When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.The moon shines with Venus in the skies above southern Alberta, Canada. | Credit: Photo by: Alan Dyer/VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty ImagesLook west sky after sunset on June 17 to witness a slender crescent moon gleaming alongside the stars of the Beehive Cluster at the head of a dazzling planetary parade.Mercury’s steady light will shine low on the western horizon in the glow of the setting sun, as while Jupiter glistens close to its upper left, with Venus and the moon lining up beyond to create a spectacular planetary display.AdvertisementAdvertisementYou may notice the soft glow of earthshine infusing the night side of the moon on June 17, as light bounces off our planet to illuminate the lunar crescent while it glides silently through the 1,000-strong stellar population of the Beehive cluster.A pair of 10×50 binoculars will reveal dozens of the brilliant, young stars surrounding the three-day-old moon, while a 4-inch telescope will provide the magnification needed to highlight the cloud bands of Jupiter and its four large Galilean moons.Mercury will be the first of the parade members to slip from view, less than two hours after sunset, while the moon will remain visible for another hour after that for stargazers in the U.S., before it dips below the western horizon.The following night sees the waxing moon leave Venus and the Beehive Cluster behind, as it sweeps towards the blue-white light of Regulus — a multi-star system that glistens at the heart of the constellation Leo.AdvertisementAdvertisementMercury, meanwhile, will sink closer to the horizon with each passing night in the weeks that follow, as Venus rises away from Jupiter to chart a course through the constellation Cancer, before passing just 1 degree from Regulus on July 9.Interested in snapping your own photos of the night sky? Then be sure to read our roundups of the best cameras and lenses for astrophotography, along with our …