Pennsylvania

Here’s when to see the ‘especially bright’ Snow moon peak in central Pennsylvania

The “Snow moon” will be visible from central Pennsylvania in early February, and although it will be far from Earth, it should still appear “especially bright,” according to Earthsky.org.

Indigenous peoples from what is now the northern and eastern U.S. called it the Snow moon or Hunger moon, NASA reported in a 2017 article.

The Old Farmer’s Almanac reports the Snow moon gets its name due to typically heavy snowfall in February. The Hunger moon name refers to the wintry period where food was usually scarce.

The Snow moon will be 2023’s second and last micromoon, according to Earthsky.org. Its distance from earth will be 252,171 miles compared to the average distance of 237,700, the site reports.

“While a micromoon can appear up to 14% smaller than a supermoon — thus appearing less bright than a supermoon — this February 2023 full moon still will shine very brightly,” Earthsky.org says. “It’ll appear especially bright because the leaves are off the deciduous trees now. And if snow covers the ground where you are, the moon will look brighter still.”

Earthsky.org suggests most viewers who are not particularly experienced cannot distinguish between a micromoon, an ordinary full moon and a supermoon, though experts may be able to spot the difference.

When can you see the Snow moon in State College?

The Snow moon will reach peak illumination at 1:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time Sunday, Feb. 5, according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac. But because it will be below the horizon in the afternoon, it might be better to look the night of Feb. 4 or later in the day Feb. 5.

The moon will rise in State College at 5:26 p.m. Feb. 5 and set at 7:40 a.m. Feb. 6, the almanac reports.

More full moons in 2023

If you miss the Snow moon in early February, you’ll have 11 more chances to see a full moon in 2023. Four will be supermoons, and one will be a blue moon.

The first full moon of 2023 was the Wolf moon, which peaked in early January.

Here’s the rest of this year’s full moon calendar, with information from Space.com:

  1. March 7: Worm moon

  2. April 6: Pink moon

  3. May 5: Flower moon

  4. June 3: Strawberry moon

  5. July 3: Buck supermoon

  6. Aug. 1: Sturgeon supermoon

  7. Aug. 30: Blue supermoon (appears biggest and brightest of the year)

  8. Sept. 29: Harvest supermoon

  9. Oct. 28: Hunter’s moon

  10. Nov. 27: Beaver moon

  11. Dec. 26: Cold moon

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This story was originally published February 2, 2023 at 12:12 PM.

Meredith Howard
Belleville News-Democrat
Meredith Howard is a service journalist with the Belleville News-Democrat. She is a Baylor University graduate and has previously freelanced with the Illinois Times and the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Support my work with a digital subscription
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