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Horoscope today, August 21 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

Horoscope today, August 21 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

The Sun8 hours ago
OUR much-loved astrologer Meg sadly died in 2023 but her column is being kept alive by her friend and protégée Maggie Innes.
Read on to see what's written in the stars for you today.
♈ ARIES
March 21 to April 20
There's no space in your day for party-poopers or naysayers – so close out negative voices, even just for a while.
As your head clears, you see exactly what you need to do. A break from a long-standing group or relationship can be part of the process.
The sun's last day in your creative zone makes your ideas dazzle.
2
♉ TAURUS
April 21 to May 21
Avoiding big tasks at home has become a habit – but it's one you can break today.
Starting with the one you have put off the most, make an action list, then work through it.
So many planets focus on this to help you succeed, but the time is now while your chart drive is strongest. Passion talks in such an inspiring way
Get all the latest Taurus horoscope new s including your weekly and monthly predictions
♊ GEMINI
May 22 to June 21
The influence of Uranus can switch routine words into an unusual form – that gets you attention. So do go with any new inspiration.
Even people who never seem to understand you, can get on board.
And something you write, from a document to a love vow, can make such a forever mark. Luck opens a powder blue door.
Get all the latest Gemini horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♋ CANCER
June 22 to July 22
What's important to you, is important – no matter what anyone else thinks.
You have the right to the absolute trust you need, and to have your value appreciated. So don't talk yourself out of this today.
When you stand strong, everyone will take notice. New love can start when your name or number is called out.
Get all the latest Cancer horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♌ LEO
July 23 to August 23
Your last day with the sun this year is your cue to make some lasting promises to yourself.
More fun can be one of them, but also more heat and light in your life.
This can link to a name you keep noticing in social media – and you know you need to know more. Moon insights help you choose perfect colour combinations.
♍ VIRGO
August 24 to September 22
You are ready to take long hard look at old dreams and desires, and work out which to keep or chuck.
Your chart is a blend of practical approach and sensitive insight, to make the right choices at the right time. Trust yourself here.
As for love, a special date may not yet be ready to go public, so keep it private for now.
Get all the latest Virgo horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♎ LIBRA
September 23 to October 23
The right deal can be travelling from north to south, or vice versa. Instead of waiting patiently, you are prepared to take action.
This can mean doing research, or gathering figures – and it's better to do this alone.
The more people get involved, the less satisfied you may feel.
'6' numbers can be lucky.
♏ SCORPIO
October 24 to November 22
Your ability to learn fast is enhanced by your chart positions – so even if a subject seems enormous, you can make a positive start today.
A moon of emotional strength asks you to commit 100 per cent to someone or something, rather than holding back.
Recently reunited couples can be the lucky ones.
Get all the latest Scorpio horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♐ SAGITTARIUS
November 23 to December 21
Pluto's plain-speaking and Saturn's support make you the ideal spokesperson to share difficult truths.
This can be with a family, especially across generations, or at work, where you can say what everyone is thinking.
Make sure everyone is on the same wavelength, before you start. Passion is deep and satisfying
Get all the latest Sagittarius horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♑ CAPRICORN
December 22 to January 20
That wave of change you can feel stirring inside is ready to break through – pretending you feel little is no longer the best approach.
Only absolute honesty will get things changing for you.
The kind of home you've imagined can take a step closer to reality and TV or radio-based tips can be the creative catalyst.
Get all the latest Capricorn horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
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♒ AQUARIUS
January 21 to February 18
Do other people truly accept and rate you, exactly as you are? This is your day to find out.
Your ruler Uranus adds a sprinkling of magic to all encounters, and artistic related efforts.
While a bonding moon makes sure you relate on the deepest levels to everyone you meet.
The luck factor lands on green squares.
Get all the latest Aquarius horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♓ PISCES
February 19 to March 20
A two-way decision may feel more like a one-way drive, and this can have a cash connection.
But if you keep the conversation going just a little longer, everyone can get on board.
Even if pride, or time, tries to stop you, try to keep this going. In love terms, finding fun in every single day matters more than big gestures.
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An Essex seaside town is preparing to welcome thousands of visitors for its annual air display over the next two days. Described by organisers as "one of the biggest and most anticipated events in the East of England", Clacton Airshow aims to celebrate aviation, heritage and do you need to know if you're heading to Clacton this year - and where can you follow the action if you're staying at home? Which aircraft will be flying this year? It's the 32nd time the coastal resort of Clacton-on-Sea will host the event, which sees aircraft flying over the town's renowned beaches and seafront year, the RAF Red Arrows and the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight – featuring the Spitfire, Hurricane and Lancaster – will be taking to the will also be a twilight display on Thursday evening, featuring Otto the helicopter, the Firebirds, and the P-51D Mustang "Moonbeam McSwine".Other aircraft set to take part include the Rolls-Royce Heritage Flight's Spitfire PRXIX, the Fairey Swordfish Mk1, P-51D Mustang "Jersey Jerk", Republic P-47D Thunderbolt, F-86 Sabre, BAC Strikemaster Pair, de Havilland Vampire, Westland Lynx AH7, OV-10B Bronco, RAF Grob Tutor T1, and Team will also be a replica Chinook on the ground at West Greensward, which visitors can board to see the scale of the iconic military aircraft. What time will it all be happening? Organisers say displays will commence at about 13:45 BST on Thursday, with the twilight display at 20:00, and starting again at 13:00 on Friday. The Red Arrows are due to close the day display on Thursday at about 17:00 and open the event on Friday at about 13: organisers say that display times are subject to change due to operational requirements or weather including flight times, aircraft facts and other information will be available to buy at the West Greensward Airshow site. How can I get to the event? If you're travelling by public transport, there is a park and ride service operation from Clacton Shopping Village in Stephenson KonectBuses services will operate from there every 10 minutes from 10:00 BST and will take visitors to the last buses back are at 22:00 on Thursday and 18:30 on the trains, Greater Anglia will be laying on extra rail services on both is available at various locations, but drivers are advised to leave extra time as surrounding roads will be busier than normal. Hastings seafront car park and the main Martello coach park are unavailable for public West Road car park is being managed by the Rotary Club of Clacton-on-Sea, which is selling tickets for £10 per car, and also has disabled parking spaces with an accessible shuttle service to and from the District Council says Marine Parade West and Pier Gap will be closed for the duration of the Road, St Vincent Road, Nelson Road and Trafalgar Road are subject to resident-only parking orders, the authority says, which will be monitored and enforced by enforcement officers. What else do I need to know? Organisers recommend checking the weather forecast before arriving, planning your journey in advance, bringing plenty of water and sun cream, and wearing comfortable, light clothing. They say it's a fun family event which is suitable for children - but the louder, faster jets can be very noisy and may cause distress to those that are sensitive to noise."If you have ear defenders it's advisable to bring them," organisers also said no public Wi-Fi was available and internet and phone signal could be patchy because of high demand, so advised agreeing a meeting point with your group in case someone got viewing areas stretch from the east side of Clacton Pier (towards Holland-on-Sea) to Martello Beach, including the upper and lower promenades and the West will also be a fireworks display after the twilight flights on Thursday. Where can I listen along or watch the action? BBC Essex will broadcast coverage of the event on BBC Sounds and its 103.5FM frequency on the Ian Wyatt and Steve Scruton will team up with pilot Sam Williams to provide commentary on the displays as well as behind-the-scenes airshow will also be live streamed on AeroView Essex's coverage starts at 12:00 BST on Thursday. Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

