Place yourself along the path indicated below tomorrow between 2041 and 2042 MST and you've got a pretty good chance of seeing ISS pass in front of the Moon. Looks like Flying J out by SPOC will be a good place to observe from. Patrick A - travel distance (kilometers) and direction B - date C - time D - elevation angle of the ISS E - azimuth angle of the ISS ( + is East from North; - is W from N) F - range (kilometers) G - latitude for observing the transit H - longitude I - elevation above Mean Sea Level (meters) J - how far (kilometers) can I be from the centerline? For other than solar transits: K - lunar transits: is space station sunlit? planetary encounters: 1=Mercury; 2=Venus; 4=Mars; 5=Jupiter; 6=Saturn L - sun elevation angle M - sun/moon or sun/planet separation angle A------- B----- C----- D--- E----- F--- G------- H-------- I--- J---- K L---- M---- 26.2 NW 21 Jan 204130 67.6 119.3 393 40.8243 -112.4896 1506 1.8 n -35.2 144.1 19.3 NW 21 Jan 204131 67.7 119.4 393 40.7846 -112.4193 1280 1.8 n -35.2 144.1 12.7 N 21 Jan 204132 67.7 119.4 391 40.7445 -112.3481 1265 1.8 n -35.3 144.1 7.9 N 21 Jan 204133 67.8 119.4 391 40.7044 -112.2770 1283 1.8 n -35.4 144.1 7.4 NE 33.35 40.6894 -112.2501 1.8 9.0 E 21 Jan 204134 67.9 119.5 391 40.6618 -112.2005 2581 1.8 n -35.4 144.1 14.3 E 21 Jan 204135 67.9 119.5 391 40.6228 -112.1325 1890 1.8 n -35.5 144.1 21.1 E 21 Jan 204136 68.0 119.5 391 40.5831 -112.0630 1568 1.8 n -35.5 144.1