12:01

17 16

Th 93

18 17

F 94

19 18

23 23

W 100

24 24

Th 101

25 25

F 102

26 26

Sa 20 95 19 Easter

Sa 27 103 27

Third Quarter 15:17 31

Th 1 Apr

F 2

Sa 3

Su 4

M

5

Tu 6

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 04.15.92.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

W

99

W

Intoning the universal source tone allows alignment of the human mind, body, and society with God. From Chinese Tao Te Ching #55: “Harmony experienced is known as constancy; Constancy experienced is called enlightenment.” Enlightenment: In a variety of ways, both safe and not, a person may slip into the perspective of light. This leap from reduced to unified consciousness can happen suddenly, yet assimilation or elimination of the experience may take time. A plethora of vocabularies avail themselves for expressing or suppressing the experiences, though a vocabulary’s existence does not guarantee its high signal to noise ratio. In a hologramic universe, every part contains the whole. Any physical trigger can thus be interpreted as being the underlying spiritual cause of the unifying paradigm shift. Anything can seem to be the universal fixed-point, existing in everything at the same time. Someone dealing with this unifying shift can have difficulty adapting again to reduced perspectives. A person may ignore their body’s needs for water, food, sleep, personal obligations, or the laws of physics, such as gravity, believing their body to be all light or only imaginary. Enlightenment can be a difficult path, like walking on a razor’s edge.

5: Green Blue Geosoluna 5… …April May 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

FU

Geos: 1 107 New Moon 11:24 UTC

2

108

Greg: 7 Apr Th 8 114 First Quarter 03:59

8 9

F 9 115 10

Sa 10 116 11

F 16 123 18

Sa 24 130 25

14 16

Th 15 122 17

3

109

4

SOL 110

5

MU

AH 7

TEE

111

6

112

113

Su 11 117 12

M 118

12 13

Tu 13 119 14

W 120

Sa 17 124 19

Su 18 125 20

M 126

19 21

Tu 20 127 22

W 128

Su 25 131 26

M 132

26 27

Tu 27 133 28

W 134

28 29

Th 135

M

3

Tu 4

W

5

Th

Full Moon 05:24 22 23

F 23 129 24 Third Quarter 03:29 

29

F

30

Sa 1 May

Su

2

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 05.16.55.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

15

121

21

Th

May the Nomadic Om Addict bless the trails of Omkareshwar with appreciative steps.

Mark C Billington first came to Omkareshwar India in 1987 looking for reception to his ideas surrounding OM as the fundamental tone for a harmonic universe, able to be discussed with scientific vocabulary and extending to all fields of science. Reception was good and rapid at the time, but Mark felt he was not ready yet, and so ran away. November 14, 2012, having completed his homework, Mark returned with his newly constructed understanding of OM to Omkareshwar, promising himself not to run away this time.

Hari OM

6: Way Green Geosoluna 5… …May June 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

Geos: 1 136 New Moon  19:30 UTC

2

Greg: 6 May F 7 8 143 9 First Quarter 17:02

MEE 137

3

FU 138

4

SOL

MU

139

5

140

6

AH

TEE

141

7

142

Sa 8 144 10

Su 9 145 11

M 146

10 12

Tu 11 147 13

W 148

12 14

Th 149

15

150

F 14 151 17 Full Moon 21:15

Sa 15 152 18

Su 16 153 19

M 154

17 20

Tu 18 155 21

W 156

19 22

Th 157

20 23

F 158

21 Sa 22 24 159 25 Third Quarter 12:12 

Su 23 160 26

M 161

Tu 25 162 28

W 163

26 29

Th 164

27 30

F 28 165

Sa

Th

3

F

4

13 16

29

Su 30

M

31

24 27

Tu 1 June

W

2

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 06.16.84.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Sa

Generally western et al tourists stay at guest houses, and Indian tourists at dharmsalas. Weather: Spring: very hot. Summer: very wet. Autumn: very pleasant. Winters: cooler days and nights. Always beautiful. Hari OM… .

