Today:
A large, waxing Gibbous Moon pays a visit to the bluish-white beacon Spica as it emerges from the twilight in the south, between 8:45 and 9:00 this evening. They two will set in the west-southwest in the early morning, the Moon a few minutes before 3:00 AM, and Spica a few minutes after. By tomorrow evening, the Moon’s orbit takes it below and to the left of Spica.

Wednesday:
You’ll need to pair of binoculars, but just after sunset, around 8:25 PM, you might be able to catch a fleeting glimpse of Mercury, as it sets in the northwest by 8:45. If you can glimpse it, you’ll notice a nice alignment stretching between it, Venus to its upper left, and then to Jupiter, completing the string. Mercury is just starting a display that improves into early June.

Thursday:
Very high in the north, nearly overhead, the seven stars of the Big Dipper, while close to the northern horizon, with a low and level view, you find the stars of the Queen, Cassiopeia, in the form of a “W”-shaped pattern. The Big Dipper and the Queen are always opposite each other, with the North Star directly between them. Six months later, in November, they switch positions.