This is only the third lunar eclipse that I've paid close attention to. (I credit Eric with focusing my attention.) The thing that always strikes me most, but that I always forget, is that at totality, the moon stops looking like a flat disk painted on the sky and becomes three-dimensional. It seems much closer then, like a hot-air balloon or a strange spaceship.
It's mostly clear here, and bitterly cold. Raphael and I have been looking at the moon from the second-story windows, but it's now too high for that. The glass in the back door gives a magnificent view, however. The moon is not a very deep red, but rather a pleasant dark orange. I have seen scarier eclipses. This moon rose a mellower orange and then went pale yellow before the shadow touched it.
If we ever replace the back door, we must get another with a glass panel in it. I've done a great deal of stargazing through that glass when the weather was inhospitable.
P.
It's mostly clear here, and bitterly cold. Raphael and I have been looking at the moon from the second-story windows, but it's now too high for that. The glass in the back door gives a magnificent view, however. The moon is not a very deep red, but rather a pleasant dark orange. I have seen scarier eclipses. This moon rose a mellower orange and then went pale yellow before the shadow touched it.
If we ever replace the back door, we must get another with a glass panel in it. I've done a great deal of stargazing through that glass when the weather was inhospitable.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-02-21 04:26 am (UTC)They never fail to amaze me no matter how often I see them.
no subject
Date: 2008-02-21 04:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-21 04:41 am (UTC)I was expecting the brightness to return from left to right, the same direction the shadow moved in; but the returning brightness began at the bottom.
I have it on good authority that the bright "star" to the lower left of the moon is Saturn; the star above it is Regulus.
no subject
Date: 2008-02-21 04:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-21 05:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-21 04:37 pm (UTC)The first lunar eclipse I remember seeing also involved the G, back in 1989. It was opening night of The Duchess of Malfi. Quite appropriate, that.