Re: Black Ops 3 Moon Guide

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Vanina Mazzillo

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Jul 16, 2024, 4:46:00 AM7/16/24
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"Plan Your Best Hunt" by knowing the best days, times and locations for hunting, summer scouting or scheduling your out of state hunting trips months in advance! With a quick spin of the MoonGuide dial, you will know the peak activity times for each day and what specific locations you need to be hunting at these times! The MoonGuide also reveals the "Red Moon" days for this fall! These crucial dates could be your best chance for catching the biggest bucks moving during daylight!

black ops 3 moon guide


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The 2 times given on the MoonGuide are the "Peak Activity", times for each day. The "red" times represent the when the moon has the strongest gravitational pull and the "black" times represent the 2nd strongest gravitational pull for that day.

A, B and C represent the recommended hunting locations for the specific am or pm hunts each day: (A) is for hunting field edges and food sources, (B) is for hunting transition zones and (C) is for hunting bedding areas. Red locations coincide with the Moon's strongest graviational pull and black locations coincide with the moon's second strongest graviational pull

The "Peak Activity" times change daily, so some of them are going to occur after dark. This information is included for your reference only and DOES NOT mean MoonGuide suggests you hunt outside of legal hunting hours in your state.

While a full moon refers to the moon phase when the moon's Earth-facing side is fully illuminated by sunlight, a new moon refers to the moon phase when the moon's Earth-facing side is fully in shadow. (Unfortunately, that means the Black Moon will be more or less invisible.)

Because the lunar calendar almost lines up with Earth's calendar year, there is typically one full moon and one new moon each month. A second full moon in a single calendar month is sometimes called a "Blue Moon." By this definition, a Black Moon is the flip side of a Blue Moon: the second new moon in a single calendar month. These Black Moons occur approximately once every 29 months and are the most common type of Black Moon according to Time and Date.

By the second definition, a Black Moon refers to an extra full moon in a season. Because Earth's seasons are approximately three months long, they typically have three new moons. When a season has four new moons the third new moon is called a Black Moon. These seasonal Black Moons occur about once every 33 months according to Time and Date.

During its "new moon" phase, the moon is always "black". It happens at that time of the month when the moon passes through the same part of the sky as the sun and as such, the moon's dark or unilluminated side faces Earth. So there really is nothing to see.

Unlike a "supermoon," which gets countless numbers of people scurrying for vantage points to see a slightly larger and slightly brighter-than-average full moon, with a Black Moon, you simply can't see it.

Some people mistakenly refer to the appearance of any thin lunar crescent as the "new moon." This fallacy has even spread into popular literature. In his classic work "A Night to Remember," about the sinking of the Titanic, author Walter Lord quotes a fireman in a lifeboat who caught sight of a narrow crescent low in the dawn sky and exclaimed, "A new moon!"

Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer's Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Joe Rao is Space.com's skywatching columnist, as well as a veteran meteorologist and eclipse chaser who also serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmers' Almanac and other publications. Joe is an 8-time Emmy-nominated meteorologist who served the Putnam Valley region of New York for over 21 years. You can find him on Twitter and YouTube tracking lunar and solar eclipses, meteor showers and more. To find out Joe's latest project, visit him on Twitter.","contributorText":"With contributions from","contributors":["name":"Daisy Dobrijevic","role":"Reference Editor","link":"href":"https:\/\/www.space.com\/author\/daisy-dobrijevic"]}), " -0-9/js/authorBio.js"); } else console.error('%c FTE ','background: #9306F9; color: #ffffff','no lazy slice hydration function available'); Joe RaoSocial Links NavigationSkywatching ColumnistJoe Rao is Space.com's skywatching columnist, as well as a veteran meteorologist and eclipse chaser who also serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmers' Almanac and other publications. Joe is an 8-time Emmy-nominated meteorologist who served the Putnam Valley region of New York for over 21 years. You can find him on Twitter and YouTube tracking lunar and solar eclipses, meteor showers and more. To find out Joe's latest project, visit him on Twitter.

On April 8, 2024, New York State takes center stage for a total solar eclipse, a celestial phenomenon that occurs in the same location only once in every 400 years. This extraordinary event has inspired breweries across the state to craft special beers.

42 North Brewing Co., Nocturnus (4.5% ABV)
A traditional German-style Schwarzier crafted with Pilsner, Munich, and Dehusked roasted malts. The beer boasts subtle notes of chocolate and coffee and pairs perfectly with drinking in the afternoon darkness.

Big Ditch Brewing Co., WNY Eclipse (6.5% ABV)
A collaboration with Buffalo Museum of Science, this black IPA balances powerful orange, grapefruit, and pine hop flavors with complex roasted and toasted malt flavors, capturing the essence of the 2024 total solar eclipse.

Lunkenheimer Craft Brewing Co., Total Eclipse (5.2% ABV)
The black-style kolsch ale, appropriately named Total Eclipse, presents dark color and flavors akin to our standard kolsch-Buster, reminiscent of the sun being obscured by the moon.

Nine Spot Brewing, Signs and Wonders Imperial Stout (10% ABV)
Crafted in anticipation of the Path of Totality passing through Rochester, this barrel-aged imperial stout rests in bourbon barrels from Buffalo distilling, releasing in the days leading to the eclipse.

War Horse Brewing Co., Path of Totality (6.8% ABV)
A hazy India pale ale brewed heavily with Australian Eclipse hops for full flavors of a mandarin orange grove to brighten up any dark situation.

The time has come for an oracle deck which draws on the ancient and existent principles of astrology. Astrology is the oldest form of divination in the world, and is both a science and an art. As well as the meanings and messages of each card, this guidebook will show reading methods and card combinations to help you harness age-old principles of astrology that will lead you to greater self-awareness and empower you to reach your full potential. Expect the card messages to be profound and far deeper than most card readings go.

on the outside. There are forces in the world we do not understand, nor can we explain how they work, and yet they do work. Astrology is just one of these forms of divination. Tarot cards are another. Runes and the I Ching are other popular methods.

Western astrology is different from other divination systems. There is tangible wisdom beyond the symbols where the movement of the planets and stars progress like a giant timepiece and trigger their influences over our lives, even when we forget those heavenly bodies are up there. I have taken these ancient as well as modern astrological ideas and created a system that works as an oracle that anyone can use.

Placing the cards in certain layouts is like creating aspects between them and, much like reading a horoscope, you will be able to make predictions based on the current influences shown by the way the cards appear in a spread. Further on, I have suggested a number of card spreads to add depth and meaning to your work with this deck.

At the end of each card message there are key points that summarize all possible meanings to help you interpret the answer to your question or understand better the issue at hand. For each card you will also find a corresponding tarot card.

The third and final part of the deck consists of sixteen cards dedicated to the finer points of astrology and includes the elements, the lunar nodes, eclipses, the Part of Fortune, particular aspects, planetary returns, Mercury Retrograde, and Void of Course Moon.

Ancient peoples took planets and lights in the skies to be significant long before there were the astrological signs we know today. The ancients recognized that what was going on in the sky reflected what was happening on Earth. Astrology, stripped down, involves the planets, the luminaries (the sun and moon) and sometimes other celestial bodies which are read just like planets.

Black Moon Lilith remains a shadowy point of a mystery much in the same way astrology is an enigma. Lilith forges her own direction and her guidance is of freedom and choice. What has been concealed can now be revealed. Spirit finds form. Black Moon Lilith has qualities similar to the planets Pluto and Neptune, which are psychic transformation, depth, that which lurks beneath the surface and matters that we may not even be aware of but have a powerful, potent and influential energy.

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