Pambu Panchangam 201011 Jun 2026
Every village has its keeper of time. In Vellanur, a hamlet tucked between emerald paddy fields and a faded temple tank, that keeper was old Raman—known by children as "Pambu" because he kept the snake-calendars, the Pambu Panchangam. No ordinary almanac, the panchangam Raman guarded was a rolled palm-leaf manuscript, its ink faded but its measurements precise: lunar days, eclipses, muhurthams, and the secret hours when the village felt luck tip one way or another.
On the first anniversary of the banyan planting—20 October—the children released paper lotus lamps into the temple tank. They floated, orange amid the dark water, and for a few quiet breaths the village kept time together. The panchangam, rolled and safe, slept beside the lamp-lighter's stool, a patient chronicle of the moments that stitched ordinary lives into something like meaning. pambu panchangam 201011
Pambu Panchangam for this period predicted the following notable celestial configurations: Every village has its keeper of time
The book lists every major festival—from Pongal and Deepavali to the obscure deity-specific vratams. It ensures that devotees do not miss the star days for Vishnu worship or Pradosham days for Shiva worship. On the first anniversary of the banyan planting—20
