Full Flower Moon 2026: Scorpio’s Shadow Meets the Beltane Fires
A Grounded UK Guide to the Rare Beltane Full Moon Alignment
The Full Flower Moon 2026 rises in Scorpio on Friday 1 May, exactly on Beltane. A grounded guide to what is happening in the sky, the crystals to work with, and a simple ritual you can do at the kitchen table.
There is a particular quality to the May hedgerow that the country walker knows in her body before she knows it in her head. The hawthorn is out. The blackthorn has finished. The bluebells have done their two week burn and are starting to fade. The whole green world has tipped over from waking up into being awake.
This is the air the Full Flower Moon 2026 rises into. She arrives on Friday 1 May at 9.23pm BST, sitting in Scorpio at 11°21′. The same evening Beltane lights her fires across the Wheel of the Year. The same evening the country has held as a fire festival for as long as anyone has bothered to remember.
It is not often that one of the great cross quarter festivals of the Wheel falls on the night of a Full Moon, and rarer still that the Moon herself is in Scorpio when she does. The two energies are doing very different work. Beltane wants you outside, in your body, in the warm light. Scorpio wants you honest about what is moving underneath. They do not cancel each other out. They make a strange and useful pair for one night.
The May Full Moon in Scorpio is also a Micro Moon, the furthest of the year from earth, and the first of two Full Moons in May. Fifteen days from this peak, on 31 May, the Blue Moon in Sagittarius arrives to close the chapter. What you sit with on Friday night is the seed of what releases at the end of the month.
What is Actually Happening This Year
The 2026 Full Flower Moon is technically a Micromoon. She sits at apogee, her furthest point from earth in her orbit, and will appear slightly smaller and softer in the sky than an average Full Moon. The energy follows the form. Micromoons tend to feel less dramatic and more internal than the big perigee Supermoons. For a Scorpio Full Moon to arrive in Micro form is fitting. The work she invites is the quiet kind.
The peak is at 9.23pm BST on Friday 1 May. The most charged window for ritual work is the four to six hours after that exact peak, which means anything from 9.23pm through to the early hours of Saturday morning is the working window for the night.
And there is one more layer. May 2026 is a rare two Full Moon month. The Blue Moon in Sagittarius arrives on 31 May at 9.45am BST at 9°56′. So this Flower Moon is opening a thirty day chapter that closes with one of the most expansive lunations of the year. The Scorpio Moon asks you to name the truth. The Sagittarius Blue Moon asks what you are going to do about it. Hold the two of them as one arc.
Beltane and the Scorpio Moon, the Odd Pair
Beltane is one of the most embodied festivals on the Wheel of the Year. Bonfires, hawthorn flowers, the maypole, bare feet on warm grass, the leaping of fires for blessing. She lives in the body, in the senses, in the pleasure of being alive. She is not subtle.
Scorpio is the opposite kind of energy. She is the most internal of the water signs, the bit of you that knows things before you have admitted them out loud. A Full Moon in Scorpio always brings up what has been kept quiet, even if you were not aware you were keeping it quiet.
When you put them together, you get something rare. Beltane gives you permission to actually feel pleasure in your body and enjoy being alive. Scorpio asks you to be honest about what you find when you do. Most of the year we celebrate without being too truthful, or we get truthful but lose the ability to celebrate. This Moon is asking for both at once.
Most of the year we celebrate without being too truthful, or we get truthful but lose the ability to celebrate. This Moon is asking for both at once.
A Simple Ritual for the Flower Moon
This is the heart of the Moon. Everything else in this piece holds her in context, but the ritual is where the work lives. Build it for the hours immediately after the Full Moon goes exact at 9.23pm BST on Friday 1 May. If you can be outside for any part of it, that is a gift. If not, a windowsill with a view of the sky is enough.
There are two versions below. The first is the full altar version, suited to anyone who has the time and the inclination to settle into a longer working. The second is the kitchen table version, which uses what is already in your house and takes ten minutes. Both honour the same alignment. The Moon does not measure the gesture by what it cost.
Version one | The full altar ritual
What you will need
- A white candle for Beltane and a black or deep red candle for Scorpio
- A small heatproof bowl
- A piece of paper and a pen
- One or more of the crystals listed below. Moonstone, Labradorite or Selenite if you can choose
- A sprig of hawthorn or any white blossom from a hedge or garden
- A stick of incense if you have one. Frankincense, sandalwood or rose
The ritual
Light the white candle first. As the flame catches, name aloud or in your head what you are celebrating about this season of your life. What has bloomed. What has come back to you. What you can feel growing. Take your time. Beltane is not a sign that asks for haste.
