Weather

Strawberry Supermoon: How Will Viewing Be In New York?

The June full moon is also known as the strawberry moon because this is the time of year when strawberries ripen.

Depending on the weather, you may have more than one chance to see the full strawberry moon, which is a supermoon this year.
Depending on the weather, you may have more than one chance to see the full strawberry moon, which is a supermoon this year. (Scott Anderson/Patch)

NEW YORK — Beginning around 8 p.m. Tuesday, you will have your first opportunity to see the next full moon at its peak, and it is a supermoon.

However, because weather in New York can be iffy, on Monday and Wednesday it will also appear bright and full, giving you more than one chance at the lunar spectacle.

Weather permitting in New York, it will be quite a treat. The June full moon is also known as the full strawberry moon because this is the time of year that strawberries ripen.

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The National Weather Service says the region will likely be partly cloudy on Monday, mostly clear Tuesday and mostly cloudy Wednesday. Check your AccuWeather.com forecast here.

Look toward the southeast just after sunset any of those days, and watch as the moon rises over the horizon. “There,” The Old Farmer’s Almanac wrote, “it will appear large and golden-hued.”

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Supermoon isn’t an astronomical term, but one coined by astrologer Richard Nolle in 1979 to explain the effect of perigee — the moon’s closest approach to Earth in a given orbit — when it occurs during a full moon.

No one paid much attention to Nolle’s definition until 2011, “when the full moon arrived at an exceptionally close perigee, coming within 126 miles (203 kilometers) of its closest possible approach to Earth," Joe Rao wrote for Space.com.

The heavens over New York hold another delight this month: a rare planetary alignment of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn that won’t occur again until August 2040, according to AccuWeather. You’ll be able to see the parade of planets through the end of the month, but the best date to mark is before 5 a.m. local time on June 24, when a crescent moon joins the planetary parade.

Also, with the summer solstice later this month comes a chance to see rare noctilucent clouds, sometimes called “electric blue clouds” because of their color, according to AccuWeather.

And who knows? You may see a meteor or two. There’s no shower expected, but meteors are always flying, and several shooting stars an hour are usually visible on any given night, according to NASA.

The next meteor shower — the Delta Aquariids — doesn’t start until July 12. It runs through Aug. 2, peaking on July 28-29. Mark your calendars for that one, because a new moon means excellent viewing conditions for this shower, which produces about 20 meteors an hour at the peak.

Consider it a warmup act for summer’s main shooting star event, the Perseids, famous for their fireballs. That shower runs July 17-Aug. 24, producing up to 60 shooting stars per hour at the Aug. 12-13 peak.

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