NATURE
MONCTON NATURE NEWS
Feb 25, 2022 (Friday)
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Edited by:
Nelson Poirier nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com
**Nelson Poirier was able to pay a short visit to Caledonia Mountain on Wednesday. Weather predictions were good but as can often happen on mountaintops, the weather was different from predictions with predominantly fog and drizzle. Despite the conditions, it was very pleasant to be visited by a pair of Canada Jays and a Boreal Chickadee that allowed for quick photos.
**It’s Friday and time to review what we may have a
chance of seeing in next week’s night sky courtesy of sky guru Curt Nason.
This Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2022 February 26 – March
5
Do you hear the wind? According to the weather proverb, March comes in like a
lion and goes out like a lamb, referring to roaring winds early in the month
and calm days leading into April. As twilight ends this evening, look off to
the east for a group of stars forming a sickle and leading a large triangle of
stars. This combination is the constellation of Leo the Lion entering the sky
as it did a few centuries ago, when the saying supposedly originated.
Now look to the west for a bent line of three stars west of the Pleiades star
cluster. That is Aries the Ram, which could still be a lamb at heart. By the
end of the month the annual march of constellations has Aries about to leave
the sky as twilight ends. Our fickle weather won’t always follow the proverb
but the constellations will continue to play it out for several generations to
come.
This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 7:03 am and sunset will occur at 6:01 pm,
giving the (7:07 am and 6:07 pm in Saint John).
Next Saturday the Sun will rise at 6:50 am and set at 6:11 pm, giving 11 hours,
21 minutes of daylight (6:55 am and 6:16 pm in Saint John).
The Moon forms a trio with Venus and Mars on Sunday morning, Mercury and Saturn
on Monday, and it is new on Wednesday. Jupiter is too close to the Sun for
viewing, reaching conjunction next Saturday. Venus and Mars are within the same
binocular view and they will remain that close for a month. Over midweek
Mercury slides closely below Saturn but it will be a challenge to see them with
binoculars in bright twilight, rising 40 minutes before the Sun. Until midweek
rural stargazers have the opportunity to see the subtle glow of the zodiacal
light in the west about 45-90 minutes after sunset.
On Sunday evening at 8 pm, tune in to the Sunday Night Astronomy Show via the
Facebook page or YouTube channel of Astronomy by the Bay.
Nelson Poirier
Nature Moncton