Thank you for the discussion, Tom.
When the Sun is in the South near the Tropic of Capricorn, the Full Moon is in the North near the Tropic of Cancer. The extreme North will see a Perpetual Full Moon.
When the Sun is in the North near the Tropic of Cancer, the Full Moon is in the South near the Tropic of Capricorn. The extreme North will not see the Full Moon rise or set throughout the day, as it is too far away.
These two statements are not completely accurate. Everyone is familiar with the seasonal cycle of the Sun as it travels north-south over 365 days. Fewer are familiar with the fact that the moon does the same thing except the N-S range is farther and the period is 18.6 years. This is an observable and measured characteristic. As such, the latitude of the lunar elliptic changes a little over 6 degrees a year not Cancer to Capricorn and back.
Even if they are true, they don't address the phenomenon I'm discussing. The phenomenon is not seasonal. It occurs every lunar cycle. My second post is similar. It is a lunar cycle phenomenon not a seasonal one. Edited from original post: After reviewing Tom's post a little more, I would retract this statement if true.
"At higher latitudes, there will be a period of at least one day each month when the Moon does not rise, but there will also be a period of at least one day each month when the Moon does not set. This is similar to the seasonal behaviour of the Sun, but with a period of 27.2 days instead of 365 days." -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_of_the_MoonEdited to add: I'll revisit this post at the full moon Nov. 30. I will capture the image from the moon calendar for Quito, Ecuador. Being on the equator, if what you're saying is true then the angle of the full moon would be to the North. At the full moon I believe you will see that the angle will be sourthernly just as it is now.