I’m not sure where I got it but I have a Google Earth Overlay that has information on the eclipse so you can click anywhere in the world, I assume it works anywhere I’ve only used it in the US, and it will tell you exactly how long the eclipse will be, if it doesn’t reach totality in that place it says how complete the eclipse is, and the important times.
Hah!! I’ll be meeting a cousin for the first time and we’ll be watching the eclipse from her deck, which is about an hour south of St. Louis.
I’ll be indoors shaking and cowering as The Great Trump God demonstrates his awesome ability to block the sun.
Well, at least that’s what he’ll claim.
When I saw the 1998 eclipse from the island of Guadeloupe, many of the schoolchildren were told that they had to stay inside with the blinds drawn, for the entire day of the eclipse… or they’d go blind. Many of the kids missed seeing the eclipse because of that.
I could sit in my front yard and see it at 99.98% totality (according to some graph I saw somewhere), but apparently the difference between 99.98% totality and 100% totality is big enough that you should go for 100% if you can. Which I can accomplish very easily with a 40-minute drive either north or east.
I will be in St. Genevieve, Missouri, a 300-year-old Mississippi River town that is a tourist attraction these days. Mrs. Homie and I figure we’ll get a nice lunch and take in the sights the day of the eclipse.
You should have told them that if they gave you lots of food you would make it go away.
We’re in SC right in the path; we’re going to the local minor league baseball game. Should be fun.
Although it didn’t seem darker, the street lights came on during the 60% eclipse I witnessed in 1994.
I don’t know why I wasn’t aware of earlier eclipses. Life happens, I guess. I’ll have to look those up.
This time: road trip! Wife & I are driving 13 hours north up to around Smiths Ferry ID. The exact spot will depend on the weather.
I had the same thought. It would be about a four hour drive (one way) for me at freeway speeds, and I wouldn’t mind that, but I’d guess that freeway speeds will be a fantasy once you get within 100 miles of the eclipse belt. As much as I would like to see it, I think I’ll skip it, because I have a lot of experience with I-5 in northern Oregon, and there are long slowdowns even at the best of times. It will probably be a nightmare at the center of the path of totality.
Looking at this map, it takes only around an hour and a half for the eclipse to move across the continental US, a distance of about 2400 miles. So, definitely a fast mover.
But yeah, it has been done and it would be awesome…
I was in school the last time there was a solar eclipse in the US in 1979, but school happened to be in the area of totality. They didn’t let us out of the classroom but we saw it out of the windows.
That’s criminal. :mad:
Sent from my LGLS990 using Tapatalk
I’ll be Huntington, Oregon right near where I-84 and the Snake River part company … look for the long haired man in the Streamliner or Grady’s the night before …
The Willamette Valley is going to be NUTS … every other Californian will be there around Salem …
I was just off the Columbia River near the road to Goldendale …
Get your eye protection EARLY … #14 welder’s glass is best … but #12 will serve …
All the partial phases are TOO bright to look at with unprotected eyes … although during totality the solar corona is no brighter than a full moon … at least make a camera obscura (pin-hole camera) … the partial phases are cool to watch …
Yes! My wife’s uncle, an astronomer who has seen many eclipses, said you have to look for a site away from street lights or other lighting that might go on automatically at sunset. They can seriously disrupt the effect of totality.
Another key to successful eclipse viewing is to be ready to drive to some place with clearer skies if it starts to cloud up in your initial location. Traffic can make this more difficult in densely populated areas. Plan carefully for this.
My wife’s brother and his family live in Kansas City. We will be going there, as will her mother, uncle and his family, possibly her son, and my mother. We plan to view the eclipse from somewhere around St. Joseph. The astronomer uncle will be our strategist and eclipse guide. It will be my first solar eclipse, and I’m really looking forward to it.
The ISO safety standard for direct viewing of the sun is here. Make sure your eye protection meets this standard. (#14 welder’s glasses might meet the standard, I did not look that up)
ISO 12312-2:2015, Eye and face protection – Sunglasses and related eyewear – Part 2: Filters for direct observation of the sun. [URL=“ISO 12312-2:2015 - Eye and face protection — Sunglasses and related eyewear — Part 2: Filters for direct observation of the sun”]
I agree. What a learning experience was lost!