7: Moon Green Geosoluna 5… …June July 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE

166 New Moon 03:00

MEE

FU

2

167

3

168

6 9

M 174

7 10

12 Su 13 16 181 17 Full Moon 11:02 

M 182

20 23

4

SOL

MU

AH 7

TEE

169

5

170

6

171

172

Tu 8 175 11

W 176

9 12

Th 177

10 13

F 11 178 14

Sa 179

15

180

14 18

Tu 15 183 19

W 184

16 20

Th 185 Solstice 22:34

17 21

F 18 186 22

Sa 19 187

Su

Tu 22 189 25

W 23 190 26

Th 191

24 27

F 25 192 28

Sa 26 193 29

Su 194

Th

1 July

Sa 3

Su

UTC

Greg: 5 June Su 8 173 First Quarter 08:10

M 21 188 24 Third Quarter 18:19

27

M

28

Tu 29

W

30

F

2

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 07.16.114.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

The large 2016 Kumbamela spiritual gathering is coming to Ujjain. By the road from Indore to Omkareshwar, the Indian government built a pipe big enough that a small car could drive through, to deliver water from Narmada to maybe twenty million Kumbamela pilgrims. Since Omkareshwar is a Jyotirlinga destination, many pilgrims are also expected, as many as five million.

8: Yellow Geosoluna 5… …July August 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

195 Geos: 1 New Moon 11:01 UTC

2

196

Greg: 4 July M 9 203 First Quarter 00:52 

5 10

3

FU

SOL

197

4

198

Tu 6 204 11

W 205

7 12

5

MU

AH

TEE

199

6

200

7

201

Th 8 206 13

F 207

9 14

Sa 208

10 15

Su 11 209

12 16

Tu 13 210 17 Full Moon 22:57

W 211

14 18

Th 15 212 19

F 16 213 20

Sa 214

17 21

Su 215

18 22

M 216

19 23

Tu 20 217 24 Third Quarter 23:00

W 218

21 25

Th 22 219 26

F 23 220 27

Sa 221

24 28

Su 222

25 29

M 223

26

Tu

W

28

Th 29

F 30

Sa

31

Su

27

1 Aug

M

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 08.16.143.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

8

202

M

Gaudi Somnath temple has 3 levels, the upper 2 accessed by only one door. When the crowds are large, people entering and exiting compete for the dark, tight, steep, low ceiling, stairs. During festivals this becomes a trap. Fear builds inside as people need to get out while below people desire to get in— entry and exit needs regulating. In the name: Gaudi is Pavarti, Shiva’s wife, and Som-natha is Shiva.

9: Orange Geosoluna 5… …August 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

Geos: 1

224 New Moon 20:45 

MEE

FU

2

225

3

226

4

3 10

W 233

4 11

Th 5 234 12

11 18

Th 12 241 19

F 242

Th 19 247 25

F 248

20 26

Th 26

F

27

SOL 227

5

MU

AH

TEE

228

6

229

7

230

8

231

F 6 235 13

Sa 236

7 14

Su 237

8 15

M 238

9 16

Tu 239

13 20

Sa 243

14 21

Su 244

15 22

M 245

16 23

Tu 17 246

W

Sa 249

21 27

Su 22 250 28

M 251

23 29

Tu 24 252 30

Sa

28

Su 29

M

30

UTC

Greg: 2 Aug Tu 9 232 First Quarter 18:21 10 17

W 240 Full Moon 09:27

18 24

W 253

Third Quarter 03:41 25

Tu

31

W

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 09.17.173.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

Toward the Kaveri River, the northern branch of the Narmada River flowing around Omkareshwar, walk past an operating (or not) brick factory. Step east over pieces of the original ruins of the Surya Temple, named for its SUN rise. A major reconstruction is needed. Across the Kaveri River is seen the Jain temple. Dam construction mined sand and gravel from the north side of the Kaveri River, changing much.

