Hoping to see the 'blood' moon eclipse? It may depend on where you live in Canada
Western Canada offers the clearest views of the total lunar eclipse, with no special equipment needed and totality visible from 7:04 a.m., experts say.
- On March 2, 2026, experts say the blood moon eclipse will be best seen the further west you go on Tuesday morning.
- The Canadian Space Agency explains a lunar eclipse occurs when Earth sits between the Moon and the sun, and totality happens during a full moon when Earth blocks sunlight.
- In Toronto, totality begins in morning twilight with the moon eight degrees above the western horizon and ends by 6:52 a.m., with the moon already set, experts warn.
- Observers can watch the lunar eclipse safely with the naked eye, and the next total lunar eclipse in the region is not until late 2028, Paul Delaney said.
- Regional contrasts show the Maritimes face a 'race against the sunrise' Tuesday, Quebec and Ontario see totality start, and Mountain and Pacific time zones have the best full view.
19 Articles
19 Articles
Hoping to see the ‘blood’ moon eclipse? It may depend on where you live in Canada
Moongazers across Canada will be treated to a full lunar eclipse early on Tuesday, but not everyone will have the best seats in the house for the celestial show that's
Hoping to see the 'blood' moon eclipse? It may depend on where you live in Canada
Breaking News, Sports, Manitoba, Canada
Hoping to see the 'blood' moon eclipse? It means an early start to Tuesday in Barrie
Moongazers across Canada will be treated to a full lunar eclipse early on Tuesday, but not everyone will have the best seats in the house for the celestial show that's expected to turn the moon red. Astronomy experts say the "blood moon" eclipse will be best seen the further west you go. A lunar eclipse occurs when Earth is between the moon and the sun and the moon passes through the shadow cast by Earth. Barrie's News Delivered To Your InboxS…
Hoping to see the ‘blood’ moon eclipse? It may depend on where you live in Canada – 105.9 The Region
Moongazers across Canada will be treated to a full lunar eclipse early on Tuesday, but not everyone will have the best seats in the house for the celestial show that’s expected to turn the moon red. Astronomy experts say the “blood moon” eclipse will be best seen the further west you go. A lunar eclipse occurs when Earth is between the moon and the sun and the moon passes through the shadow cast by Earth. The Canadian Space Agency says the pheno…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 75% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium











