Hi there,
I stood with two astro-friends of mine on top of a small tower in Halle, and we've had it all: Clouds (all over the sky), rain (visible against the bright horizon, just a couple of droplets at our site), lightning (several times on two places on the horizon), media attention (I gave a few short phone-interviews to one radio station), stars (a few of them through occasional cloud-holes). Oh, and there were a few seconds of moon-visibility. The first time was about 22 minutes after maximum eclipse, around 21.13 CEDT - I half scared my buddies off the tower when I screamed with pleased surprise. The second time was just five minutes before the fourth contact, the end of the partial eclipse.
It was amazing to see how the clouds mainly gave view to the Southern part of the moon and still obscured the Northern part most of the time. How could it have been different? The eclipse happened in the North of the moon, so the clouds had to hide that region from us.
But still, we got a few short glimpses of the eclipsed moon.
Anyway, I'll really start sacrificing more people to the weather-god, so he'll do a better job next time.
Cheers!
Markus