10: Moon Red Geosoluna 5… …Sept 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE

254  New Moon 09:03 UTC

Greg: 1 Sept 9

2

Th 2 262 10 First Quarter 11:49

9 16

MEE

FU

SOL 5

MU 258

6

AH

255

3

256

4

257

259

7

F 263

3 11

Sa 264

4 12

Su 5 265 13

M 6 266 14

Tu 7 267 15

260

8

261

W 268

8

Th

F 269

10 17

Sa 270

11 18

Su 271

12 19

M 13 272 20

Tu 14 273 21

W 274

15 22

F 276

17 24

Sa 277

18 25

Su 278

19 26

M 20 279 27

Tu 280

21 28

W 281

22 29

Th 282 30

283

24

Sa

25

Su

26

Tu 28

W

29

Th 30

F

Full Moon 19:05 16 23

TEE

Th 275 Equi nox 14:21

Third Quarter 09:56  23

F

M

27

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 10.16.202.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

“And when the broken hearted people living in the world agree, there will be an answer: LET IT BE.” by The Beatles

11: Way Red Geosoluna 5… …October 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

FU

SOL

284 Geos: 1 New Moon 00:12 UTC

2

285

3

286

4

287

Greg: 1 Oct Sa 9 292 First Quarter 04:33

2 10

Su 293

6 11

M 294

7 12

Su 10 299 17

M 300

11 18

Tu 301

12 19

9 16

5

MU

AH

TEE

288

6

289

7

290

8

Tu 8 295 13

W 296

9 14

Th 297

10 15

F 298

11

W 302

Th 14 303 21

F 304

15 22

Sa 305

13 20

Third Quarter 19:14

Full Moon 04:23 16 23

Su 306

17 24

M 307

18 25

Tu 19 308 26

W 309

20 27

Th 21 310 28

F 311

22 29

Sa 312

23

Su

24

M

25

Tu 26

W

27

Th 28

F

29

Sa

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 11.16.232.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

291

Sa

12: Purple Geosoluna 5… …Oct Nov 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

FU

SOL

MU

Geos: 1 313 New Moon UTC 17:38 

2

314

3

315

4

316

5

317

Greg: 30 Oct Su 9 321 First Quarter 19:51

31 10

M 322

1 Nov 11

Tu 323

2 12

W 324

3 13

6

AH

TEE

318

7

319

8

320

Th 4 325 14

F 326

5 15

Sa 327

6

Su

7 16 Full Moon 13:52

M 8 328 17

Tu 9 329 18

W 330

10 19

Th 11 331 20

F 332

12 21

Sa 333

13 22

Su 334

14 23

M 335

15 24

Tu 16 336 25

W 337

17 26

Th 18 338 27

F 339

19 28

Sa 340

20 29

Su 341 30

342

M 22

Tu 23

W

24

Th 25

F

26

Sa

27

Su 28

M

Third Quarter 08:33 21

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 12.16.328.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

“Won’t you help me sing these songs of freedom, it’s all we ever had… redemption song.” by Bob Marley

1: Rainbow Way Geosoluna 5 & 6… Nov Dec 2016 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE 343

MEE

FU

SOL

2

344

3

345

4

346

Greg: 29 Nov Tu 9 351 First Quarter 09:03

30 10

W 352

1 Dec 11

Th 353

2 12

7 W 16 358 Full Moon 00:06

8 17

Th 9 359 18

F 360

14 W 23 365/0 Third 01:56 Quarter  GEOS NEW YEAR Solstice 10:44 21 W

15 24

Th 16 1 25

22

Th 23

5

MU

AH

TEE

347

6

348

7

349

8

350

F 3 354 13

Sa 355

4 14

Su 356

5 15

M 357

6

Tu

10 19

Sa 361

11 20

Su 362

12 21

M 363

13 22

Tu 364

F 2

17 26

Sa 3

18 27

Su 4

19 28

M 20 5 29

Tu 6

30

7

F

24

Sa

25

Su

26

M

Tu 28

W

New  Moon 12:18 UTC

27

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 01.16.358.05 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

This 10:44 leap year solstice only shows 365 solar days instead of 366 because the previous Geos New Year Solstice counted the 366 days.

