Forum Discussion

  • Thanks for sharing. Might have to brave the cold and out to watch.
  • I'm kinda amused by the trend of calling every celestial event by some fantastic sounding name, no matter how mundane it really is. The moon always looks red during a total lunar eclipse.
  • True. Maybe it's to attract folks who are chasing werewolves in the park - stoned... (sorry always think of that Blackie & The Rodeo Kings song when wolves come up. :)
  • drsteve wrote:
    I'm kinda amused by the trend of calling every celestial event by some fantastic sounding name, no matter how mundane it really is. The moon always looks red during a total lunar eclipse.


    Yeah, but this one is expected to be bloodier and wolfier than ever.
  • drsteve wrote:
    I'm kinda amused by the trend of calling every celestial event by some fantastic sounding name, no matter how mundane it really is. The moon always looks red during a total lunar eclipse.


    For many of us, it is not a "mundane" event.. Some of us enjoy looking at the night sky. It is a super moon ( closer to the earth and bigger). It is a lunar eclipse. And it is the first full moon of the year (wolf moon).

    If you don't want to see it, stay inside and sleep. As for me, I will be looking up at the sky that night, weather permitting.
  • I don't think drsteve meant "mundane" in the sense of boring and not worth the effort to see. I think he meant that a red moon during a lunar eclipse is standard operating procedure for lunar eclipses. It's what happens. It's normal (aka mundane).

    A lunar eclipse is always interesting. :)
  • drsteve wrote:
    I'm kinda amused by the trend of calling every celestial event by some fantastic sounding name, no matter how mundane it really is. The moon always looks red during a total lunar eclipse.


    Not so mundane to me - there is actually some history to this particular name. This eclipse occurs at the point the moon is closest to the earth making it appear larger in the sky which is also called the perigee. AKA super moon

    That makes the moon look extra close and extra bright – up to 14% bigger and 30% brighter than a full moon at its farthest point from Earth, known as the apogee.

    This is the first of three supermoons in 2019. The others will be on Feb. 19 and March 21. Of these, the Feb. 19 full moon will be the closest and largest full supermoon of 2019.

    Although the moon is in Earth's shadow, some sunlight still reaches the moon. The sunlight passes through Earth's atmosphere, which causes our atmosphere to filter out most of the blue light which makes the moon appear red to people on Earth.- AKA Blood moon.

    "Wolf" moon. According to the Old Farmer's Almanac, Native Americans called the January full moon the "wolf" moon because it appeared when wolves howled in hunger outside the villages.

    The almanac said ancient peoples commonly tracked the seasons by following the lunar calendar (vs. today’s solar calendar).

    For millennia, people across the world, including Native Americans, named the months after nature’s cues - it wasn't made up by members of an RV forum.
  • dewey02 wrote:
    drsteve wrote:
    I'm kinda amused by the trend of calling every celestial event by some fantastic sounding name, no matter how mundane it really is. The moon always looks red during a total lunar eclipse.


    For many of us, it is not a "mundane" event.. Some of us enjoy looking at the night sky. It is a super moon ( closer to the earth and bigger). It is a lunar eclipse. And it is the first full moon of the year (wolf moon).

    If you don't want to see it, stay inside and sleep. As for me, I will be looking up at the sky that night, weather permitting.


    Yeah, what I meant is that lunar eclipses aren't exactly rare, not that they aren't interesting. I'll definitely be watching, weather permitting, even though I've seen it many times.

About RV Tips & Tricks

Looking for advice before your next adventure? Look no further.25,102 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 18, 2025