Not lost and not forgotten, the cross quarter days.  Known often as the time of lambing, an ancient honoring of the turning of the wheel.  Here is a cryptic notation from wikipedia:
Imbolc (also 
Imbolg), or 
St Brigid’s Day (Scots Gaelic 
Là Fhèill Brìghde, Irish 
Lá Fhéile Bríde, the feast day of 
St. Brigid),  is an Irish festival marking the beginning of spring. Most commonly it  is celebrated on 1 or 2 February (or 12 February, according to the 
Old Calendar) in the northern hemisphere and 1 August in the southern hemisphere. These dates fall approximately halfway between the 
Winter Solstice and the 
Spring Equinox.
[1][2]
The festival was observed in 
Gaelic Ireland during the 
Middle Ages. Reference to Imbolc is made in 
Irish mythology, in the 
Tochmarc Emire of the 
Ulster Cycle.
[3] Imbolc was one of the four 
cross-quarter days referred to in Irish mythology, the others being 
Beltane, 
Lughnasadh and 
Samhain.
[4] It has been suggested that it was originally a 
pagan festival associated with the goddess 
Brigid, who was later Christianised as 
St. Brigid.
In the 20th century, Imbolc was resurrected as a religious festival in 
Neopaganism, specifically in 
Wicca, 
Neo-druidry and 
Celtic reconstructionism.
[1][2]
 
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