Tuesday, September 29, 2015

The super moon lunar eclipse

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By this evening, the clouds had disappeared from earlier in the day and the clear skies allowed a good view of the first part of the super moon lunar eclipse. This is the first time since 1982 that an eclipse of a super moon has happened. A super moon occurs when, due to the elliptical orbit of the moon, it is the closest to earth it will get. It is supposed to appear about 14% larger than normal according to NASA.

I got out my 7DII and 500 II F/4 and set up in the park just beyond the back yard. Here are a few shots before the clouds drifted across and brought the show to an end.

I didn't get out right at the start but just as the moon was about half way in the shadow.


This next shot shows the beginning of the 'blood moon' effect, but the remaining sliver is really over exposed. It is the result of photographing in such harsh, contrasting conditions. The two little lines to the left of the moon are the lights of a plane that just skimmed along the edge of the moon.....I was hoping it might go right across, but even if it had, since the photo was taken at 1/15th of a second it would be just a blur.


By the time most of the moon was in shadow, I had to use a mirror lock-up, crank the ISO up to 3200 and even at that, the shutter speed was 1/8th or 1/5th of a second.


 The final shot, before the clouds quickly obscured the moon.


That's it....the next super moon eclipse will be in 2033!!

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