Light the black or red candle next. As the second flame catches, ask yourself the Scorpio question. What is the truth I have not let myself say? Sit with whatever rises. There is no need to write it down yet. The point is to feel it without flinching.
When you are ready, write the truth on the paper. One or two sentences. Keep it simple.
Hold your crystal in your dominant hand. Read the truth back to yourself, slowly, three times. The first reading is for acknowledging it. The second is for honouring it. The third is for letting it go.
Light the corner of the paper from the black candle. Let it burn safely in the heatproof bowl. As it burns, watch the smoke rise. Beltane carries the truth out into the world. Scorpio releases what you have been holding.
When the paper has burned to ash, blow out the candles in the order you lit them. White first, then black. In the morning, take the ash outside and return it to the earth. The base of a hedge or a tree, a wild patch on your walk, a windowbox if you have one.
Leave your crystal on the windowsill overnight to charge in the moonlight.
Version two | The kitchen table ritual
This is for anyone who does not have an altar set up, who does not want to buy something new for one ritual, or who simply wants the ten minute version. Your kitchen holds enough.
What you will need
- One candle. Any candle. A tea light from the bottom drawer is fine
- A small bowl or saucer
- A piece of paper and a pen
- A pinch of salt
- Whatever crystal you have, if you have one
The ritual
Sit at your kitchen table. Light the candle. Place the bowl in front of you with the pinch of salt in the bottom. Salt has carried cleansing in folk practice across most of Europe for centuries. She does the same job here.
Hold the crystal if you have one. Hold your own hand if you do not. Speak the Beltane question first. What am I celebrating tonight? Then the Scorpio question. What truth have I been keeping quiet?
Write whatever surfaces on the paper. Fold it twice. Tear off one corner and burn that corner over the candle, dropping the ash into the bowl with the salt. The rest of the paper goes in the bin in the morning, and the salt and ash go onto the soil of a houseplant or out into the garden.
That is the whole ritual. Ten minutes. Done at the kitchen table with a candle and a bowl. The Moon receives it as fully as she receives the longer version.
It is not a Moon for performing. It is a Moon for arriving. Wherever you arrive, the answer is yes.
The Crystals for the Flower Moon
Six crystals carry this Moon particularly well. Each does a slightly different job, and they layer beautifully if you have several. If you only have one, choose by feel rather than by list. And if you have none, the kitchen table ritual works without them. The whole Mystic Grove crystal collection is here when you are ready.
Each of these stones has qualities that have been recognised across many cultures and over long stretches of time. We work with them here within the rhythm of the Wheel of the Year, holding their wider lineages with respect rather than claim.
Moonstone
Moonstone is the one I always reach for first on a Full Moon night. The Romans believed she was made of solidified moonbeams, and both Greeks and Romans associated her directly with their lunar deities. In Sri Lanka and India she has been venerated for at least two thousand years as a sacred stone of the moon, set traditionally on the brow of lunar deities and carried as a stone of intuition and night travel.
Most commercial moonstone today comes from Sri Lanka, with the finest blue flash variety historically from Myanmar, where she is known as Mukdahan. The qualities people have recognised in her, the lunar tuning, the soft adularescence that catches the light like the moon catches it, the association with cycles and intuition, are extraordinarily consistent across the cultures who have known her.
For the Scorpio Flower Moon she takes the edge off the intensity. Where Scorpio can feel airless, Moonstone reminds you that emotion comes in waves, the wave will pass, and the Moon herself returns to the same point every month. Hold her while you ask the harder question. Browse Moonstone at Mystic Grove.
Labradorite
Labradorite was first identified in 1770 by Moravian missionaries on the Labrador peninsula in Canada, though the Innu and Inuit peoples of that land had known her long before. Innu legend holds that the northern lights were once trapped inside the rocks of the Labrador coast, and that a warrior struck the rocks with his spear and freed most of the lights into the sky, leaving the remainder caught inside what we now call Labradorite. The flash you see when you turn her in the light is the part of the aurora she still holds.
She is for intuition, for dream work, and for the place where the seen and the unseen meet, which is a description of Scorpio if there ever was one. Hold her in your dominant hand during the moments of the ritual when you ask the deeper question. Her flash of blue and gold under the dark surface is also a useful visual reminder of what Scorpio actually is. Depth that holds light at the heart of it. Browse Labradorite at Mystic Grove.
