Post #419,888
8/21/17 8:57:42 PM
8/21/17 8:57:42 PM
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Totality in Corvallis
It was one of those rare life experiences that completely lived up to billing. The difference between totality and even half a minute before is astonishing in a have-to-see-it-to-believe-it fashion. It was the coolest fucking thing I have ever seen: if you ever have the opportunity to put yourself in the way of one of these, and if you can arrange this without reducing yourself to penury, I emphatically recommend that you do so. I’m thinking that I’m prepared to expend a great deal of time and effort, if necessary, to repeat the experience.
bedazzled,
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Post #419,889
8/21/17 10:30:52 PM
8/21/17 10:30:52 PM
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80% was disappointing
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Post #419,890
8/21/17 11:26:19 PM
8/21/17 11:28:30 PM
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Had I stayed home it would have seen 99%.
But with the totality band only 90 or so miles away, you know I'd be there. Yesterday, the wife and I took our motor home to Clinton, (yes, Clinton! :)) SC and parked overnight at a Pilot truck stop. Took a couple hours to get there and closer to 4 hours to get back home today. Totally worth it! Even with just binoculars, the corona was awesome!
To borrow a phrase from Mark Twain (but in another context) the difference of seeing a partial eclipse and a total eclipse is like the difference of seeing a lightning bug and seeing lightning.
It's the second total eclipse for me. For the first one on July 10, 1972, I drove the family over 700 miles from Upstate NY to Cap-Chat, Quebec. That's on the Gaspe peninsula where English is not a known language. It was overcast so you knew where the sun was, but you could not clearly see it. The most impressive thing was seeing the moon shadow wave blacking out the clouds at great speed. Clouds of mosquitoes came out of nowhere to feast on us.
Alex
"There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."
-- Isaac Asimov
Edited by a6l6e6x
Aug. 21, 2017, 11:28:30 PM EDT
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Post #419,896
8/22/17 8:11:22 AM
8/22/17 8:11:22 AM
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We enjoyed it.
A nice break during the day, the quality of the light changed noticeably (like looking through sunglasses), and the crescents in the light in the shadows were interesting, but you had to know how to look for them. E.g. MoreBut it's nothing like totality (which I hope to see some day). Cheers, Scott.
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Post #419,897
8/22/17 8:26:35 AM
8/22/17 8:26:35 AM
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Come to Indiana in 7 years.
About 5 miles south of where I'm currently working, to be exact. ;0)
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
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Post #419,901
8/22/17 9:01:15 AM
8/22/17 9:01:15 AM
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It is appealing!
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Post #419,903
8/22/17 9:58:38 AM
8/22/17 9:58:38 AM
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It's hitting Cleveland dead-on
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Post #419,904
8/22/17 10:34:05 AM
8/22/17 10:34:05 AM
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Thanks. Might have to head to Upper Sandusky (an hour away) for 3 min 54 secs.
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
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Post #419,905
8/22/17 10:36:28 AM
8/22/17 10:36:29 AM
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Might be a good time to get one of these.
bcnu, Mikem
It's mourning in America again.
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Post #419,924
8/23/17 12:52:41 PM
8/23/17 12:52:41 PM
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Totality in Russellville, KY
We were scheduled to go to Carbondale to see it in Saluki Stadium (that picture going around with all the people in a stadium was taken there), but a check of the weather the night before caused us to change our plans to Cerulean, KY. Up at 3am, another check of the weather sent us further east to Russellville, KY, instead, a 4 hour trip. We arrived a Logan County Library for free parking at 7:30am, grabbed a patch of grass, and settled in to wait.
I agree with everything Alex and Rand said, but even more so. The 1 minute lead-in to totality is an overwhelmingly surreal experience. The approaching shadow looming to the West, the breeze picking up, the cicadas stopping (which no one noticed until they fired up again when the Sun came back), the shadow diffractions on a piece of paper (nearly impossible to photograph, apparently, and the photos I've seen don't do them justice), then the disappearance of the Sun in one's eclipse glasses and the surrounding gasps of amazement and awe as everyone rips them off. Photos don't remotely capture the event: the human eye + brain is a much better camera than anything you can buy.
We're already planning for the next one. My advice: this is going to be April. Get a few staging hotel rooms scattered along the length of the shadow and pick one the day before. Use that as a base for the next day and just drive where the weather is going to be. Bring an awning, chairs, water, food, and games, and get there early. If you're lucky you can make it back to the hotel before the traffic gets insane (a co-worker spent 4.5 hours going 120 miles from Carbondale). Then spend the next day leisurely traveling back home (we stopped at the prehistoric Indian mounds in Anderson, IN).
Regards, -scott Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.
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Post #419,962
8/24/17 11:21:50 PM
8/24/17 11:21:50 PM
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Re: Totality in Russellville, KY
I was driving home from a conference in New Orleans to Chicagoland. Stayed the night in Evansville, IN. I had to catch a 7:50 am flight on Tuesday morning...And drive the rest of the way from Carbondale to Naperville. If I didn't have that flight to catch, I probably would have headed closer to Hopkinsville, KY instead of Carbondale. But, oh well. By the time the 2024 eclipse comes around, I plan to be back in Austin, where just a couple hours drive away, I can find 4 minutes and 25 seconds of totality.
-Mike
@MikeVitale42
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin, 1759 Historical Review of Pennsylvania
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Post #419,975
8/25/17 12:50:33 PM
8/25/17 12:50:33 PM
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How was the drive to Napersville?
Regards, -scott Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.
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Post #419,976
8/25/17 2:06:37 PM
8/25/17 2:06:37 PM
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Including a few stops along the way, about 8 hours.
There were cops at local intersections up to 15 miles away, directing traffic. I-57 was a complete mess, and it took quite a while to cut over from I-57 to I-55.
-Mike
@MikeVitale42
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin, 1759 Historical Review of Pennsylvania
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