For uptime, it is always easy to spot Venus. The shepherd’s star will shine at dawn, throughout the month above the east horizon, but it will not be very high in the sky.
Not far from Venus but much less brilliant, Saturn will rise almost an hour and a half before the sun at the beginning of the month and a little more than two and a half hours before it on the 31st. But the observation conditions will not always be favorable because it will be very low on the horizon.
For those who prefer to admire the sky in the evening, Mars will be observable in the first part of the night. The red planet will be above the western-south-west horizon at the beginning of the month then will slide towards the western horizon. Its brilliance will be weak but it always remains recognizable thanks to its orange red shade.
At the end of the twilight, it will also be possible to see the giant planet, Jupiter, A dozen degrees in height above the West-West West Horizon. This is the last month when we can observe it in the evening sky.
Do not look Mercure In May’s sky, she is unobservable this month.