If you can find a west horizon, bring your binos and you can see all these planets at the same time.
Uranus is a hard call, but if you have decent binos, edge Venus out of your field of view and look for the
Mercury is not very hard to see, but it is hard to find. Fortunately Jupiter will guide the way.
*** WARNING ***
*** NEVER *** look directly or point your binos or any other optical aid at the sun!!! Burning your retina is permanent blindness, end of story! But once you’re blind, the fact that the heat can break your lenses/prisms won’t matter. There are special filters to look at the sun, never look at the sun without one!
Eagle-eyed skygazers have a chance to see several planets and the Moon over coming evenings. Venus, Mars, and the Moon will be easy. To see Jupiter and Mercury, you need to have a low western horizon (no trees
or buildings) and look about 30 minutes after sunset—any later and they will have set. Binoculars will be helpful for Mercury and essential for Uranus. Use Jupiter to find Mercury, Venus to find Uranus, and the Moon to find Mars. Tuesday night might have better sky conditions in Mi’kma’ki. Good luck!