Editor & Proofreader

Editor: Nelson Poirier    Proofreader: Louise Nichols

Friday 11 September 2020

Sept 11 2020


 NATURE MONCTON INFORMATION LINE, Sept. 11, 2020 (Friday)


To view the photos mentioned in this edition go to http://nminfoline.blogspot.ca

Please advise editor at nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com if any errors are noted in wording or photo labeling.

For more information on Nature Moncton, check into the website at
www.naturemoncton.com

Edited by: Nelson Poirier nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com
Transcript by: Louise Nichols nicholsl@eastlink.ca
Info Line # 506-384-6397 (384-NEWS)
To respond by e-mail, please address your message to the information line editor nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com.

** Clifford Twist took a drive to the Tantramar Marsh on Thursday morning.  Going down the Parson Rd and then Luciphy Rd where he scouted a field on the right hand side of the road, he was rewarded with 4 SANDHILL CRANES [Grue du Canada].  He felt two of them were immature and two adults.  The coordinates of where he saw them are attached as well as a photo.

45°57'18.4"N  64°13'30.6"W.

** On Tues. Sept. 8th, Evan Smith was sitting in his vehicle looking down on a marsh in Wickham when two SOLITARY SANDPIPERS [Chevalier solitaire] suddenly joined him and decided to take a bath, then preened to be followed up by a short nap.  Evan comments nothing like a short nap after a nice bath!  Evan got some great photos of the whole process from arrival to preening and the nap.

** A NORTHERN FLICKER [Pic flamboyant] has taken a very serious liking to a certain spot on Brian Stone’s lawn and must be finding the treasure it is after.  Brian got a few videos as well as some photos.  Check the action at the links below.




** Aldo Dorio was out photographing on Hay Island and Neguac Wharf are as usual on Thursday.  The shorebirds are starting to get a little trickier to identify as the season progresses with juvenile and basic plumages becoming more common.

** It’s Friday, and time to review next week’s Sky-at-a-Glance, courtesy of sky guru, Curt Nason.

This Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2020 September 12 – September 19
This is the time of year when the evening sky seems static; the stars appear to be in the same place night after night in twilight. As you can see below, the Sun sets about two minutes earlier each evening. With reference to the stars, Earth rotates once every 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds. But since our clocks are based on a 24-hour solar day rather than the sidereal day, the stars rise about 4 minutes earlier each evening. The rate of earlier sunsets this time of year cancels half of that westward movement. Although the stars rise earlier we also see them sooner. That is a bonus because many of the finest objects to observe in a telescope are prominent now, particularly the Milky Way.

The opposite occurs in spring when the later sunsets add to the earlier rising of stars. The constellations seem to fly past over a month or two, much to the chagrin of those who delight in observing the distant galaxies that abound in those constellations. Earth’s motion around the Sun results in many of the constellations being seasonal. For example, we currently see Orion in the southeast before sunrise. Come January it will be there after sunset and stick around in the evening sky until mid-spring. Those constellations near the north are circumpolar, meaning they never set and we see them year round. There are 22 constellations in the southern hemisphere sky that we see no part of at all from New Brunswick.

This Week in the Solar System  
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 6:54 am and sunset will occur at 7:35 pm, giving 13 hours, 41 minutes of daylight (6:59 am and 7:39 pm in Saint John).  Next Saturday the Sun will rise at 7:02 am and set at 7:21 pm, giving 12 hours, 19 minutes of daylight (7:08 am and 7:26 pm in Saint John).

The Moon is near Venus on Monday and it is new on Thursday. Jupiter reaches a stationary point this Saturday, beginning a slow dash toward Saturn which will end in a spectacular conjunction at the winter solstice. Both planets are well placed for evening twilight observing. Watch for Jupiter’s moon Io to reappear from the planet’s shadow between 9:10 and 9:15 pm on Wednesday. By midweek Mars will be rising around 9 pm and appearing almost as bright as Jupiter, while Mercury is setting 40 minutes after the Sun. With the new Moon this week, zodiacal light might be visible to the east in a dark morning sky for the rest of the month.

With astronomy meetings and outreach activities on hold, you can watch the local Sunday Night Astronomy Show at 8 pm, and view archived shows, on YouTube at: 
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAEHfOWyL-kNH7dBVHK8spg


nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com
Nelson Poirier,
Nature Moncton


SANDHILL CRANES. SEPT 10, 2020. CLIFFORD TWIST

SOLITARY SANDPIPERS. SEPT 8, 2020. EVAN SMITH

SOLITARY SANDPIPER. SEPT 8, 2020. EVAN SMITH

SOLITARY SANDPIPER PREENING. SEPT 8, 2020. EVAN SMITH

SOLITARY SANDPIPER PREENING. SEPT 8, 2020. EVAN SMITH

SOLITARY SANDPIPER NAPPING. SEPT 8, 2020. EVAN SMITH

NORTHERN FLICKER.  SEPT. 10, 2020.. BRIAN STONE

NORTHERN FLICKER FORAGING HOLE.  SEPT. 10, 2020.. BRIAN STONE

BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER . SEPT 10, 2020. ALDO DORIO

BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER AND LESSER YELLOWLEGS. SEPT 10, 2020. ALDO DORIO

YELLOWLEGS . SEPT 10, 2020. ALDO DORIO

Autumn constellations



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