

It can also be called the Moon after Yule, in reference to the pagan holiday of Yule supplanted by Christmas. January’s full moon is often referred to as the Wolf Moon. Each moon of the year has its own name and connotations depending on the season. About every nineteen years, the opposite occurs, in that February will not have a full moon. The thirteenth full moon is called a blue moon. 2020 is notable in that it will not have twelve full moons, but thirteen. Full moons have captured imaginations across cultures and time, and many cultures have named the various full moons.

The very word “lunacy” stems from people’s ideas of mental stability and the moon’s phases. The full moon has been affiliated with harvests, festivals, wolves, and insanity.
