Posted on 09/20/2024 2:48:19 PM PDT by MtnClimber
Explanation: For northern hemisphere dwellers, September's Full Moon was the Harvest Moon. On September 17/18 the sunlit lunar nearside passed into shadow, just grazing Earth's umbra, the planet's dark, central shadow cone, in a partial lunar eclipse. Over the two and half hours before dawn a camera fixed to a tripod was used to record this series of exposures as the eclipsed Harvest Moon set behind Spiš Castle in the hazy morning sky over eastern Slovakia. Famed in festival, story, and song, Harvest Moon is just the traditional name of the full moon nearest the autumnal equinox. According to lore the name is a fitting one. Despite the diminishing daylight hours as the growing season drew to a close, farmers could harvest crops by the light of a full moon shining on from dusk to dawn. This September's Harvest Moon was also known to some as a supermoon, a term becoming a traditional name for a full moon near perigee.
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🪐 🌟 🌌 🍔
It rained, I missed it. Oh darn. It hasn’t rained here in three weeks but a tropical system in the southeast visited us at the wrong time. Oh well, nice pic.
I’m enjoying the lunar standstill. Last month the full Moon rose very far to the northeast. This Harvest Moon rose a few degrees farther south. It’s pretty cool.
ZZ Top wrote a song about that. Sort of.
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