Saturn is considered a bright planet, but it's the faintest of them. Maybe the moon can help you spot it on August 20 or 21. As for Mars, it's still bright! Don't miss it.
The supergiant star Antares shines red in our sky, and the planet Saturn - glorious ringed world - shines golden. See them near the moon August 18 to 20, 2018.
On Monday evening, a great celestial drama begins as the moon sweeps by Venus. There are 4 bright planets in the evening sky now, and the moon will pass each one in turn.
The August 11, 2018 partial solar eclipse happens will be seen in the Arctic, far-northeastern Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Scandinavia, and much of Asia (north and east).
On the night of August 26, a waxing crescent moon will set in early evening. So you'll have dark time to find the Teapot asterism and let it guide you to our Milky Way's center.
These next 2 mornings - August 6 and 7, 2018 - you'll find the moon in front of Taurus the Bull, near its 2 most prominent signposts: the bright star Aldebaran and the Pleiades star cluster.
Right now, the planets Venus and Jupiter - and the Big Dipper - can help you learn the sky mnemonic follow the arc to Arcturus and drive a spike to Spica.