Some great shots by Jrista and Slyham.
I have not had time to fully sort through the photos I took last night with my 800mm and the 150-600, but most of the ones taken during the full eclipse had too much motion blur. As the moon got darker, I just increased exposure time. This was a mistake. The moon moves rather quickly across the sky and the longer exposure introduced blur. On the small screen of the camera they looked deceptively okay, but when I downloaded them to the computer you could tell the moon had moved a good bit even during a one second exposure.
I just now did a little research on the issue and saw a web site which recommended that for lunar photography you should take 250 and divide it by the mm of your lens to get the maximum exposure time to avoid blur. See
http://www.amlunsoc.org/photography.htm For my 800mm lens, that would be no more than a 30th of a second and about a 40th of a second for the 600mm. (this seems to be similar to the 500 or 600 rule applied to star photography) Or I could do it right like jrista and get an equatorial tracking mount. Unfortunately, I would also need Mr. Spock to help me operate it.
It is a good thing there may be a few more of these events coming up. Time to crank up the ISO and open up the lens if I am going to use the long lenses to photo the next one.