On Tuesday December 21st the last total lunar eclipse for four years will occur. A total lunar eclipse occurs whenever a full Moon glides directly into our Earth's shadow which blocks most of the Sun's light from reaching it because moonlight is nothing more than reflected sunlight. There is however always some red sunlight in the shadow which makes the Moon turn an unpredictable shade of reddish orange during totality which will last from 2:40 a.m. to 3:54 a.m Eastern time or your equivalent. During totality the bright stars of winter will surround the Moon; Orion's Betelgeuse, Taurus' Aldebaran, Sun-like Capella, the twins Castor and Pollux, and Orion's hunting dog stars Procyon and Sirius. Check our website for more info. Keep looking up!
I copied this off the Star-Gazer website, too tired this morning to write my own announcement
Great site for naked eye atronomy
www.starhustler.com
Hope the Rain here passes, strange I'm having to worry about rain in So-Cal, everyone knows it never rains here
