Lunar Eclipse to Be Visible From New York as Local Web Page Is Down Ahead of 'Blood Moon'
This Tuesday a lunar eclipse will unfold, drawing attention because a related regional guide is temporarily inaccessible. The disruption stems from a connection error between Cloudflare and an origin web server that prevents a Palm Springs Life page from displaying, complicating public access to localized viewing details.
This Tuesday: 'Blood moon' will be followed by a rare sky spectacle
Observers were advised that this Tuesday a 'blood moon' will be followed by what has been described as a rare sky spectacle. The phrasing signals an event of special visual interest for sky watchers in multiple regions, prompting media and local guides to publish viewing information ahead of the occurrence.
New York: Lunar Eclipse will be visible
One clear, location-specific detail is that the total lunar eclipse will be visible from New York. That visibility designation highlights New York as a point of observation for the event and underscores why timely regional coverage and site access matter for residents and visitors planning to view the eclipse.
Coachella Valley: Sky Watch guidance — specifics unclear in the provided context
A headline identifying Coachella Valley as a target for Sky Watch coverage — titled Sky Watch: When to See Total Lunar Eclipse in the Coachella Valley — indicates there is tailored guidance for that area. The exact timing and local vantage recommendations are unclear in the provided context, leaving the local guidance itself inaccessible for this report.
Palm Springs Life: Web page cannot be displayed
A Palm Springs Life page intended to carry regional Sky Watch material could not be displayed because of an unknown connection issue between Cloudflare and the origin web server. The site presented an error message explaining the cache-origin connection problem and stated that, as a result, the web page cannot be displayed.
Cloudflare: Ray ID 9d6081f80a31972f and troubleshooting steps
The error page lists a Cloudflare Ray ID of 9d6081f80a31972f and displays an IP reference of 2a01: 4f8: c014: 863e::1. The page explains that Cloudflare monitors for these errors and automatically investigates the cause. It instructs that, to support investigation, operators can pull the corresponding error log from their origin web server and submit it to Cloudflare’s support team, and to include the Ray ID found on the error page. The message also shows a line noting performance & security by Cloudflare.
©2026 CBS Broadcasting Inc. note
The material connected to regional coverage carries the notice: ©2026 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. That copyright line appears alongside the headline stating a total lunar eclipse will be visible from New York.
The cause-and-effect is straightforward: an origin-server connection failure between Cloudflare and the site prevented publication of online regional guidance at a moment when a lunar eclipse is imminent. That lack of access limits readers’ ability to consult local Sky Watch timing and instructions for Coachella Valley specifically, even as New York is identified as a place where a total lunar eclipse will be visible. What makes this notable is the timing — the outage strikes as public interest in a clearly identified celestial event is peaking and when local viewing guidance is in demand.
Officials or site operators are directed by the error page to retrieve server logs and submit them with the Ray ID to Cloudflare’s support to accelerate resolution. For now, the broader implication is that digital infrastructure failures can directly affect public access to time-sensitive event information, leaving some regional audiences without the localized instructions that media and guides typically provide ahead of an eclipse.