Ugādi / Gudi Padwa
Lunar new year
Saturday, 14 April 2029
From the pañchāṅga
How it is observed
The Saṁvatsara turns. Kept with an oil-bath at dawn, the bitter-sweet Ugādi pacchaḍi tasted as a sign of the year’s mixed fortunes, new clothes and a temple visit, and the reading of the year’s pañcāṅga (pañcāṅga-śravaṇa).
Meṣa Saṅkrānti
The Sun enters Meṣa
Saturday, 14 April 2029
The Sun crosses at 3:54 AM, your local time
The Sun enters Meṣa (Aries), the first sign of the zodiac, and the solar year begins again. Across the south and east this is the solar New Year, Viṣu in Kerala, Puthāṇḍu in Tamil Nadu, Vaiśākhī in the Punjab, Poila Boishakh in Bengal, Bohag Bihu in Assam, one transit kept under many names.
What is done, In Kerala the first thing seen on waking is the Viṣukkaṇi, an arrangement of auspicious things laid out the night before; elsewhere the day is kept with bathing, charity, and the new-year feast.
सङ्कल्पः · saṅkalpaḥ
Saturday, 14 April, in the old reckoning
अद्य · श्वेतवराह कल्पे · वैवस्वत मन्वन्तरे · कलियुगे प्रथम पादे
adya · śveta-varāha kalpe · vaivasvata manvantare · kali-yuge prathama pāde
शालिवाहन शके १९५१ · सौम्य संवत्सरे · उत्तरायणे · वसन्त ऋतौ
śālivāhana śake 1951 · Saumya saṁvatsare · Uttarāyaṇe · Vasanta ṛtau
वैशाख मासे · शुक्ल पक्षे · प्रतिपदा तिथौ · शनि वासरे · अश्विनी नक्षत्रे · विष्कम्भ योगे · किंस्तुघ् न करणे
Vaiśākha māse · Śukla pakṣe · Pratipadā tithau · Śani vāsare · Aśvinī nakṣatre · Viṣkambha yoge · Kiṁstughna karaṇe
जम्बूद्वीपे · भारतवर्षे*
jambū-dvīpe · bhārata-varṣe (India)
*The locality lines, jambū-dvīpe bhārata-varṣe, your deśa and your kṣetra: name your continent, country, region, and town. India is shown by default; spoken aloud you'd substitute your own.
What you just read
The sankalpa is the opening declaration of any traditional Hindu observance. It places the moment in three nested frames, cosmic, calendrical, and astronomical, before any act, so the doer knows when and where they are standing in time.
Cosmic time doesn't change with where you read this. Śveta-varāha is the present kalpa (a day of Brahmā, ~4.32 billion years). Vaivasvata is the current manvantara within it. Kali-yuga prathama pāda places us in the first quarter of the dark age. These are the deepest layers of the Hindu reckoning of time, the same for someone in Bengaluru, Mumbai, Sydney, or San Francisco.
Calendrical time tracks the present year. The