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['Supermoon' tomorrow] Sun/Moon-rise/set App

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tomos:
'Supermoon' tomorrow (2016-11-14)
It's nearer the earth than it has been in over 50 years.

How visible this size difference will be, I dont know. Most at moonset tomorrow morning I think, but probably also at moonrise later in the day.
So, when's that?

Cue app to show when and where the moon will rise in your location -
The Photographer’s Ephemeris (TPE)

['Supermoon' tomorrow] Sun/Moon-rise/set App

Info for dsktop/web version: http://photoephemeris.com/tpe-for-desktop
Webversion: http://app.photoephemeris.com

via imaging-resource.com/

4wd:
I found Time And Date easier to understand (being a complete astronomy noob):

['Supermoon' tomorrow] Sun/Moon-rise/set App

Next one is on December 14 and then you have to wait a year for the following.

['Supermoon' tomorrow] Sun/Moon-rise/set App

As to which direction I can see it, I'll look for the big bright thing in the night (assuming there's no clouds)  :D

tomos:
^ Time and Date was linked as well (in the source link) -- yeah, lots of good info there.
Maybe cause I like maps, or tend to be very 'visual', I found the other easier to get into.

As to which direction I can see it, I'll look for the big bright thing in the night (assuming there's no clouds)  :D
-4wd (November 13, 2016, 11:30 PM)
--- End quote ---
:)
The advantage of the other one, for photographers in particular, is that they can find/choose a location with something specific in the foreground for rising/setting of the moon, maybe woods, or a lake.

4wd:
As to which direction I can see it, I'll look for the big bright thing in the night (assuming there's no clouds)  :D
-4wd (November 13, 2016, 11:30 PM)
--- End quote ---
:)
The advantage of the other one, for photographers in particular, is that they can find/choose a location with something specific in the foreground for rising/setting of the moon, maybe woods, or a lake.-tomos (November 14, 2016, 11:57 AM)
--- End quote ---

True but since it was cloudy last night, direction became kind of irrelevant for me  ;D

tomos:
As to which direction I can see it, I'll look for the big bright thing in the night (assuming there's no clouds)  :D
-4wd (November 13, 2016, 11:30 PM)
--- End quote ---
:)
The advantage of the other one, for photographers in particular, is that they can find/choose a location with something specific in the foreground for rising/setting of the moon, maybe woods, or a lake.-tomos (November 14, 2016, 11:57 AM)
--- End quote ---

True but since it was cloudy last night, direction became kind of irrelevant for me  ;D
-4wd (November 14, 2016, 06:55 PM)
--- End quote ---

and I simply missed it :-[
it took much longer to rise than stated due to a wooded high ground in that direction, and then I got distracted by something else :-\
Missed it by less than an hour I'd say -- at that stage it was quite high already, very bright, but not looking particularly big (which I guess most people know only happens when it's near the horizon).

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