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    • January. Full Wolf Moon. The howling of wolves was often heard at this time of year. It was traditionally thought that wolves howled due to hunger, but we now know that wolves use howls to define territory, locate pack members, reinforce social bonds, and gather for hunting.
    • February. Full Snow Moon. February is typically a time of heavy snowfall. Bald Eagle Moon. Bear Moon. Month of the Bony Moon. Eagle Moon. Groundhog Moon. Hungry Moon.
    • March. Full Worm Moon. Traditionally thought to be named after the earthworms of warming spring soil. Alternatively, in the late 1700s, Jonathan Carver wrote that this Moon actually refers to a different sort of “worm”—larvae—which emerge from the bark of trees and other winter hideouts around this time.
    • April. Full Pink Moon. This full Moon heralded the appearance of the “moss pink,” or wild ground phlox—one of the first spring wildflowers. Breaking Ice Moon.
  2. It's also called the Moon After Yule, Ice Moon and Old Moon. Here's why the January full Moon is widely known as the Wolf Moon.

    • Names
    • Definitions
    • Naming
    • Origin

    Full Moons had given names in many ancient cultures. The Full Moon names we use today often reflect the changing seasons and nature, like Harvest Moon, Strawberry Moon, or Snow Moon. The Full Moon in January is the Wolf Moon named after howling wolves, which may stem from the Anglo-Saxon lunar calendar. Other names: Moon After Yule, Old Moon, Ice M...

    About every 19 years, there is no Full Moon in February. This is one of several definitions of the term Black Moon. The other definitions refer to a New Moon which does not fit in with the equinoxes or solstices, similar to a Blue Moon.

    Today, many of these ancient month names have been adopted as names for the Full Moon of each month. A common explanation, published in the Old Farmer's Almanac, is that Colonial Americans adopted Native American names and incorporated them into the modern calendar. However, it seems that the Full Moon names we use today also have Anglo-Saxon and G...

    Every three years, the Hunter's Moon is also the Harvest Moon. Traditionally, people in the Northern Hemisphere spent the month of October preparing for the coming winter by hunting, slaughtering and preserving meats for use as food. This led to Octobers Full Moon being called the Hunters Moon, Dying Grass Moon, and Blood Moon or Sanguine Moon. How...

    • new Moon.
    • waxing crescent Moon.
    • first quarter Moon.
    • waxing gibbous Moon.
  3. January’s Full Moon is known as the Wolf Moon, after active wolves during the early parts of the year. The name is thought to have a Celtic and Old English origin, brought over to North America by European settlers.

  4. January: Wolf Moon. The Wolf Moon is a name given to the full moon in January, associated with the cold, snowy winters in North America. It was named after the howling wolves that could be heard more frequently during this time of year. It was believed that wolves howled due to hunger in the winter (when food was scarce) and to establish territory.

  5. For example, our name for January’s full moon in North American skylore is often called the Wolf Moon.