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Goldsworthy's Slate, Hole, Wall, a round enclosure of stacked grey stones, stands in the gardens' south-east corner, under a weeping silver lime tree sweet with honey-fragrant blossom. The Water of Leith Walkway runs close to the John Hope Gateway on Arboretum Place, and I follow it south-westwards. In Stockbridge, the Sunday market, shaded by whitebeam trees, offers loaves of artisanal bread, Perthshire strawberries and cakes made from insects. Almost hidden in branches under a bridge, a lifesize cast-iron figure stands in the river nearby, one of Antony Gormley's 6 Times statues. Another of the figures is buried chest-deep by the zebra crossing between National Galleries Scotland: Modern One and Two. Wandering past domed St Bernard's Well, with its statue of the goddess of health, and picturesque Dean Village, crammed with fellow camera-wielding visitors, I detour to the Modern galleries up the riverside steps. Linking both museums is Charles Jencks' huge Landform, with its grassy hills and curving pond. There are days' worth of galleries, artists' rooms and sculpture gardens to explore here, but the afternoon is passing and I have more miles and museums to cover. Heading back along the leafy Water of Leith, I climb another steep flight of steps towards Haymarket. On the south lawn of St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral, a labyrinth winds through aromatic yarrow and knapweed. Around this flowering meadow, as part of an installation called On Sacred Ground, there are rough benches elegiacally listing threatened Scottish species: corncrake, hawfinch, wryneck, ring ouzel, capercaillie. I walk on through Princes Street Gardens, back past the Royal Academy building, and drop into the National Gallery (free) next door to see Van Gogh's impasto Olive Trees and William McTaggart's stormy seascapes. 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Stacked Whalebones is a pale ball of interlocking bones, the whole skeleton of a five-metre pilot whale found beached in Northumberland. Around golden bronze age torcs and silver Viking arm-rings, Roman carvings and flint arrowheads, the artist also designed Enclosure, two curving walls of reworked Edinburgh slates. Another backdrop is of stained Dumfriesshire clay like the Red Wall in the Fifty Years exhibition. Outside, the Edinburgh fringe is in full swing (until 25 August). Among the crowds are buskers, jugglers, unicyclists. With just one night to sample its anarchic offerings, I plunge into dodgy cabarets and sweaty comedies in tiny underventilated venues. At 9pm, I'm back at the National Museum for an accomplished Lloyd-Webber-esque musical about Van Gogh. Towards midnight, I head to Summerhall for a strange, polyphonic prequel to Hamlet by the Polish choral-theatre group Song of the Goat. The next day, as I walk to Edinburgh's Waverley station, there's a prismatic haze caught between the misty drizzle and breezy summer sun. It reminds me of Goldsworthy's 1980s photo series with titles like Rainbow Splash Hit Water With Heavy Stick Bright, Sunny, Windy. As the train speeds south, through Northumberland and North Yorkshire, I see with new eyes the wave-pounded cliffs and bale-studded headlands, the dry-stone walls and sheep-scattered patchwork dales. The trip was provided by Visit Scotland, NGS and LNER, York to Edinburgh from £23 each way, London to Edinburgh from £52 Andy Goldsworthy 50 Years runs until 2 November, £19 adults, £5 children,

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