Community Corner

Full Pink Paschal Moon, April Meteor Showers: How To Watch In Hudson Valley

Meteor showers return to the skies over the Hudson Valley this month. First, April's full pink moon shines at its brightest Wednesday night.

Meteor showers return to the skies over the Hudson Valley this month. First, April’s full pink moon shines at its brightest Wednesday night.
Meteor showers return to the skies over the Hudson Valley this month. First, April’s full pink moon shines at its brightest Wednesday night. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

HUDSON VALLEY, NYMeteor showers return to the skies over the Hudson Valley this month, but first, April’s full pink moon shines at its brightest overnight Wednesday and Thursday.

The moon reaches peak illumination at 12:59 a.m. EDT Thursday, but you don’t have to wait that late to take in its beauty. A good time to watch is around moonrise — that’s around 7 p.m. Wednesday. As it rises over the eastern horizon, the moon will appear big and golden. Find an open space to watch the moon come up if you can.

Right now, it looks like the weather in the Hudson Valley calls for clouds and a passing shower Wednesday night, and more clouds Thursday night.

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The April full moon is called the “pink” moon because it’s associated with the blooming of a vibrant pink wildflower, creeping phlox, sometimes called moss phlox or moss pink, according to The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

The first full moon after the spring equinox is also known as the Paschal full moon, which dictates the date of Easter — Sunday, April 9, this year.

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Among indigenous people, the April full moon references other harbingers of spring — for example, “breaking ice moon” (Algonquin) and “moon when the streams are again navigable” (Dakota), referencing greater ability to travel, and “budding moon of plants and shrubs” (Tlingit) and “moon of the red grass appearing,” (Oglala), references to the start of the growing season.

When To Watch For Fireballs

Later this month, watch for fireballs in the sky.

The Lyrid meteor shower runs from April 15-29, peaking overnight April 22-23, when the moon will be about 9 percent full, according to the American Meteor Society.

It’s an average sky show, producing about 15 or 20 shooting stars an hour, but it historically has produced bright Lyrid fireballs that blaze across the sky and leave dust trails that last for several seconds, according to NASA.

The Lyrids intersect with the Eta Aquariid meteor shower, which also starts on April 15. Sometimes called the Eta Aquarids, the show runs through May 27 this year. The peak occurs May 5-6 — at the same time the full flower moon is 100 percent full.

The Eta Aquariids have a broad peak, and that means skywatchers may see elevated numbers of meteors a few days before and after the peak, though the moonlight will compete, according to EarthSky.org.

At the peak, the Eta Aquariids produce between 10 and 30 meteors an hour, according to NASA. They’re known for their speed, entering Earth’s atmosphere at about 148,000 miles an hour, and also for leaving glowing “trains” — incandescent bits of debris — that last for several seconds to minutes.

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