Uranus in a Blood Moon

Uranus is the brightest object to the lower left,photographed © Douglas W. Boucher during the recent eclipse of the Moon(Blood Moon) with his 16 inch telescope. His description is quoted below:

"If you look on CNN or Astronomy Picture of the Day you will see variouspictures of the recent “Blood Moon” total lunar eclipse on 08 October 2014at about 5 to 6 a.m. mountain time. Most of these pictures emphasize themoon (Luna) and the earthly landscape as the moon turned blood red. Mineis a bit different. I noticed from the predictions that the planet Uranuswould be close to the moon during the eclipse and I wondered if I could getat least part of both of them in the field of view of the 16” telescope,and recognizable. It took a bit of juggling, and I was dodging high thinclouds all the way, and attached is one of the resulting 50 or so photographs.
 
Part of the totally eclipsed moon is easily recognized in the right of theframe, and you can even make out the rayed crater Tyco and the fact thatthe moon is not perfectly round, the horizon of the moon is irregular. Inthe lower left corner of the picture is Uranus, the brightest star like objectin the picture. You may note that Uranus has an X shaped diffraction pattern,or spikes, caused by the optical system of the 16” telescope. That is normal.Near the image of Uranus and separate from the diffraction spikes are fairlyeasy to see images of Uranus’s moons Oberon (about 7 o’clock position) andTitania (about 3 o’clock) about a quarter of an inch or less from Uranus,at normal monitor display size. Fainter, closer to the planet, and less distinctare images of moons Ariel (8 o’clock) and Umbriel (2 o’clock). There arealso about thirty stars scattered around in the picture.  During thewhole sequence of pictures there were high, thin clouds moving through, andthese moisture bearing clouds made everything a bit blurry and caused multiplerainbows in some of the pictures. This particular image contains the bestmix of those features, although faint Ariel and Umbriel are hard to see.Even fainter yet, Uranus’s innermost moon Miranda is lost in the glow ofthe planet itself.
 
Now the part that the news media missed. The planet Uranus was right in themiddle of the shadow caused by planet Earth. To an observer on the PlanetUranus (or any of its moons) the Earth and Luna would have appeared to transitthe sun, and would have appeared as small black dots moving across the sunfor about an hour, similar to the Transit of Venus on 05 June 2012 as seenfrom earth.  So far, no picture of this exceedingly rare event has beenreceived from Uranus."