'Blood Moon' rises as Kenya looks to the stars for tourism
Last updated: September 8, 2025 | 14:30
A full moon rises in the sky during a "Blood Moon" total lunar eclipse, as seen from the Sopa Lodge in the Samburu National Reserve in Northern Kenya.
Under the Kenyan stars tourists and tribal dancers looked up at the rust red "blood moon" as the east African country launched a new tourism initiative promoting the country's night skies.
When the Sun, Earth and Moon line up, the shadow cast by the planet on its satellite makes it appear an eerie, deep red color that has astounded humans for millennia.
The phenomenon was visible late Sunday across the planet with some of those in a remote lodge in Samburu county, hundreds of miles from capital Nairobi, where the Kenya's tourism ministry and the Kenya Space Agency launched a drive to push "astro-tourism".
Revellers gather to observe a full moon during a "Blood Moon".
Foreign tourists mingled with local dancers -- wearing fantastically colorful beads and draped cloths -- as they took turns gazing through telescopes at the slowly reddening moon and the kaleidoscope of stars around it.
"It's an amazing experience," Kenyan visitor Stella-Maris Miriti, 35, told the media.
"At first I thought it was not happening because the moon was dark... but at 8.30 the magic happened," she added.
The tour operator had travelled up from Nairobi to see the "blood moon" away from the city's lights.
Samburu tribesmen gather to observe a full moon before a "Blood Moon". Photos: Reuters
Waiting her turn at the telescope, was 26-year-old Maggie Debbe, visiting with her parents from Australia.
"I think it's awesome, I just did not expect any of this," she told the media.
'Game-changer'
Kenya hopes to capitalize on star-struck tourists like Debbe.
The country has some of the lowest light pollution levels in the world, according to the Bortle dark-sky scale -- which measures night sky light -- and an already thriving tourism industry which accounts for almost 10 percent of the country's GDP.
Astro-tourism could be a fresh reason for tourists to visit, believes Jacques Matara, the Kenya Space Agency's deputy director of Space Research and Innovation.
"We have that advantage of having some of the most beautiful and clear skies worldwide," he told media.
"Astro-tourism is our opportunity to create awareness about the utility of space for socio-economic development," he said.
"This is something that could be game-changing, especially in our tourism sector."
As the "blood moon" shone down between the stars, Johanns Hertogh-van der Laan, a 75-year-old ex-teacher from Holland, certainly agreed.
Having come to Kenya with his wife to see the wildlife, he said he had been blown away by the night skies.
"It has been, I think, 40 years ago that I saw it as clear as now," he told the media.