Wyoming
Rare Super Blue Moon Will Look Huge Over Wyoming On Monday
Monday’s full moon over Wyoming won’t be just full, it will appear huge in the night sky, a rare time when the first full moon of August is also a blue supermoon.
The first full moon in August is also called a sturgeon or mountain shadows moon, and Monday will be the first of four consecutive supermoons to close out 2024.
Supermoons happen when “the moon is within 90% of its closest approach to Earth,” according to NASA. When that happens, the moon can appear up to 30% brighter and 14% larger than usual given their position in the sky, usually close to the horizon.
Monday’s is also the first and only full moon of August, so how can a supermoon also be a blue moon?
The short answer is calendar quirks. The long answer is a bit more complicated and less colorful.
Once In A Blue Moon (Times Two)
There are technically two types of blue moons. The better-known is the second full moon in one month, according to the Gregorian calendar.
But there are also seasonal blue moons, and the third of four full moons in a single season is a blue moon. The Aug. 19 supermoon is the third full moon of summer 2024, making it a seasonal blue moon. And because it’s the first full moon of August it’s a sturgeon moon (named for the fish). And also it’s within 90% of the closest it’ll get to Earth, making it a supermoon.
If that’s confusing, join the club. Even Max Gilbraith, the planetarium coordinator for the University of Wyoming, wasn’t familiar with the concept of a seasonal blue moon.
“I’ve never really encountered it,” he said. “But this will be the third full moon of an astronomical season that has four full moons. I don’t know why it’s just the third moon is the blue moon, but I’m sure that there’s some reason for it.”
Despite the occurrence of four full moons in one season, only the third moon is the blue moon. The fourth full moon isn’t anything noteworthy, although it will be another supermoon in September.
Calendar Quirks
Gilbraith wasn’t familiar with a seasonal blue moon because it’s a chronological phenomenon rather than an astronomical one.
“There are meteorological seasons and astronomical seasons,” he said. “Meteorological seasons are adjusted for latitude and climate, whereas astronomical seasons are determined by the equinox or solstice.”
Lunar calendars could be as old as civilization itself, with archaeological evidence suggesting that humans used the moon as a time-measuring tool as far back as 30,000 years ago.
Julius Caesar was the progenitor of the modern solar calendar, developing it in 46 B.C. It was used for 1,600 years until Pope Gregory XIII modified it in 1582, creating the Gregorian calendar used worldwide today.
Gilbraith said the quirks of the Gregorian calendar are good for blue moons. The calendar’s blue moons have nothing to do with the astronomical aspects of the moon.
“It doesn’t create any physical phenomena that you can observe,” he said. “It’s just a timekeeping sort of happenstance. It might be fun for superstitious reasons, but it’s just an artifact of timekeeping.”
Cool Moon
Ironically, “once in a blue moon” isn’t as special as the idiom would suggest. Nevertheless, there are some fun facts about the upcoming sturgeon moon.
NASA said August’s full moon will be so super that it should appear full for three days between Sunday night and Wednesday morning.
Furthermore, it’s a rare super blue moon, which only happens every 10 to 20 years.
While the next seasonal blue moon will occur in May 2027, the next super blue moon will not occur until January 2037. So, put that on your Gregorian calendar.
For the record, “once in a blue moon” averages out to once every two or three years. That’s slightly more frequent than a leap day, one of the important quirks of the Julian calendar that endured into the Gregorian calendar.
The Minute Summer Stops
According to his astronomical calendar, Gilbraith said that Wyoming’s summer will officially end in the early hours of Sept. 22.
“Our terminal equinox is at 6:43 a.m. Mountain Time on Sept. 22,” he said. “That is the official end of summer for everyone in Wyoming to the minute, so no tree leaves are allowed to come down until then.”
The final full moon of this summer’s seasonal blue moons will rise Sept. 17, putting it within the final days of the season. So, Wyomingites should savor this summer’s sturgeon super blue moon while they can.
And no, the moon won’t literally be blue when it rises Monday.
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.
Wyoming
14 Wyoming Cowboys make Athlon All-Mountain West preseason team
Wyoming
Measles confirmed in Teton County, Wyoming, as summer crowds flock to parks – East Idaho News
JACKSON, Wyo. (WyoFile) — After confirming a case of measles in an unvaccinated adult in Teton County, Wyoming, health officials are warning the public about possible exposure at locations in Grand Teton National Park and Jackson.
The news comes as summer crowds flood the region with tourists from around the world.
The public may have been exposed between June 17-25 at several locations in Teton County, according to the Wyoming Health Department. They include restaurants in Grand Teton National Park’s Colter Bay Village on June 17-18; a Colter Bay convenience store on June 20 and the Target in Jackson on June 25.
