There was a Supermoon on Tuesday, a storm on Wednesday and our shutterbugs out Thursday, seeing what was what. |
As you know, a supermoon is the full moon which coincides with the lunar perigee. The perigee is the moon's closest approach to Earth. |
It results in very high tides, as you can see here in Green Harbor. |
You get about 4 Supermoons a year. There is one in March. The one in November, 2016 was the closest in 68 years, and wont be beaten until 2034. |
Unless medical technology makes a great leap forward, the largest Supermoon anyone reading this might see is in December of 2052. The next Lunar Eclipse Supermoon is March of 2021. |
I was going to use this artsy shot to say something profound. Instead, I will note that, like the similar sounding Superman, supermoons also make people say "Look, up in the sky..." |
Moving on to the never-disappointing Duxbury Beach. |
Sometimes, the surf floods them. Sometimes, the tide floods them. It's like that Sixteen Tons song... "If the right don't get you, then the left one will." |
After glorifying people for driving through puddles, we made a few inland/brackish/estuary/transition zone stops, just to see what's what. This is Colby Hewitt Road in Marshfield. |
No offense, but the guy who has to walk over a pier during a supermoon to get into his house is probably cooler than you... perhaps even cooler than me, and that ain't easy. |
In case you're wondering how close a Supermoon gets to overwhelming the Bluefish River Bridge, the answer is what sports betting people call "a long foot." |
I was gonna buy this house, but my accountant insisted upon a 484 square foot sea shanty on the Cape. |
A quick dip into Kingston... |
The Jones River, flooded by the tide. |
No comments:
Post a Comment