Lunar eclipse: Crowds descend on observatory for 'blood moon'

Bob Alborzian was a child when his father first showed him the Milky Way galaxy through the lens of a telescope, leading to a lifelong love of astronomy.

Now 69, Alborzian was on hand with his own homemade telescope Monday night at the Griffith Observatory, where he and hundreds of others awaited the blood moon, the first total eclipse of 2014.

The eclipse, which will peak early Tuesday, will be the first in more than three years to be visible from Los Angeles and uninterrupted by sunrise. In Los Angeles, the most impressive part will begin at 10:58 p.m. when the first bite is taken out of the moon. It will be blotted out entirely at 12:06 a.m. Tuesday, said experts at the observatory.

As the bite spreads across the moon, it will transform into a dark blood moon. The dark red hue will come from the light of sunsets and sunrises over the rest of the Earth.

Griffith Observatory will remain open to visitors, who can look up at the eclipse either from the building or from the grass and sidewalk areas. Experts will provide presentations on the eclipse.

The homemade telescope through which Alborzian planned to view the eclipse had an 8-inch lens and was constructed out of cardboard. The telescope rotated because its bottom was made from an old jazz record. Others who had come to view the eclipse peeked inside the telescope, which was covered in newspaper clippings about Ella Fitzgerald, Sam Cooke and the Beatles.

I only cover it in good music, said Alborzian, a member of Sidewalk Astronomers, an amateur astronomy association.

The crowds descended upon the Observatory early, with hundreds of people lounging on the lawn hours before the eclipse was set to begin. Families passed the time with picnics and throwing baseballs.

The observatory and the Los Angeles Astronomical Society, as well as other astronomy clubs and organizations, offered telescopes for viewers.

Heven Renteria, 31, said he fell in love with the sky at age 6 while visiting the observatory with his mother. Gazing at the stars while overseas serving as a Marine brought him back to astronomy as a hobby.

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Lunar eclipse: Crowds descend on observatory for 'blood moon'

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Astronomy lovers preparing to lose sleep for tonights lunar eclipse

(Courtesy: HR MacMillan Space Centre)

VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) Heres a good reason to let your kids stay up past their bedtime; there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.

This particular event will see the moon turning into the colours of a sunset.

John Tanner with the HR MacMillan Space Centre says you dont need to do much just go outside!

Try and pick a nice dark spot and really notice the difference in brightness because if youre away from the city or a nice dark backyard, youll notice how much darker it gets during the eclipse. You might see the Milky Way stretching in the sky; youll see more stars showing up.

The Space Centre has an evening of events planned.

The eclipse itself is expected to start just before 10 p.m., with the main event coming just after midnight.

Just before 11 oclock youll start to see a little black nick [on] the side of the moon and slowly moving across and, of course, thats the shadow of the Earth. And, by 12:06 a.m., it will be fully in the shadow and its an eclipse! describes Tanner.

If you miss out, dont worry: This is just the first of four lunar eclipses that will be visible over the next two years.

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Astronomy lovers preparing to lose sleep for tonights lunar eclipse

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