Arbre et Lune Bleue
			
		
		
			Image Credit & Copyright:  
Eric Houck
		
		
			Does an alignment like this occur only once in a blue moon?
No, although it was during a 
blue moon that this single-shot image was taken. 
During a full 
moon that happened to be the second of the month -- 
the situation that defines a 
blue moon -- 
the photographer created the juxtaposition in late January by quickly moving around to find just the right spot to get the 
background Moon 
superposed behind the arc of a 
foreground tree. 
Unfortunately, in this case, there seemed no other way than getting bogged down in mud and resting the camera on a barbed-wire fence. 
The arc in the oak tree was previously created by hungry cows in 
Knight's Ferry, 
California, 
USA.  
Quirky 
Moon-tree juxtapositions 
like this can be created during any 
full moon though, given enough 
planning and time. 
Another opportunity will arise this weekend, coincidently during another 
blue moon.
Then, the second blue moon in 2018 will occur, meaning that for the second month this year, two full moons will appear during a single month (moon-th). 
Double blue-moon years are 
relatively rare, with the last occurring in 1999, and the next in 2037.