| Wk | Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 | 31 97 % | 1 99 % | 2 Full Moon | 3 98 % | 4 93 % | 5 87 % | 6 78 % |
| 24 | 7 68 % | 8 57 % | 9 Last Quarter | 10 34 % | 11 24 % | 12 15 % | 13 8 % |
| 25 | 14 3 % | 15 1 % | 16 New Moon | 17 2 % | 18 7 % | 19 13 % | 20 20 % |
| 26 | 21 28 % | 22 37 % | 23 46 % | 24 First Quarter | 25 65 % | 26 74 % | 27 82 % |
| 27 | 28 89 % | 29 95 % | 30 99 % | 1 Full Moon | 2 99 % | 3 95 % | 4 89 % |
Lunar calendar June 2015
The lunar calendar for June 2015 lets you follow the Moon day by day: visible phase, illumination, visibility, and notable events such as supermoons, micromoons, or lunar eclipses visible during the month.
Moon name for June 2015: strawberry moon.
No notable lunar event occurs in June 2015.
Some gardeners use the Moon's phases and path as guides for sowing, planting, pruning, or harvesting. See the moon gardening calendar for 2026, available in yearly or monthly format for June.
According to solunar theory, fish are thought to be more active at certain times tied to the Moon and the Sun. Our moon fishing calendar for 2026 highlights the best windows day by day, for the whole year or just June.
Did you know?
A full lunar cycle lasts about 29.5 days. That is why the Moon does not show exactly the same appearance from one civil month to another, and why full moon and new moon dates keep changing.
Lunar calendar FAQ June 2015
How do I read the lunar calendar for June 2015?
What do the moon types shown in the calendar mean?
- New moon: the visible face is almost completely in shadow.
- Waxing crescent: a thin bright crescent appears and illumination increases.
- First quarter: about the right half of the Moon is illuminated.
- Waxing gibbous: more than half is illuminated, before full moon.
- Full moon: the visible disk is fully illuminated.
- Waning gibbous: illumination decreases after full moon.
- Last quarter: about the left half remains illuminated.
- Waning crescent: the illuminated part gets thinner before the next new moon.