What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

Location: Singapore

Latitude: 1.2929

Longitude: 103.8547

Time Zone: GMT+08:00

Time Zone ID: Asia/Singapore

The full moon calendar 2023 and the next full moon including exact date and local times are listed below.

When is the next full moon?

TODAY: Friday, November 25, 2022

Next full moon: Thursday, December 8, 2022 - 12:09 pm GMT+08:00

Full moon schedule for 2023

Month

Full Moon Date

Full Moon Name

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

January 7

07:09 am

Full Wolf Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

February 6

02:30 am

Full Snow Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

March 7

08:42 pm

Full Worm Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

April 6

12:37 pm

Full Pink Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

May 6

01:36 am

Full Flower Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

June 4

11:43 am

Full Strawberry Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

July 3

07:40 pm

Full Buck Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

August 2

02:33 am

Full Sturgeon Moon

August

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

August 31

09:37 am

Blue Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

September 29

05:58 pm

Full Corn Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

October 29

04:24 am

Full Hunter’s Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

November 27

05:16 pm

Full Beaver Moon

What day is the Harvest Moon 2023?

December 27

08:33 am

Full Cold Moon

Harvest moon for 2022 is September 10. The Full Moon closest to the Autumnal Equinox, in the northern hemisphere.

Full Moon (NASA Photo)

The Harvest Moon is the full moon that occurs nearest to the autumnal equinox in the northern hemisphere.

by Jeffrey L. Hunt

The Harvest Moon is the moon that occurs nearest the first day of autumn in the northern hemisphere.

In the Central Time Zone, the equinox occurs on September 22 from 2020 – 2030, except for 2027 when it occurs September 23.  Here are the Harvest Moon dates for the same time interval:

Harvest Moons 2020-2030 (CDT) – Full Moons nearest the autumnal equinox

  • October 1, 2020
  • September 20, 2021
  • September 10, 2022
  • September 29, 2023
  • September 17, 2024
  • October 6, 2025
  • September 26, 2026
  • September 15, 2027
  • October 3, 2028
  • September 22, 2029 (11:29 a.m. CDT); Autumnal Equinox (12:38 p.m. CDT)
  • September 11, 2030

Notice that a nearly “pure” Harvest Moon occurs when the full moon and the equinox occurs on the same date in 2029.

Traditionally, the full moon’s light at this season aided the fall harvest that occurred at this time of year at mid-northern latitudes. In times before Daylight Saving Time, the sun set around 6 p.m. (standard time), when clocks became important.

During the harvest time work could run longer than the 12 hours of daylight. So any extra illumination would help during the long work days of the season.

The full moon is bright enough to illuminate the ground so that the human eyes can easily maneuver outside and continue to work without artificial light.

As daylight wanes after late September, the moon’s reflected sunlight was important to help harvesters reap the summer’s bounty.

There’s an astronomical reason for added moonlight at this time of year. Other astronomical concepts are important:

  1. The moon’s is full when it is precisely 180° from the sun.  On nights before the “official” full moon, it may look like it’s that phase; it is missing 1-2% of its full moon light.
  2. The vernal equinox is the location of the sun in the sky on the first day of spring.  The equinox is the origin (0,0) for at least two coordinate systems.
  3. The autumnal equinox is the location of the sun on the first day of autumn.  Its coordinates are 180° from the vernal equinox (180,0).
  4. The celestial equator is the extension of the earth’s equator into the sky.
  5. The ecliptic is the plane of the solar system.  The sun seems to move along this great circle in the sky. The planets and moon appear to move near the ecliptic.  The moon’s orbit is inclined 5° to the ecliptic.
  6. Seeming to travel along the ecliptic, the sun crosses the celestial equator at the equinoxes – those points in the sky where the imaginary ecliptic crosses the imaginary celestial equator.  When the sun is farthest from the equator (23.5° north or south), the solstices occur.
  7. The moon crosses the ecliptic twice a month.  If the sun is located at the spot where the moon crosses, a solar eclipse occurs.  If it crosses 180° from the sun’s location (full moon), a lunar eclipse occurs.

As the autumnal equinox approaches, the sun moves toward its namesake point in the sky. As the sun sets, the vernal equinox point rises.  If the moon is approaching its full phase simultaneously – a rare occurrence – it is approaching the vernal equinox coordinates.

As the list above shows, the nearest full moon to the beginning of the fall season can occur several days before or after the equinox date.

The vernal equinox lacks bright stars nearby to indicate its location.  (The north pole in the sky has Polaris nearby. Several bright stars – Regulus, Spica, Antares, Aldebaran, and Pollux – are near the ecliptic.)  The equinox point is among the faint stars of Pisces, southeast of the “circlet” of dim stars that outlines the Western Fish of the constellation. The bright planets are sometimes nearby to provide cues for the invisible point’s location. During the evenings of harvest time in 2020, Mars is over 25° east of the equinox. During the 2022 Harvest Moon, Jupiter is about 5° east of the point. During 2024, Saturn is about 15° west of the equinox at harvest time; 2° west in 2025; and 12° east in 2026.

When the vernal equinox is near the eastern horizon, the plane of the solar system (ecliptic) makes a minimum angle with the eastern horizon.  As the moon moves eastward, it covers the 13° segment of its orbit compared to the starry background.  Compared to the horizon, the moon does not lose much altitude.

The moon revolves about 13° to the east each day.  It rises later – about 50 minutes each day – and sets later. During the full moon at harvest time, the moon rises only about 30 minutes later on successive afternoons and evenings. This effect occurs for a few evenings after the full phase as well. Consequently, the Harvest Moon illuminates the landscape after sunset around this traditional harvest time.

As the gibbous phase occurs around the time of the autumnal equinox, begin to spot the nightly change of the moon compared to the horizon.  The moon is slightly lower, not as much as the average nightly change, and seemingly a little farther north along the horizon.

This Harvest Moon effect can be observed anytime the vernal equinox is near the horizon and the moon is moving toward that important coordinate, even if the moon is at a waning crescent phase, such as near the time of the vernal equinox in March.

The Harvest Moon gets more notice because of its traditional agrarian role and the publicity the moon receives in the popular press, such as blue moon, supermoon, and such.

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What is special about the harvest moon?

For several evenings, the moonrise comes soon after sunset. This results in an abundance of bright moonlight early in the evening, which was a traditional aide to farmers and crews harvesting their summer-grown crops. Hence, it's called the “Harvest” Moon!

What is the difference between a harvest moon and a regular moon?

The term "harvest moon" refers to the full, bright Moon that occurs closest to the start of autumn. The name dates from the time before electricity, when farmers depended on the Moon's light to harvest their crops late into the night.

What date is the harvest moon?

That's pre-mechanization, of course, but the name has stuck. Perhaps the most iconic of all the full Moons, the “Harvest Moon” will this year rise on Saturday, September 10, 2022. The name is always given to the closest full Moon to the fall equinox, which this year occurs on Thursday, September 22.

How often does a harvest moon occur?

Most years, the Harvest Moon is in September, but around every three years, it's in October. When the Harvest Moon occurs in September, it replaces the Corn Moon. When it, less frequently, happens in October, it takes the place of the Hunters Moon. When are the Full Moons this year?