* The author is part of the community of readers of La Vanguardia

This last autumn supermoon has twice crowned the bell tower of the hermitage of Sant Sebastià, in Vic, as seen in these photographs in Las Fotos de los Lectores de La Vanguardia.

When the moon was full, it crowned the bell tower at night, while the next day the hermitage was already illuminated by the sun.

The hermitage of Sant Sebastià is located on a hill 770 meters high, belongs to the parish of Santa Eulàlia de Riuprimer and the municipality of Vic.

This temple, with its bell tower as the most outstanding element, can be seen from many points of the Plana de Vic and in the hermitage there is an excellent viewpoint.

The supermoon is known as this because it looks and shines brighter, as well as apparently larger. It coincides with its perigee, that is, the moment in which the orbit of our natural satellite brings it closest to the Earth.