PleiadesAcademy.com

PleiadesAcademy.com

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Founded by Ersilia Arjocan MA to deliver accredited energy therapy training & programmes

31/12/2025

Best wishes for a magical 2026 ✨️ may your best dreams come true 🎉🎉✨️💕

11/09/2025

Tonight is a perfect time for intuitive journeys and manifesting practices, as the Disseminating Moon conjuncts the Pleiades. Personal Psyche links up to Colllective Consciousness. Make the most of it ✨️

Moon gets close to Uranus! 🌙✨

✨ On September 12, the Moon (77% illuminated) will cozy up to mysterious Uranus in Ta**us!
🔭 Uranus shines at magnitude 5.7, so you’ll need binoculars or a telescope to spot it.
🌌 As a bonus, the brilliant Pleiades star cluster (mag 1.2) will sparkle nearby!
🔥 From Eastern Europe and Western Asia, observers may even witness the Moon passing in front of the Pleiades — a rare lunar occultation!

Learn more:
https://starwalk.space/news/moon-in-conjunction-with-mars-venus-saturn-jupiter

01/09/2025

Sun, Moon, and Pleiades powerful cosmic alignments in September ✨️💕

🌌 September 2025 Sky Highlights 🌌

Get ready — September is full of unforgettable celestial shows! Here are the dates you’ll want to mark on your calendar:

🌕 Sept 7 – Total Lunar Eclipse
The Full Corn Moon will turn a deep red, creating the breathtaking spectacle of a Blood Moon.

✨ Sept 12 – Pleiades Occultation
Watch as the Moon passes in front of the famous Seven Sisters star cluster.

🌙 Sept 19 – Venus Meets the Moon & Regulus
The dazzling Morning Star shines next to Leo’s brightest star, Regulus, and a thin crescent Moon. In some places, the Moon will even briefly hide Venus!

☀️ Sept 21 – Partial Solar Eclipse
The Moon will cover up to 85.5% of the Sun, visible across Australia, New Zealand, Antarctica, and the Pacific Islands. Remember: use proper solar filters for safe viewing!

🪐 Sept 21 – Saturn at Opposition
The ringed planet shines at its brightest and is visible all night long — a perfect chance for viewing.

🍂 Sept 22 – September Equinox
Day and night balance nearly equally as autumn begins in the Northern Hemisphere and spring in the Southern Hemisphere.

✨ Don’t miss any of these! Check out the full guide to September’s night sky here:
👉https://starwalk.space/news/night-sky-tonight-september

20/07/2025

Make a wish 💕🤞💕🌙 💕✨️ 💕 New Moon, Pleiades & Venus in Ta**us ♉️ may your best dreams manifest!

🌌 A Celestial Trio: Venus, the Moon & the Pleiades 🌌
Date: July 21, 2025

On the night of July 21, skywatchers around the world will be treated to a rare cosmic gathering: the brilliant planet Venus, the crescent Moon, and the dazzling Pleiades star cluster will appear close together in the western twilight sky.

🔭 What You’ll See:
• Venus, shining brightly just after sunset
• A delicate crescent Moon nearby
• The Pleiades (also known as the Seven Sisters), sparkling above

This alignment offers a stunning chance to observe three of the night sky’s most iconic objects in a single view—no telescope needed.

📍 Best viewed from dark-sky locations, just after sunset, looking toward the western horizon.

✨ Don’t miss this magical summer sky show!

20/06/2025

Happy Summer Solstice ☀️ 💕✨️🎊 and Matariki weekend! ✨️💕 For New Zealand Maori and all Polynesian people, the heliacal rising of the Pleiades marks the beginning of their luni-solar-sidereal year. What does the Summer Solstice mean to you, and how will you mark it? How will you celebrate the sun at its highest in the sky and the return of the Pleiades to the night sky?

Seasons change, stars change

The Ecliptic is
the annual path that the sun traces in the sky,
the projection of the plane of Earth’s orbit onto the celestial sphere,
The constellations which the ecliptic traverses are called the zodiac.

Consider that ...

the Sun is higher at noon in June than in December,
the Sun is slightly farther from Earth in June than in December,
the stars that are in the midnight December sky are the same stars in the noon June sky, and vice versa,
the ecliptic is high at midnight in December and at noon in June, and
it is low at noon in December and at midnight in June.

the Sun always lies directly on the ecliptic line, moving two of its own angular diameters to the east each day, (The Sun's diameter is 0.5 degrees. It moves 1º each day.)
it takes the Sun 365.25 days to complete one circuit around the ecliptic,
and the Moon and the planets lie either on or near the ecliptic.

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18 Devonshire Row
London
EC2M4RH

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 10pm
Tuesday 10am - 10pm
Wednesday 11am - 10pm
Thursday 10am - 10pm
Friday 10am - 10pm
Saturday 10am - 1:30pm