Selenite
Selenite takes her name from Selene, the Greek goddess of the moon. She has been worked since antiquity, and translucent slabs of her were used in temple windows in ancient Rome to let in a soft, lunar quality of light, which is where the original Roman name lapis specularis came from. Selene’s stone, mirror stone, the moon’s own glass.
She is your cleanser through any lunar work. She does not need recharging herself, she does not need looking after, and she will clear whatever you put on her. After the ritual, lay your other crystals on a piece of Selenite to clear what they picked up during the working. She is also the easiest stone to charge in moonlight. A tower on the windowsill catches the moonbeams and holds them through the next month. Browse Selenite at Mystic Grove.
Black Tourmaline
Black Tourmaline, known in mineralogy as Schorl, has been used as a protective stone in folk practice across Europe and Asia for centuries. Mediaeval sources describe her being placed at the four corners of a working space, and she still does the same job today. Her crystal structure is what mineralogists call pyroelectric, meaning she carries a small electrical charge when warmed, which may be part of why people have intuitively turned to her as a stone of grounding and energetic clearing for so long.
For Scorpio work she is essential. When the deeper question gets asked and the body starts answering with old grief or memory you had forgotten about, Black Tourmaline keeps you anchored. She does not stop the work happening. She makes it safer to do. Place a piece at each corner of the altar, or carry one in your pocket through the evening. Browse Tourmaline at Mystic Grove.
Rose Quartz
Rose Quartz is one of the oldest worked stones in the human record. Beads have been recovered from sites in the ancient Near East dating to around 7000 BCE. The Greeks held her as a stone of Aphrodite, who became Venus to the Romans, and she has been associated with the heart and with gentleness across many cultures since.
She is the Beltane half of this alignment. Where Scorpio asks for truth, Beltane asks for love, and Rose Quartz lets the truth be received gently rather than harshly. She softens the field around the working so that whatever surfaces can be met with kindness rather than judgement. The stone that says, whatever comes up tonight, I will not be cruel to myself about it. Browse Rose Quartz at Mystic Grove.
Obsidian
Obsidian is volcanic glass, born of fire meeting cold and cooled before crystals could form. She has been worked across many cultures for tools, weapons and scrying mirrors, with John Dee’s famous obsidian mirror in the British Museum a 16th century example of the latter. The Aztec and Mayan peoples of central America held her as a stone of the underworld and of unflinching sight, and her qualities of cutting through illusion have been recognised independently in many other lineages.
She is for the practitioner ready for the most direct version of Scorpio work. If there is something specific you have been avoiding looking at, Obsidian will ask you to look. Use her with care and only if you are ready. She is not a stone for soothing. She is a stone for truth, and there is a difference. Browse Obsidian at Mystic Grove.
An Ancestral Note on the Beltane Fires
Beltane fires were once lit on every hilltop in Ireland and Scotland on the eve of 1 May. Cattle were driven between two fires for blessing on the way to summer pasture. Couples leapt the fires for fertility. The folklorist Frederick Marian McNeill recorded that in some Highland communities into the early 20th century, every household hearth was extinguished on Beltane Eve and relit only from a coal carried from the communal need fire on the hill.
The same fires that once travelled by hand from hilltop to home are the fires this Moon lights now. Whatever scale you keep them at, you are keeping a very old flame. A single candle on a kitchen table is enough.
Journal Prompts for the Days Around the Moon
The energy of the Flower Moon does not arrive only on the evening she peaks. It builds in the days before her and softens for a few days after. The prompts below are for working through the whole window, from late April into the first week of May. Pick one prompt per evening. Write for ten minutes without stopping. The point is not to be eloquent. The point is to be honest.
- What has come into bloom in my life that I have not noticed?
- What truth has been stirring that I have been keeping quiet?
- If I let myself live fully in my body this month, what would change?
- Which relationship is asking for honesty rather than smoothing over?
- What desire have I been pretending not to feel?
- What old grief is asking to be honoured before I let it go?
- If Beltane gives me permission to celebrate, what am I celebrating?
- If Scorpio asks for the truth, what am I avoiding?
Herbs, Oils and Candles to Layer With
If you would like to deepen the ritual with the wider apothecary of the season, here are some traditional correspondences that sit naturally alongside the Flower Moon. Use what you have to hand. None of this is required. All of it is welcome.
