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Blood moon rises over Miri during a total lunar eclipse. Photo: Miri EditionBy Dayangku Hidayatul
KUCHING, March 4: Thick clouds clung stubbornly to the skies over Kuching last night, dimming hopes of witnessing the much-anticipated blood moon in all its glory.
Yet while the city skyline remained veiled in grey, social media told a different story.
Across Malaysia and beyond, feeds shimmered with striking images of a reddish-orange moon hanging dramatically against the clear night sky. From rooftops to open fields, skygazers captured and shared their awe as the celestial spectacle at it unfolded, a glowing orb slowly transforming under the Earth’s shadow.
The moon, washed in a soft crimson hue, rose gently and transformed as earth’s shadow crept across its surface. What began as a familiar golden orb slowly deepened into a dusky red, a quiet spectacle that captivated millions at once.
The total lunar eclipse coincided with Chap Goh Mei, the fifteenth and final day of Chinese New Year; a celebration often associated with reunion, hope and fresh beginnings.
Fireworks lit up the rooftops, the crimson moon stayed concealed behind heavy clouds above Kuching—unseen, yet not entirely absent, quietly marking the last night of the festive season from beyond the grey veil.
At its peak between 7.30pm and 8.02pm, the moon entered totality, fully cloaked in earth’s shadow. After hours of being hidden behind thick clouds, the moon finally began to reveal itself around 9.30pm in Kuching, emerging faintly through breaks in the grey sky, a late but welcome sight for those who had waited patiently.
Although many missed the full blood moon, witnessing the moon slowly return to its natural glow was a beauty in itself. The next time a blood moon graces the New Year sky will not be until 2028.
Unlike a solar eclipses, no special equipment was needed. The phenomenon was completedly safe to observe with the naked eye. A rare cosmic event accessible to anyone willing to pause and look skyward.
The moon’s reddish tint occurs during a lunar eclipse when it passes through Earth’s shadow. Sunlight filtering through planet’s atmosphere is scattered and refracted, allowing only the longer red wavelengths to reach the lunar surface and casting it in that signature copper glow.
For many in Sarawak, clouds may have obscured the direct view, but not the shared experience. Screens became windows to distant skies, bridging the gap between those under clear horizons and those waiting patiently beneath grey ones.
And so, whether seen in person or through a glowing screen, the memory of a crimson moon lingers as a gentle reminder that beyond the heaviest clouds, the universe continues its silent, timeless rhythm. — DayakDaily

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