It was a dark night, and deep in a field farm machinery........
Blue Moon for Harvest Time!

The Rector’s Blog - October 2020
Dear Friends,
It was a dark night, and deep in a field farm machinery was at work with the help of their powerful spotlights. It was an impressive sight. Despite the technological advances, however, we still have nostalgic images of manual labour working by the light of a harvest moon. Yes, but which is the harvest moon?
I have always been interested in folklore and I have prided myself in my knowledge of country traditions. But recently I have had to correct myself. I have always thought that the harvest moon is the full moon in September, but this is wrong. The harvest moon is the full moon nearest to the autumn equinox, and this year it falls on 1st October. The full moon on 2nd September was the ‘corn moon’. Sorry, but these things fascinate me. The full moon on 31st October will be the hunters’ moon. It will also be a blue moon as it is the second full moon in a calendar month. I can already hear you saying ‘Get a life’!
‘Once in a blue moon’ means something that does not happen that often. What are the things that happen in your life once in a blue moon? Getting an answer right on University Challenge? Cleaning skirting boards? Phone a friend? (Incidentally, the last blue moon was in March 2018 and the next one will be in August 2023.) So, this October we literally have a rare occasion – a blue moon – and maybe this is a good time to do something we don’t often do. What might that be? Contact someone we haven’t been in touch with for a long time? Master some new technology? Join in with Sober October? Read the Bible cover to cover? Be nice to somebody we usually ignore? Unclutter the attic? Write memoirs? Smile more often? Set a whole day aside for Bible reading and prayer?
The ‘blue’ in Frank Sinatra’s ‘blue moon’ song is just a play on words and has nothing to do with infrequent events. But the lyrics talk about ‘standing alone, without a dream in my heart, without a love of my own’. Now there’s a thought: Romance aside, how about being more optimistic and creative in October – learning to dream again, and learning to love more? And Jesus? In Matthew 16 Jesus encourages us to learn how to interpret the signs of the times. I’m just pointing out that there’s a blue moon coming. Interpret it as you wish.
John Ganjavi