Herbs and flowers
- Hawthorn, the May tree herself, blooming exactly now and the gateway plant of Beltane
- Mugwort, traditional for Scorpio and the thinning veil between worlds
- Rose petals, for Venus and the heart
- Rosemary, for cleansing and remembering
- Yarrow, for Scorpio protection and the folk magic of the season
- Vervain, the Beltane procession herb of these islands
- Meadowsweet, for sweetness and the gentler half of the alignment
Essential oils
A drop of the right oil will lift any ritual into another register. Browse the essential oils and blends at Mystic Grove, and consider these for the Scorpio Flower Moon.
- Frankincense, for sacred fire and the deeper reach of Scorpio
- Myrrh, the underworld oil, for honest sitting with what surfaces
- Rose, for the Beltane heart
- Sandalwood, for grounded presence through the working
- Patchouli, for the deep earth and Scorpio’s underground rivers
- Hawthorn, when you can find her, for the Beltane lineage
Candles
Candle colour carries its own quiet language. Our ritual candle collection sits in the wider Mystic Grove candle range, and these colours are the ones aligned with this Moon.
- White, for Beltane and the Full Moon
- Black, for Scorpio and the work of release
- Deep red, for the Beltane fire and the heart of Scorpio
- Silver, for lunar work and the Goddess
- Pink, for Venus and the gentle heart
Light any single candle from this list during the ritual. Anoint it with one drop of any oil from the list. Sit a small handful of any herb at the base. The combinations are yours to build from what you have, and the Moon receives whatever is offered with the same patient grace.
Frequently Asked Questions
What date is the Full Flower Moon 2026?
The Full Flower Moon 2026 falls on Friday 1 May at 9.23pm BST in the UK. She rises in Scorpio at 11°21′ and is a Micromoon, sitting at apogee, her furthest point from earth in her orbit. She is also the first of two Full Moons in May, with the second arriving on 31 May as a Blue Moon in Sagittarius. The 1 May date means this Flower Moon falls on Beltane itself, an unusual alignment that does not come along often.
What is the spiritual meaning of the Flower Moon in Scorpio?
The Flower Moon in Scorpio brings together two distinct energies. The Flower Moon herself is the May Full Moon traditionally associated with bloom, fertility and the noticing of what has survived the winter. Scorpio is the most internal of the water signs and is associated with honest emotion, hidden truth, and the surfacing of what has been kept quiet. Together they ask the practitioner to celebrate what has bloomed in her life while being honest about what is moving underneath.
What is a Beltane Full Moon and why is it rare?
A Beltane Full Moon is a Full Moon that falls on or close to Beltane, the cross quarter fire festival of the Wheel of the Year on 1 May. The alignment is rare because the lunar cycle and the solar calendar move at different rates, and a Full Moon falling exactly on a major festival day happens only every few years. The 2026 Beltane Full Moon is particularly significant because she lands on the festival itself and is in Scorpio, which adds a layer of depth and emotional honesty to the celebration.
What crystals work best for a Scorpio Full Moon?
The crystals most associated with Scorpio Full Moon work are Moonstone for lunar tuning, Labradorite for intuition and dream work, Selenite for cleansing, Black Tourmaline for grounding, Rose Quartz for the gentle heart, and Obsidian for the most direct truth work. For the 2026 Flower Moon, layering Moonstone with Labradorite is particularly powerful because both stones bridge the seen and the unseen in different ways.
How do I do a Full Moon ritual at home?
A Full Moon ritual at home does not have to be elaborate. The simplest version uses one candle, a piece of paper, and ten minutes at your kitchen table. Light the candle. Name what you are celebrating. Name what you are releasing. Write the release on the paper, burn a corner of it safely, and return the ash to the earth in the morning. The longer altar version layers in two candles, crystals, herbs and incense, but the gesture is the same. The Moon receives both versions equally.
Every crystal at Mystic Grove is hand selected before she leaves the bench, dispatched in protective packaging from Mystic Grove HQ.
Explore the full Beltane Fire Festival collection for everything you need for the Flower Moon ritual.
Continue Your Journey: Read more about working with the season in our guide Best Crystals for Beltane 2026, or learn how to set up your sacred space in How to Build a Beltane Altar 2026. For more lunar work and monthly moon guidance, visit our Moon Crystals and Rituals journal.
