Saturday, 13 August 2022

The Sturgeon Supermoon

 Another supermonn tonight; the last supermoon of the year.  This one is the Sturgeon Moon named by the Algonquin tribes in what is now the north eastern United States after the fish that were more easily caught in the Great Lakes and other major bodies of water at this time of year.  

The Photographers' Ephemeris told me that it would rise over the fields behind Scartho adjacent to the Horsefield so just as the sun was setting in the north west at one end of the fields we waited fro the moon to appear in the south east.  For once there was no bank of cloud on the horizon so we waited with anticipation.  A short while after the appointed hour we saw an orange glow behind New Waltham and then there it was: a deep orange-red orb haning in the sky about the fields.  It was a moving and magical spiritual experience and I could only wonder at the emotions felt by those Algonquin people so many years ago.

The next full moon is the Harvest Moon on September the 10th when we are at the caravan on the edge of The Lakes.  Fingers crossed for a clear night.

To view large, please click on an image.







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