“Images of broken light, which dance before me like a million eyes, they call me on and on—across the universe… Thoughts meander like a restless wind inside a letter box, they tumble blindly as they make their way—across the universe. Jai Guru Deva Om… Nothing’s gonna change my world…” song by The Beatles

2: Violet Geosoluna 6… …Dec 2016 & Jan 2017 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE Geos: 1

RAE

8 2 New Moon 06:53 UTC 

MEE 9

3

FU 10

4

SOL

MU

AH

11

5

12

6

13

7

TEE 14

Gregorian New Year

Greg: 29 Dec Th 8 15 First Quarter 19:47

30 9

F 31 16 10

Sa 1 Jan 17 11

Su 18

2 12

M 19

3 13

Tu 4 20 14

W 21

5 Th 15 22 Full Moon 11:34 

6 16

F 7 23 17

Sa 8 24 18

Su 8 25 19

M 26

10 20

Tu 11 27 21

W 28

22

29 Third Quarter 22:14 

12 23

13 24

F 14 31 25

Sa 15 32 26

Su 16 33 27

M 34

17 28

Tu 35

18 29

W 36

19 30

Th 37

F 21

Sa 22

Su 23

M

Tu 25

W

26

Th

27

F

20

Th 30

24

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 12.15.320.03 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

“I heard there was a secret chord… But you don’t really care for music, do you?” Hallelujah (song) by Leonard Cohen

3: Way Blue Geosoluna 6… …Jan Feb 2017 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

Geos: 1 38 New Moon 00:07 UTC

2

Greg: 28 Jan Sa 29 8 45 9 First Quarter 04:19 

MEE

FU

SOL

MU

AH 7

TEE

39

3

40

4

41

5

42

6

43

44

Su 46

30 10

M 47

31 11

Tu 1 Feb 48 12

W 49

2 13

Th 3 50 14

F 51

4 Sa 15 52 Full Moon 00:33

5 16

Su 53

6 17

M 54

7 18

Tu 8 55 19

W 56

9 20

Th 10 57 21

F 58

11 22

Sa 59

12 23

Su 60

13 24

M 14 61 25

Tu 15 62 26

W 63

16 27

Th 17 64 28

F 65

29

66

Sa

19

Su

20

M 21

Tu 22

W

23

Th 24

F

25

Sa

Third Quarter 19:33  18

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 11.15.52.03 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

“And it’s whispered that soon, if we all call the tune, then the piper will lead us to reason. And a new day will dawn for those who stand long, and the forest will echo with laughter… And she’s buying a stairway to heaven.” by Led Zeppelin

4: Moon Blue Geosoluna 6… …Feb Mar 2017 Gregorian Top left number is the lunar date. Top right is solar date counting from New Year’s Day solstice. Bottom left and right are the Gregorian date and day. At least every three years has an extra month. Some weeks have the extra day, wobbling with the tides.

DOE

RAE

MEE

FU

SOL

MU

AH

TEE

Geos: 1 67 New Moon 14:58 UTC

2

68

3

69

4

70

5

71

6

72

Greg: 26 Feb 8

27 9

M 75

28 10

Tu 1 Mar 76 11

W 77

2 12

Th 78

3 13

F 4 79 14

Sa 80

Su 6 81 16

M 82

7 17

Tu 8 83 18

W 84

9 19

Th 85

10 20

F 11 86 21

Sa 87

22

88

Su 13 89 24

M 90

14 25

Tu 15 91 26

W 92

16 27

Th 93

17 28

F 18 94 29

Sa 19 95 30

Su 96

W

Th

24

F 25

Sa 26

Su

M

Su 74 First Quarter 11:32 

5 15

7

73

Full Moon 14:54 12 23

Third Quarter 15:58 Equinox 10:28 20 M

21

Tu 22

23

Full moon, UTC Geosoluna notation: 04.15.81.07 (Lunar month, lunar day, solar day, solar year)

27

OMKARESHWAR

M. P. INDIA GEOSOLUNA

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