Moonrise
On certain evenings we gather on our Cocoa Beach, Florida east-facing beach-side balcony simply to watch the day undo itself—sunset staining the western sky while, behind us, something quieter begins. On Sunday, January 20, 2019, the quiet had a name: a total lunar eclipse. I’d checked the online charts earlier—moonrise time, azimuth, the patient geometry of the heavens laid out in numbers—and set our chairs faced the anticipated spectacle.

The light went a little pewter, as it does when the sun slides offstage and the world inhales. Out on the water a cruise ship shouldered south, a floating city of windows that, under ordinary sunsets, catch fire pane by pane. I looked up too late for the blaze and felt that small pang one gets for the thing almost seen. Still, the ship kept gliding, a bright punctuation mark traveling our skyline.

Then the moon appeared—first as a bruise-colored coin pressed against a bank of cloud, then as itself, pale and whole, rising as if pulled on a cord. Photographs can play a trick here: place a ship under a full moon and, with the right lens, the vessel swells to improbable grandeur while the moon looks like a modest ornament. Our eyes know better. The ship is huge but near; the moon is unimaginably larger, only far. Distance humbles everything.
It’s a fine parlor truth that every lunar eclipse requires a full moon. There’s a steadiness in that—that the earth, playing the rare importance of middle child, can only cast its shadow when the moon has come fully into its own. The reverse, of course, is not guaranteed. Most full moons rise and go about their business, silvering roofs and quieting dogs, without ever tasting the earth’s shadow. Tonight would be different.

The Riddle of Size
Before the darkness advanced, the old riddle of size made its entrance. Low on the horizon, the moon seemed suddenly intimate, big enough to pocket the ship and still have room for the lighthouse. We call it an illusion, but the word hardly captures the tenderness of it: how the mind, seeing that round face near our familiar trees and eaves, feels the moon to be part of our belongings. Angular diameter stays stubbornly constant; affection does not. The experiment is easy enough—choose a pebble that covers the low moon at arm’s length, then try again when the moon is high. The same pebble hides it perfectly. What changes is not the moon, but the story our senses tell.

Clouds raveled and the disk lifted, gathering brightness. As the earth’s umbra slid across that worn, luminous stone, the color shifted from pearl to rust, then to the old red of clay amphorae. People love the names—Super, Wolf, Blood—as if the moon had stepped onto a carnival midway. I prefer the quieter facts: sun, earth, moon aligned; light refracted through air; the planet itself briefly confessed in velvet shadow. It felt less like spectacle than like a family resemblance revealed by candlelight.
Eclipse
Much later, around us, the little neighborhood chorus noticed. A conversation stalled mid-sentence; the unspooled hush you hear at a concert just before the bow draws its first note came and settled on the patio. Even the ocean seemed to restrain itself, waves taking smaller breaths. The cruise ship had long since slid behind the curvature of our seeing.
We kept watching. A lunar eclipse is an exercise in patience: everything happens slowly enough to be felt, quickly enough to refuse boredom. Shadows are honest about their edges. When the moon wore its deepest copper, I thought of ancient nights and imaginations unlit by anything but fire, how dependable cycles must have seemed like messages and how—standing there, spine pricked by a familiar old awe—I could not entirely disagree. It was not fear, but kinship: the sense that we are included in the machinery, not merely spectators.

When the light returned, it did so from one margin, like dawn rehearsed on a smaller stage. The coin brightened by degrees, and the old face we know reappeared—craters and mares soft as thumbprints. The illusion of size faded as the moon climbed, and the experiment with the pebble proved itself yet again. Even so, I felt the tug of that earlier enchantment, the way a child misses a dream just after waking. The mind keeps two ledgers: one for what is measured, one for what is felt. Tonight both were full.
Eventually we retired. Chairs nested. Doors clicked. In the kitchen, glasses chimed in the sink. But the moon kept on, white and durable, its borrowed light restored. Somewhere out there the ship’s passengers drifted to their cabins, stories in their pockets about the night the world itself cast a shadow, and how the ocean looked briefly like copper under a patient star.
Later, when I wrote down the times and the few facts I could trust to memory, I realized the real record was not the measurements but the company: our leaning back, the shared breath, the soft astonishment that comes when something vast moves at a human pace. The eclipse ended; the evening did not. That, too, felt like a kind of alignment—ours with one another, our small chairs with a very large sky.
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Ethereal photos of the moon, Michael … always a reminder of our own small space in the cosmos! 😀
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Good to learn of your enjoyment, Annika. There are more moon shots to come, next week.
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These are beautiful, thank you.
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Thanks for sharing your pics as well as your description.
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Beautiful pictures of this lunar event!
The cruise ship is an added bonus.
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There is more to come, next week.
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What a great view! That last shot is magnificent.
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Thanks, Irene. What struck you about it, especially?
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First of all, the clarity and brightness of the moon. Then, the blending of colors in the sky. There also seems to be a layer of clouds right above the water. Was this a long exposure on a tripod?
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The full moon is bright so 1/1000 of a second at F10 ISO 800. I “always” use a tripod when using an SLR for such shots and did so here.
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Nicely done. 😊
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Excellent pictures as always. As an amateur astronomer, I’m always looking at great shots of anything in the sky. Two thumbs up on these.
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You’ll enjoy the next post on the Total Lunar Eclipse. Your compliment is appreciated.
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Nice photos. We missed out on the eclipse in January. Too many clouds in the sky.
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we lucked out
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Wonderful moon photos, Michael Stephen, I especially like the last one…those colors are so rich.
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Beautiful shots and Very Nice the blood moon.
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Beautiful shots of the moon, including the red moon. And excellent narrative, as always.
We had a lunar eclipse a couple of nights ago but it was quite cloudy.
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Beautiful captures. I’ve actually never seen a lunar eclipse before.
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We were privileged to be there under clear skies. At the time we had our eyes on China, as well, and were scouring the area for N95 masks.
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Simply gorgeous
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Thank you, Sheree! I’m so glad the eclipse glow resonated with you. The sky did the real magic—I just tried to keep up. Appreciate your kind words! 🌕✨
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You’re most welcome.
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Excellent pics and description of sequence of events…. Thank you
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Thank you, Indra! I’m so glad the sequence came through clearly—what a night to watch Earth’s shadow at work. Did you get to see the eclipse where you are? If so, what moment struck you most? Appreciate you stopping by and sharing the awe with me. 🌘✨
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We are in New Delhi, India and missed the eclipse due to cloudy skies
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Poetry in Motion – your combination of stunning images and thoughtful words never fails to pierce the heart.
Thank you for sharing and all our best to your wife and all your dear families for a wonderful autumn season ahead.
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I enjoy revising previous posts and rewriting them. Another coming out tomorrow.
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