Interstate Posted April 10 Author Share Posted April 10 One of the best parts of totality was when the sun started to peek back out... it almost looked like there was a tear in the sky. I am pissed I didnt force the family to go. However it was nice to drive in peace and quiet though. They got to see it on Facetime. lol 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TSG Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 14 minutes ago, George BM said: Question for those of you who saw totality in both 2017 and 2024. I notice that the width of totality with this eclipse was larger than it was for 2017. My question is: Did this eclipse's totality seem darker than 2017s? I would say yes, but my two viewing locations couldn't have been more different so hard to be sure. 2017 was on the side of a mountain in Eastern TN. This year was on Hope Memorial Bridge in downtown Cleveland. Way more artificial light this time around, but it felt about the same, and the 360 degree sunset effect seemed more pronounced. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MN Transplant Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 2 hours ago, WxUSAF said: Yikes, 12 hours through NH is nuts. We had a ~50 min backup to go about 6 miles as we were leaving Monday. Stopped in Johnson City, TX, for dinner to get out of it and the local businesses were actually mostly disappointed with the lack of customers. I wondered about the local businesses too. I think it was the gas stations (especially the ones with food) and hotels that really profited. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Interstate Posted April 10 Author Share Posted April 10 12 minutes ago, MN Transplant said: I wondered about the local businesses too. I think it was the gas stations (especially the ones with food) and hotels that really profited. Yeah... where I was it was business as usual. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Interstate Posted April 10 Author Share Posted April 10 Well I hope I can start the thread in 21 or so years. It was a great time. Next time we should have a meeting place for all of us old people.. lol 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TSG Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 22 minutes ago, Interstate said: Well I hope I can start the thread in 21 or so years. It was a great time. Next time we should have a meeting place for all of us old people.. lol Thinking about how old I'll be for that one was an odd feeling. 52... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nw baltimore wx Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 1 hour ago, George BM said: Question for those of you who saw totality in both 2017 and 2024. I notice that the width of totality with this eclipse was larger than it was for 2017. My question is: Did this eclipse's totality seem darker than 2017s? For me, no. It was the same. Sitting in Houston and already delayed to BWI. I guess I haven’t yet had my last Shiner Bock. 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scarlet Pimpernel Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 1 hour ago, Interstate said: Well I hope I can start the thread in 21 or so years. It was a great time. Next time we should have a meeting place for all of us old people.. lol There won't be such a thing as "threads" in 21 years, as we currently know it! Well, other than the Panic Room, where the ageless Reaper @WxWatcher007 will still remain to guide us hapless souls, even well into his retirement by then! 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RitualOfTheTrout Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 4 hours ago, TSG said: Thinking about how old I'll be for that one was an odd feeling. 52... I hear you on this, I was looking at the maps (https://eclipsewise.com/eclipse.html) and really gets you thinking in timescales that illustrate just how brief a trip we get here even if all goes well and makes you appreciate getting to see this one. 2090s looking good for grandchildren though from an eclipse viewing travel perspective.. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TSG Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 1 hour ago, RitualOfTheTrout said: I hear you on this, I was looking at the maps (https://eclipsewise.com/eclipse.html) and really gets you thinking in timescales that illustrate just how brief a trip we get here even if all goes well and makes you appreciate getting to see this one. 2090s looking good for grandchildren though from an eclipse viewing travel perspective.. I'll be amazed (and maybe ready for the sweet kiss of death lol) if I make it to the 2090s. I guess modern/future medicine should make 90+ a more enjoyable existence down the road, but idk if it's something I'd want to experience today Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthArlington101 Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 8 hours ago, Interstate said: One of the best parts of totality was when the sun started to peek back out... it almost looked like there was a tear in the sky. I am pissed I didnt force the family to go. However it was nice to drive in peace and quiet though. They got to see it on Facetime. lol was expecting the girlfriend to go -- offered to my mom to take her place and spare me a solo drive. She wasn't down w/ the sleeping arraignments... a single queen lol. that said, she ended up regretting not going. Working towards convincing them for a family (read: less expensive for me) Spain 2026 trip 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fozz Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 I went to Dallas, and watched the eclipse with my younger cousin and told her all about them. It was an amazing experience, and my second time seeing an eclipse after 2017. Of course the pics don’t do justice, and a few minutes is never enough. But it was 100% worth it and I can’t get enough of it. 13 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DeeDeeHCue Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 One lesson learned: cloud forecasts aren’t worth the anxiety. It looked overcast in Dallas on Monday morning, clouds burned away just around totality- as observers have noted for years. It’s a thing: along the path of totality at least, it’s a cloud killer! https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-024-01213-0 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jebman Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 23 hours ago, TSG said: I'll be amazed (and maybe ready for the sweet kiss of death lol) if I make it to the 2090s. I guess modern/future medicine should make 90+ a more enjoyable existence down the road, but idk if it's something I'd want to experience today 2090s? You must think society will be fully nanotrophic by the 2050s or 60s! I wish I could make it to that medical stage, if I could I could go full on Ray Kurzweil and attain medical escape velocity and live on into the 2200s! