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HAVRE DE GRACE, MD — The 2022 June solstice, which marks the beginning of summer in the Northern Hemisphere and the beginning of winter in the Southern Hemisphere, occurs Tuesday at 5:14 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time.
The sun travels its longest path through the sky on the day of the summer solstice, which occurs the exact moment Sol reaches its highest and northernmost points in the sky, making it the longest day of the year in terms of daylight.
On Tuesday, the sun will rise at 5:37 a.m. in Havre de Grace and will set at 8:35 p.m., meaning we'll see about 14 hours and 58 minutes of daylight.
Whether it's sunrise or sunset, if you take pics of the longest day of the year in Havre de Grace, send them to havredegrace@patch.com. Please only send pictures you have taken that we may have permission to publish on Patch.
You can read more about the science of the summer solstice on The Old Farmer's Almanac website. The more urgent concern is how you're going to spend the summer. Here are a few ideas:
The summer solstice offers a short window to see electric blue noctilucent clouds, the highest in Earth's atmosphere, which float about 50 miles above our planet's surface near the edge of space, which starts at an altitude of 62 miles.
Also, through the end of June, check out a rare planetary alignment that won't be seen again for decades. Around June 24 is the best date to look, according to the private weather company AccuWeather, because a crescent moon will join the lineup of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn in the predawn sky.
The summer meteor showers start in July with the Delta Aquariids, which run for more than a month and peak in late July, but you won't have to wait to lose yourself in the full wonder of the summer sky.
The shooting star show you really want to catch is the Perseid meteor shower, which produces up to 60 shooting stars an hour at the peak. The shower, which runs July 17 to Aug. 24, is known for producing large numbers of bright meteors. The Perseids fly mainly after midnight and can be seen anywhere in the sky, though they radiate from the constellation Perseus.
You'll also have a few chances to howl at a full moon this summer, a perfect primordial tradition that developed in some neighborhoods as people looked for ways to stay connected while staying apart during the pandemic.
But why ditch it now that people are getting out more? Of particular interest for howling are the next two full moons, the full buck moon on July 13 and the full sturgeon moon on Aug. 12. Both qualify as supermoons, and though they're not any different from other full moons, they appear to be bigger and brighter.
Also, don't miss the last full moon of the summer on Sept. 10. It's known as the full harvest moon.
— By Patch editors Beth Dalbey and Elizabeth Janney