Northland skywatchers will be in for a rare celestial phenomenon in the early hours of tomorrow, if the clouds stay away for it to be observed.
It will mean getting out of bed very early - or staying up very late - with a very rare "super blue blood moon eclipse" visible above New Zealand on February 1 at 2.30am.
It's the first time the three celestial events - a supermoon, a blue moon and a total lunar eclipse - have occurred at the same time since 1866.
A supermoon is when a full moon coincides with the closest the moon gets to Earth during its orbit and appears bigger and brighter. A blue moon is when two full moons occur in a single calendar month.
The third simultaneous phenomena to occur is a total lunar eclipse, also known as a blood moon, when a full moon, Earth and the Sun line up and the moon appears to be red. And while it's a once in several lifetimes event, observing the "super blue blood moon eclipse" is very much dependent on the weather.