Caption
A total lunar eclipse, known as the blood moon, is seen over Kfardebian village, northeast of Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025.
Credit: AP Photo/Bilal Hussein
A total lunar eclipse, known as the blood moon, is seen over Kfardebian village, northeast of Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025.
A rare total lunar eclipse and blood moon is coming to the Georgia sky, and we’re in the right place at the right time for this event. On the morning of March 3, the moon will pass through Earth’s shadow and turn a deep, rusty red in a total lunar eclipse.
It’s a free show that requires no special equipment, no eclipse glasses and no real travel. Just a clear sky and a willingness to set an alarm.
According to the Time and Date utility and reference site, the term “blood moon” is not necessarily scientific but is commonly used to view celestial phenomena.
For this eclipse, you don’t need a telescope or special glasses to watch, but binoculars or a telescope could give you a better view of the details.
The best window for Columbus viewers is roughly 5 to 6:30 a.m., when the partial phase deepens and totality kicks in.
The moon will be low on the horizon, so trees and buildings will work against you, and the farther west you drive, the better your odds of catching more of totality before the moon sets.
Find spots with clear, unobstructed views of the western sky, like an open field, west-facing parking lot or a spot along the river with a clear sight line.
If you can’t get outside or would just rather sit on your couch in warmth, you can watch a livestream of the eclipse.
Graham Jones and Anne Buckle will host on the Time and Date site, joined by Preethi Krishnamoorthy and Avinash Surendran from Hawaii, with other feeds from Perth Observatory in Australia and the website’s mobile observatory near Los Angeles.
Tune in to the livestream between 3:44 a.m. and 7:07 a.m. on March 3.
The March 3 total lunar eclipse is the third in a string of three back-to-back blood moons, following eclipses in March and September 2025. After this one, the next total lunar eclipse visible from North America won’t come until New Year’s Eve 2028.
Where will you be watching? Email me at srose@ledger-enquirer.com or find me on social media.
This story comes to GPB through a reporting partnership with Columbus Ledger-Enquirer.