The first meteor shower of 2015 will peak this weekend, but viewing the shower proves to be difficult for some.

USA Today reported the best time to view the annual Quadrantid shower will be right before dawn.

However, not everyone in the Northern Hemisphere will have the opportunity to see the shower because of wintery conditions.

USA Today said Arizona, Nevada, New England and the West Coast have the best chances of clear skies and thus, the best chances of seeing the shower.

A nearly full moon also complicates viewing the shower because it will hide all except for the brightest meteors.

According to Fox 11 LA, the Quadrantid Meteor Shower can produce more than 100 meteors per hour.

"They're one of the more active meteor showers of the year, but they're not seen by many people" said Bill Cooke, director of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office at Marshall Space Flight Center. "It's very cold around that time, so people don't want to go outside."

Fox 11 LA said the International Meteor Organization predicted the peak times for the shower around 9 p.m. ET/ 6 p.m. PT Saturday.

To see the shower in the sky, Fox 11 LA said to look in the northern part of the sky between the constellation Bootes and the Big Dipper's handle.

NASA said the Quadrantids' showers originated from the 2003 EH1 asteroid, which studies say may have been a piece of a comet that broke apart centuries ago.

The shower received its name from the constellation Quandrans Muralis or mural quadrant, created by French astronomer Jerome Lalande in 1795.

It is no longer recognized by astronomers.