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When To See Rare Blue Moon In MD; It’s Also A Micromoon

The weather should cooperate this weekend for Marylanders to catch a glimpse of a rare blue moon shining down.

If the weather cooperates, Maryland skywatchers will get a rare look at a blue moon this weekend, though its name is more about the calendar than its color.

The full moon peaks at 4:45 a.m. ET Sunday, May 31, making it the second full moon of May. That is the most common modern definition of a blue moon: the second full moon in a single calendar month. May’s first full moon occurred on May 1.

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The weekend weather forecast for Maryland, according to the National Weather Service, will be partly to mostly sunny skies with temperatures reaching the upper 60s into the low 70s on both Saturday and Sunday.

Despite the name, the moon won’t actually appear blue, according to NASA. It may look golden, orange or reddish when it is low on the horizon, the same effect that can make sunrises and sunsets appear warm-colored.

A truly blue-looking moon isn’t unheard of, and is usually caused by particles in the atmosphere, such as smoke or volcanic ash.

Here’s another caveat: Far-northern skywatchers may also be entering the noctilucent cloud season. The high-altitude clouds can glow silver or electric blue after sunset or before sunrise, especially near the summer solstice, but they are unrelated to the blue moon and won’t make the moon itself appear blue.

The best time to see the moon will likely be around moonrise Saturday evening, May 30, when it climbs above the eastern horizon shortly after sunset. The moon will appear full to most casual observers from Saturday night into Monday.

This month’s blue moon is also a micromoon, which is the opposite of a supermoon. A micromoon occurs when the moon is near apogee, its farthest point from Earth in its orbit. A supermoon occurs when it is at perigee and makes its closest approach to Earth in its elliptical orbit pattern.

As a micromoon, this full moon will appear slightly smaller and less luminous than usual, though the variation may be subtle enough that casual observers would need a side-by-side comparison to notice the distinction.

The blue moon can be seen without a telescope. Binoculars can help bring out surface details, but the full moon is bright enough to see with the naked eye if skies are clear. Pick a site with an open view of the eastern horizon and check local moonrise times.

Blue moons are uncommon but not extraordinary. They happen because the lunar cycle is about 29.5 days, while most calendar months are 30 or 31 days long. That mismatch occasionally gives a month two full moons.

A less common definition calls the third full moon in a season with four full moons a blue moon. By that measure, the next blue moon will occur May 20, 2027.

Related: 2026 Guide To Meteor Showers, Blue Moon, Micromoons And Supermoons



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