How To See Super Blood Wolf Moon In Venice-Mar Vista

The Jan. 20-21 full wolf moon over California is special: A total lunar eclipse — known as a blood moon — occurs during a supermoon.

VENICE-MAR VISTA, CA – A supermoon and total lunar eclipse will coincide Jan. 20-21 in a rare celestial occurrence that will be visible across North America. Whether you’ll be able to see this event — also known for reasons we’ll get into later as a “blood moon” and a “wolf moon” — in Los Angeles County is dependent on the weather, of course.

Our forecast calls for patchy fog Monday morning after 4 a.m., otherwise partly cloudy with a low around 50, according to the National Weather Service. Luckily, the skies will most likely be pretty clear!

A total lunar eclipse, which only happens during a full moon, occurs when the Earth moves between the sun and the moon, blocking the sunlight normally reflected by the moon, NASA explains. The Earth’s shadow falls on the entire moon and the orb takes on a dark red or copper color — hence the “blood moon” part of this celestial event — as it is illuminated by sunlight filtered and refracted by the Earth's atmosphere.

There’s no need to take special precautions to protect your eyes to view the total lunar eclipse, as you would during a solar eclipse. Just look up in the sky and enjoy it.

On Sunday night, start watching the skies about 7:30 p.m. Pacific Standard Time as the Earth’s shadow begins passing in front of the moon from the lower left. Totality begins at about 8:41 p.m. Eastern Standard Time and continues for about an hour until 9:43 p.m. on Sunday, when the moon returns to its normal appearance. (For more local news, sign up for real-time news alerts and free morning newsletters from your local California Patch. If you have an iPhone, click here to get the free Patch iPhone app.)

Normal, though, is in the eye of the beholder in this case. Because it’s a supermoon — a recently popularized term describing the phenomenon that occurs when a full moon coincides with the moon’s closest approach to Earth, or perigee — it will appear larger than normal.

Lunar eclipses that occur during supermoons are rare, making this one extra special because it comes almost a year after the Jan. 31, 2018, super blood moon — also a blue moon, because it was the second full moon (and supermoon) of the month.


See Also: 2019 Guide To Meteor Showers, Total Lunar Eclipse And Supermoons


Having two full moon blood moons in back-to-back years is an oddity, NASA planetary scientist Rick Elphic told Time magazine.

“It’s usually years between lunar eclipses that have supermoons in them,” Elphic said. “We just happen to be in a seasonal cycle where last year there was one and then this year, there is one and I don’t think there will be another supermoon eclipse for a while.”

Early Native American tribes called the January full moon the “wolf moon” because it was the time of year when hungry wolves howled near their camps. However, the Farmers’ Almanac notes that the notion of wolves howling at a full moon is “known to be more folklore than fact.”

Some cultures refer to the first moon after Christmas as the “moon after yule.”

Photo: NASA Ames Research Center / Brian Day