As long as you see the night sky, there are a lot of cool things going on this year in August. One of them is the whole moon, also known as Stranger Moon. This is the last full moon of the summer, and it is coming on August 9.
According to the old farmer’s Almanak, the entire moon will reach its peak on ET on August 9 at 3:55 am. That way, if you want to see the moon in its brightest place, you would like to find the evening of August 8 and the next morning. If you miss it, this is not a big deal, because the moon will be more than 90 % from August 6 to August 11 to August 11, so there will be many opportunities to find and see it.
There is a lot going on throughout the moon, so if you want to make that night, you have other things you can find. Saturn, Venice, Mercury, Uranus and Neptune will be all in the south and eastern sky, standing well in the preparation of the planet parade at the end of August. Venus and Jupiter do not appear until the evening, but they will be visible with the naked eye. The other three will need some increase.
The Prasads Alka shower is also dynamic, so you depend on how dark the outside depends on how you can spy on a shooting star. Praces come from the Prasus Bridge. On the morning of August 9, it will be in the eastern sky along with Venice and Jupiter, so everything will be in the same general area.
Why is this called Stranger Moon?
The Stranger Moon is named after the Shaista Sturgeon Fish. According to the Old Farmers’ Almanak, Stranger was an important meal for the local Americans in the Great Lakes, and at the end of the summer, the fish was very abundant. Of all the bony fish, Sturgeon is the most ancient, which meets 120 million years ago. In this way, scholars often refer to fish as a living stake. It is also a long -time fish, which is an average age of 50 to 60 years. The women of the species can be 150 years old.
Other names from the full moon of August include Karn Moon, Raising Moon, Black Cherry Moon and Mountain Shadow Moon. It is also known as the crop moon, distributing the name with the full moon of September.


