Today:
Viewing is tricky, requiring a flat horizon, and probably binoculars, but this evening Venus and Saturn are very close together, very low in the west, and just after sunset, between roughly 6:30 and 6:50 PM. The much brighten Venus will be easier to spot, with Saturn barely above and to the left. Tomorrow evening, you’ll see the effects of Venus’s orbit, shifting to slightly higher than Saturn.

Sunday:
Daylight Savings Time begins today, as we move the clocks ahead one hour, making the sunrise and sunset an hour later. There is actually a connection to astronomy, as time used to be “local”, based on the Sun’s position being due south at noon. That changed in the 1800s, when trains needed a “standard” time system.

Monday:
By 2:30 AM tomorrow, a waning Gibbous Moon climbs into the southeast, and will spend the night seemingly towing a red star just behind it. This is Antares, the “heart” of the Scorpion. The pair slides low through the southern skies, cresting due south at 6:10 AM, only a quarter of the way above the horizon, as they fading into the morning twilight.