- What age is right for karnavedha?
- Tradition names the child's sixth, seventh or eighth month — Sushruta says the sixth or seventh — and failing that, an odd year of age: the third, fifth or seventh. Even years are avoided by custom.
- Are karnavedha dates the same as mundan dates?
- No — karnavedha has its own nakshatra set. Jyeshtha, tonsure's one sharp exception, is not admitted for piercing, and mundan is taken only in the bright fortnight while karnavedha is open to both — so the two lists differ.
- Can karnavedha be done in Krishna paksha?
- Yes — the karnavedha sources explicitly allow both fortnights; only the Rikta tithis, Amavasya and the other doshas stay barred. Bright-fortnight days simply rank a little higher.
- Why does the karnavedha calendar show long seasonal gaps?
- Karnavedha pauses through Kharmas (Sun in Sagittarius or Pisces), Chaturmas (Devshayani to Prabodhini Ekadashi) and Adhik Maas — months inside those windows legitimately show few or no dates.
- How are these muhurat dates calculated?
- Each day is scored against the five limbs of its Drik panchang — tithi, vara (weekday), nakshatra, yoga and karana — following the classical muhurta tradition — the Muhurta Chintamani, the Kalaprakasika and B.V. Raman's Muhurtha. Days carrying a dosha (Amavasya, the Rikta tithis, Bhadra or Panchak) are then removed, leaving only the auspicious dates for New Delhi.
- Are the timings valid for my city?
- The dates are anchored to New Delhi (IST). The auspicious day is usually the same across India, but the sunrise-based windows — and intervals like Rahu Kaal and Abhijit — shift a little by location, so check the full panchang for your own city before fixing a time.
- Why do some months have no dates?
- The strict rules drop the inauspicious tithis and nakshatras, and the seasonal pauses — Kharmas (Malmaas), Chaturmas and Adhik Maas — halt major beginnings entirely. A month sitting inside one of those windows can legitimately show few or no dates.
- What is the Abhijit Muhurta?
- Abhijit is the roughly 48-minute window around local solar noon, ruled by Lord Vishnu and considered auspicious for almost any task. The Muhurta texts treat it as a 'victory' window, and we highlight it as the prime slot within the griha pravesh and bhoomi pujan windows.
- What are Bhadra, Panchak and the Rikta tithis?
- These are the classical doshas we exclude. Bhadra (the Vishti karana) and Panchak (the Moon in the last five nakshatras, Dhanishta to Revati) are inauspicious periods; the Rikta tithis — the 4th, 9th and 14th of each fortnight — are the 'empty' tithis avoided for new beginnings.
- Should I still consult an astrologer?
- Yes. These dates are a strong, rule-based shortlist, but they are computed for a generic chart. For a wedding or any major event, confirming the muhurta against your own birth chart with an astrologer is recommended.