May’s Full Flower Micro Moon: Understanding the Significance and What to Anticipate
As full moons go, next month’s will be beyond the ordinary. The so-called Full Pink Moon in May, named after the month’s blooms, will appear to have shrunk to a miniature size and dimmed noticeably darker, and will also block out the red star Antares—the “heart of the scorpion” in Scorpius.
Peaking on May 12 at 12:56 p.m. EDT, the Full Pink Moon will rise to the east and hang relatively low in the sky, as it will around the spring equinox. But a keen observer might notice a distinct difference in its appearance.
But the moon didn’t actually shrink. Nor is it a mere illusion; the moon will occupy less area in the sky.
Yet this difference in size and brightness could easily escape the casual observer’s notice, though it will be apparent to the human eye if you look for it.
The Full Pink Moon’s position among the stars is relatively constant year on year, trading positions between the constellations Libra and Scorpio. This year it will fall in Libra where one may spy the constellation’s brightest star, Zubenelgenubi, a magnitude-2 star, nearby. Moon gazers will need to find a clear view of the horizon to see this.

The Full Flower Moon sets over Stonehenge in Amesbury, United Kingdom, on May 26, 2021. Webster/Getty Images
On the night after, the moon will have crossed over into Scorpio where it will form a conjunction with the reddish magnitude 1.1 star Antares—known as the “heart of the scorpion” because it’s centred within Scorpio. At this point, the moon will still appear full though it technically won’t be (the moment of technical fullness is but a split second).
As an added bonus—only for observers way down in the horn of South America unfortunately—an extra rare astronomical phenomenon is in store. Viewing from certain locales, on May 13 and 14, from 10:31 p.m. until 2:57 a.m., the moon will completely cover over—or occult—the red star Antares, hiding it from view.
Astronomers expect this occultation to be spectacular.
Why Is It Called The ‘Flower Moon’?
For many years, people have called May’s full moon the Flower Moon—as far back as colonial times. Every moon in the lunar calendar has similarly colorful monikers, most alluding to the seasons in which they fall. There is the Beaver Moon in autumn and Cold Moon in winter; each denotes the entire lunar month, not just the full moon.
Naturally, wildlife and livestock were also a big part of life and became associated with begetting animal moons names in spring. There is the Moon of the Shedding Ponies used by the Oglala peoples and the Egg Laying Moon and Frog Moon of the Cree.
The nicknames are as proliferous as spring itself.