New Moon Astrophotography Stays in Spain

Plan your stay around the darkest nights of the lunar cycle.

Astrophotography holidays in Spain are especially productive when planned around the darkest part of the lunar cycle. At Leonard’s Lookout, you can bring your own equipment for several nights beneath Bortle 3 skies, with outdoor setup areas, power and a dedicated processing office available at the property.

2026 New Moon Dates

New Moon provides the darkest part of the lunar cycle for deep-sky and wide-field imaging. The dates below show the remaining New Moons of 2026, helping you plan a multi-night stay around your preferred targets and seasonal conditions.

August highlight: The 12 August New Moon falls during the Perseid meteor-shower period.

Planning note: These are suggested booking windows rather than guaranteed moonless or clear nights. Useful imaging time depends on the Moon’s rise and set times, your chosen targets, local weather and the length of your stay.

A Practical Base for Multi-Night Imaging

Leonard’s Lookout is designed for independent astrophotographers bringing their own equipment. Stay for several nights, set up directly at the property and use the house as a comfortable base between imaging sessions.

Bortle 3 skies

Rural skies suitable for deep-sky imaging, tracked nightscapes and wide-field astrophotography.

Power at setup areas

Outdoor power is available at the front and rear of the property for convenient equipment setup.

Starlink and office

Use the dedicated office for target planning, image review, calibration and processing.

Small-group stays

Four double bedrooms and multiple living spaces suit solo guests, couples and small imaging groups.

Plan Your New Moon Stay

Astrophotography holidays in Spain work best when dates are chosen around your targets, equipment and preferred imaging conditions. Check current availability for Leonard’s Lookout, or contact us with practical questions about setup areas, power or group stays.