That's what I was figuring. I've done some time-lapse, (with film of all things) click the shutter every 5 seconds. Since this event will be shorter I can do a much tighter sequence and higher frame rate.
The other issue with a slow eclipse, Sun or Moon, is the movement in the sky. Objects pan across the frame.
If I can get out there early and the lens isn't fogged over with humidity, (and I have a usb fan and power pack now) I should be able to get a good test image, and then get the Moon until the Sun makes the background too bright. But don't forget a full Moon in the daylight is still brighter than the blue sky.
Also the Sun is in the East and the Moon will be in the West. Not direct interference.
I'm trying to find the Draconids now and see if the Moon will be a problem for that? Yeah, it's not worth the effort.
Still working on Meteor showers in 2014. Orionids 10-20 per hour, Midnight to dawn on October 21.
In 2014, the waning crescent moon shouldn’t too greatly interfere with this year’s Leonid meteor shower. The peak morning will probably be November 18 – but try November 17, too.
http://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/earthskys-meteor-shower-guide#leonidsFor anyone who doesn't follow these events, it's pretty easy. The name is the radiant point, so look at that constellation, after Midnight - maybe 2AM is even better, for the best viewing. Example: Orionids, look towards Orion for the most activity.
Yeah I posted about this over on SS the thing is that here EST it will only be visible for about 10 minutes before the sun comes up and poof!