“We are asking people who may have been exposed to watch for measles symptoms for 21 days past the exposure date and consider avoiding crowded public places and high-risk settings such as daycare centers,” State Health Officer Alexia Harrist said in a press release.
Monitoring is especially critical for people who have not been vaccinated with the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine, according to the health department.
It marks Wyoming’s second confirmed case of the highly contagious infection in 2026. Wyoming went 15 years without a confirmed case of measles until last year.
Resurgence
Health officials confirmed Wyoming’s first 2026 case in May. An adult patient in Fremont County who did not have a confirmed vaccination status caught the disease, according to the Wyoming Department of Health.
Measles was declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000 — indicating no endemic transmission for 12 months or more. But it re-emerged in recent years primarily due to declining vaccination rates and increased public health skepticism. Those trends spawned during the COVID-19 pandemic and have persisted during the second Trump administration.
The neighboring state of Utah is one of America’s 2026 measles hotspots, with 499 cases reported so far this year.
RELATED | Anguished parents. Doctors in tears. Utah’s long measles outbreak takes a toll
A vaccination rate of 95% is necessary for community immunity to prevent measles outbreaks, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
In 2025, Wyoming’s proportion of kindergarten students who had completed the MMR vaccine was 93.6%, the CDC reports. That rate is higher than Colorado, Utah and Montana for the same year.
However, it’s declined overall since 2012-13, when Wyoming’s kindergarten vaccination rate was above 97%. It fell to 90.2% in 2020-21 before inching back up to the current 93.6%.
A measles case had not been reported in the state since 2010 until July 2025, when the health department confirmed measles in an unvaccinated child from Natrona County. By year’s end, 13 more cases were confirmed. The majority involved unvaccinated children and adults.
Along with being extremely contagious, measles can cause severe complications like pneumonia and brain swelling and can leave lasting impacts on the immune system. One to three out of every 1,000 children who become infected with measles will die from complications, according to the CDC.
RELATED | The US is on the verge of losing its measles elimination status. Here’s why that matters
RELATED | Measles is not the only disease on the rise. Mumps also may be making a comeback
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Wyoming
Election Q&A: Scott Smith for Wyoming state treasurer
GILLETTE, Wyo. — As the Aug. 18 primary election approaches, County 17 is introducing candidate questionnaires to help voters make informed decisions at the ballot box.
Every candidate in the primary field was sent the same three questions and given a limit of 500 words, which could be distributed among their answers as they saw fit. To ensure a fair and direct line to the community, all responses are published exactly as submitted, without edits or alterations.
Candidates were asked:
- What are the most crucial challenges your constituents are facing?
- If elected, how will you address these challenges?
- What qualities or qualifications do you possess that have prepared you to meet these challenges?
Questionnaires are being published on a rolling basis online through Aug. 11. They will be accessible via the County 17 Election Tracker.
Scott Smith (R), Wyoming state treasurer
What are the most crucial challenges your constituents are facing?
Everywhere I go many Wyoming citizens are concerned that our government is selling out our state lands to the highest bidder for crony capitalism. Some are concerned about Data Centers, Commercial Wind Generators, or nuclear waste storage. The biggest concern is the resources these outfits are taking, secondly, they are concerned about health issues related to living nearby, and lastly they are concerned with cost associated with these projects being passed onto the taxpayer.
If elected, how will you address these challenges?
One of the things that many people don’t know is that the State Treasurer sits on the State Land and Investment Board. (SLIB) The same issues that concern our citizens are the same reasons that I have decided to run for this office. The SLIB has voted to lease state lands to a hydrogen plant in Converse County that would take eight gallons of our valuable water to produce one gallon of hydrogen jet fuel using wind and solar generation to power the plant. These same elected officials have sold off $100 million of our state lands to the federal government. I believe that some things are not for sale. As Treasurer you can count on me to count the cost and listen to the people in the public testimony. If we are going to accept some of these projects the citizens need to have the benefit, like lower utility costs.
What qualities/qualifications do you possess that have prepared you to meet these challenges?
My bachelor’s degree is in Business Administration with an emphasis in management and marketing. I will be a leader in the state treasurer’s office that creates a positive work environment that will allow our investment team to create higher returns on the people’s money that the state invests. I would like to work with the legislature to use these interest earnings to buy down the people’s property taxes to alleviate part of the burden inflation has caused on the average citizen. My day job, I work as a bookkeeper and work with numbers day in and day out and have corrected some inefficiencies to help small businesses become more profitable. I plan to do that within the state office and make those profits available to the legislature to reduce the tax burden for the people. I have also served in the Wyoming House of Representatives for Goshen County and I have served on the Appropriations Committee and I am familiar with the massive state budget.
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