Oh Em Gee a Trifecta of Astronomy Tonight!!?

One would think right? If the Washington Post has a headline, “A full moon, lunar eclipse and comet all in one evening? It happens tonight”, you might think holy shit I gotta see this trilogy of spectacularness!

Every science article I read in the lay press I find an overhyped problem, Cancer is Cured!, Neanderthals and apes had sex!, Two blue moons this month never to be seen again!

That’s, fine, gotta get the clicks. But today’s story is utter nonsense and it leaves out the actual interesting part that you should go check out.

  1. It isn’t a trifecta. A full moon and a lunar eclipse happen concurrently every single time. It’s like saying “the full moon will be round at the same time!”
  2. It’s a penumbral lunar eclipse. You won’t see jack at the start when they tell you to look since penumbrals just darken the moon a bit and that won’t be until mid eclipse.
  3. The comet is cool but even with binoculars and you knew exactly where to look I doubt you would see it. Tiny smudge.
  4. Dipshits should have used an Oxford comma. (Yes, once I get picky I go full blown grammar Nazi too. I’m not pointing out the six other typos in the article because I’m too busy with some pointy sticks that I need to light on fire and jab into my eyeballs.

What is cool which happens every single month is a full moon rising in the east over the Rockport Breakwater at sunset. The moon rises at 4:59 PM. If you go to Granite Pier the moon will rise just to the right of the breakwater. The grey line in the picture shows exactly where. Or click on Photographers Ephemeris and make your own map.

And my name isn’t Paul “Buzz Kill” Morrison for nothing.  It’s going to be overcast by then. 🙂
I will be there since the clouds will move in from the west and there is a small chance the moon clears the breakwater in the east before the clouds extinguish the view, but we live in New England, so don’t count on it.

Go out there and pretend to see moonrise in the overcast which is going to drop more snow tomorrow.
Go out there and pretend to see moonrise in the overcast which is going to drop more snow tomorrow.

Orbitz gifs Edward Hopper in Motion

There are a lot of Hopper gifs out there and now Orbitz add 9 Edward Hopper in MotionFly into Chicago, Columbus, Dallas, Des Moines, New York, Washington to see the real deal.

Automat, Des Moines Art Center, IA
Chop Suey, private collection
Hotel Window, Forbes Magazine collection
House by the Railroad Tracks, MoMa
Lighthouse Hill, Dallas Museum of Art
Morning Sun, Columbus Museum of Art
New York Movie, MoMa
Nighthawks, Art Institute of Chicago
People in the Sun, Smithsonian

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Smithsonian American Art Museum “An Edward Hopper Scrapbook”

http://americanart.si.edu/hopper/

SeniorCare Valentines Breakfast Postponed Due to Weather

trixy546's avatarCape Ann Community

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Just a reminder that SeniorCare’s Meals on Wheels Valentines Breakfast has been postponed until Friday, March 10, due to the storm.

Wishing you all a safe & warm snowy day.

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SAVE THE DATE: SILVER OAK JUMPER TOURNAMENT

For our local equestrians, Jeff Papows shares the following ~ee42cd13-22dd-4a2b-88ae-4001664f61baThe 2017 version of The Silver Oak Jumper Tournament Prize list is now available.  Prize lists will be mailed on April 1.  An online version is available on our website www.silveroakjumpertournament.com

Improvements to the property continue at Fieldstone Show Park since last September–leaving no area unattended and promising utopian conditions and a beautiful setting for top level show jumping.  Olaf Petersen, Jr. will be returning again to set the courses in the Grand Prix Ring and Nick Granat will be returning to care for Ring II and the World Equestrian Center’s YJC young jumper ring.

For those desiring a prize list prior to April, please contact Sharon at the following email address: sharon@silveroakjumpertournament.com

ff0154a9-9e57-4deb-bc00-f56e83c84c16The 2016 $75,000 Grand Prix Champion: Callie Smith onboard Attention Et Z

The “Calm” Before the Storm

While the snow came later than expected, a full-blown winter storm was definitely in the air. We took a little tour of Rockport from Old Garden Beach, to Bearskin Neck, to Long Beach, and down Eden Road just before the storm blew in.  As we were driving home, the snow began to come down fast and furious.

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Storm: so it’s like this now

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After 4pm Gloucester
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Before 6:30am or so
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After – 4pm or so (low tide)
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Before- 6:30am or so looking to Long Beach 

Quote of the Week

 

After a long hiatus this one just cried out to be shared:

“The most serious charge which can be brought against New England is not Puritanism, but February…Spring is too far away to comfort even by anticipation, and winter long ago lost the charm of novelty. It is the very three a.m. of the calendar.”

Joseph Wood Krutch (1893 – 1970)

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A Knoxville native, Krutch received an undergraduate degree from the University of Tennessee and then a doctorate in English Literature from Columbia. From the 1920’s to the 1950’s he was the theater critic for The Nation, a prominent magazine of the time, and also published well received biographies of Samuel Johnson and Henry David Thoreau. It was his study of the latter, and a move to Tucson, that lead to his own nature and conservation writing for which he is perhaps best known, including The Desert Year in 1951 and The Great Chain of Life in 1956. There is a cactus garden at the University of Arizona named in his memory.

 

This timely quote was stolen from the Sawyer Free Library’s excellent February newsletter which can be subscribed to here. My thanks to the uncredited author.

Greg Bover