well im sure somewhere on the internet you could find it but its not a prediction it is a calculation
Follow the link to NASA's eclipse web site.
There are generally two lunar eclipses and two solar eclipses each year. Sometimes you will see two partial eclipses instead of one total eclipse; in 2011, there will be four partial solar eclipses, and no total or annular solar eclipses. Since lunar eclipses happen on the Moon, they are visible from the entire night half of the Earth. Solar eclipses, when the Moon's shadow hits the Earth, affect very small areas of the Earth, and so they seem to be more rare. The next total lunar eclipse will happen on December 21, 2010, and will be visible from any point in North America.
No, solar eclipses happen about twice a year. (Sometimes instead of one "real" eclipse, we get two "partial" eclipses.) You can look up the dates and locations of solar eclipses starting with the year 2000 BC and going to 3000 AD on the NASA Eclipse web site (linked below).
UK in London.
I don't know how but scientists say that in 2015 there is going to be four moons that are blood red. I think its because 2014-2015 four eclipses will happen, but I don't know what that has to do with four moons.
There is only going to be one!
There are between 2 and 5 solar eclipses each year. In 2011, there are four solar eclipses, all partial ones. There is also one every ten years
Cricketmad.com predicts that Melbourne Stars will prevail over Sydney Sixers
A cummulus cloud predicts fine weather, a cirrus predicts okay weather (also fine), stratus are often connected to stormy weather, and a nimbus is probably going to bring rain.
The Earth and Moon are rocks, moving in defined orbits. We can calculate when eclipses are going to happen, and this doesn't take a whole lot of skill to do; the builders of Stonehenge, 3000 years ago, could do it too.
"Next" is a moving target, and there are many kinds of eclipses. Today is Thursday, May 26, 2011, and the "next" solar eclipse will occur in 5 days, on June 1, 2011. It will be a partial eclipse, visible from northern Japan, Korea, northern China, most of Siberia, the northern half of Alaska and Canada, and Greenland. 2011 is a good year for eclipses! There will be two other solar eclipses (all partial, on July 1 and November 25) and two TOTAL lunar eclipses, on June 15 (visible from eastern Africa, India and southwestern Asia) and December 10 (visible from eastern Asia and Australia).
It all comes down to probability. It's just like playing darts. You're going to hit the board a lot more often than you score a bullseye.