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 There’s also The Great American (partial) Eclipse on 1/14/2029 (which also happens to be on my mother’s birthday): https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse_of_January_14,_2029 We need a HECS the day before this too LOL 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nj2va Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 We need to start the thread for the next eclipse already. This was fun to track along with everyone! 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 My only picture of totality. This shot was overexposed and too bright in my iPhone, but it cleaned up decent after being darkened in my editor at home. It's nowhere near as good as most of the pics you all took, but it was all I had to work with given a malfunctioning iPhone and only 2.5 minutes. Nothing at all compares to seeing it with the naked eye though. 9 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jebman Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 On 4/10/2024 at 3:11 PM, TSG said: I'll be amazed (and maybe ready for the sweet kiss of death lol) if I make it to the 2090s. I guess modern/future medicine should make 90+ a more enjoyable existence down the road, but idk if it's something I'd want to experience today Advanced nanotrophic medical applications will not only make being in your 90s more enjoyable, you will be 90 years old and look and feel and work and play like you are about 25 years old. The advances will banish many cancers and other maladies and greatly lengthen telomeres and many people will find themselves living well into their second and even third centuries, while pretty much staying young and vigorous the entire time. People will have multiple careers. Some folks will acquire many doctorate degrees and be many different things because thinking and learning powers will be exponentially increased. Extended families will contain many generations. Some of you right now, reading this, will live to see at least 2150. You will get to see many total eclipses. Not all of them will be on earth. Man will venture to the stars. This has already started! Artemis Program Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 On 4/11/2024 at 8:27 PM, nj2va said: We need to start the thread for the next eclipse already. This was fun to track along with everyone! I’d definitely be interested in having a thread to discuss all future eclipses. I’ve been researching them all a lot. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wxdude64 Posted April 14 Share Posted April 14 On 4/10/2024 at 9:43 AM, George BM said: Question for those of you who saw totality in both 2017 and 2024. I notice that the width of totality with this eclipse was larger than it was for 2017. My question is: Did this eclipse's totality seem darker than 2017s? Well, as someone earlier posted, my experience was VERY different. In 2017 I was on top of a mountain off Foothills Parkway in eastern TN, seeing that darkness close in from a distance was awesome! Being in central TX with small elevation changes you couldn't tell/see it closing in. However, it WAS a longer period of darkness than 2017. We had partly cloudy skies and missed about 30-45 seconds of the start of totality because of it, but the rest was awesome. Their neighbor has chickens and both the roosters carried on like it was morning once the sun broke back out. We saw an awesome bright eruption on the south/lower side of the sun during, and then the ring once the moon started clearing the sun. We got to our location about 4 hours in advance (visiting her relatives) and then stayed another day, so travel was not an issue for us. 4 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TSG Posted April 14 Share Posted April 14 41 minutes ago, wxdude64 said: Well, as someone earlier posted, my experience was VERY different. In 2017 I was on top of a mountain off Foothills Parkway in eastern TN, seeing that darkness close in from a distance was awesome! Being in central TX with small elevation changes you couldn't tell/see it closing in. However, it WAS a longer period of darkness than 2017. We had partly cloudy skies and missed about 30-45 seconds of the start of totality because of it, but the rest was awesome. Their neighbor has chickens and both the roosters carried on like it was morning once the sun broke back out. We saw an awesome bright eruption on the south/lower side of the sun during, and then the ring once the moon started clearing the sun. We got to our location about 4 hours in advance (visiting her relatives) and then stayed another day, so travel was not an issue for us. Yeah we were close! I was just a bit further south at one of the overlooks on Cherohala Skyway 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nj2va Posted April 15 Share Posted April 15 I’ve always wanted to visit AUS/NZ so we circled July 2028 as the trip to go there and see the eclipse. Going to stop in LA first to see a few Olympic events. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
32º Posted April 17 Share Posted April 17 12 hours driving each way was worth the 4 minutes of totality. I took this picture using a Samsung S24 Ultra from Sweetwater lake, Indiana. The best description is that it looked freekey, like a hole in the sky. 10 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted April 17 Share Posted April 17 On 4/9/2024 at 9:06 PM, nw baltimore wx said: I loved my recent trip to Iceland but I’m not sure I’d risk their weather for an eclipse. We’re considering taking the clouds risk and going to iceland in 2026 anyway. I’ve never traveled internationally but it’s always been a country I’d like to see. The eclipse would just be a bonus. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nw baltimore wx Posted April 17 Share Posted April 17 9 minutes ago, PrinceFrederickWx said: We’re considering taking the clouds risk and going to iceland in 2026 anyway. I’ve never traveled internationally but it’s always been a country I’d like to see. The eclipse would just be a bonus. You may want to look into Play Airlines. You can fly from BWI to Madrid where the weather would likely be better, and do a stopover in Iceland for up to 10 days either going out or coming home. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted April 17 Share Posted April 17 17 minutes ago, nw baltimore wx said: You may want to look into Play Airlines. You can fly from BWI to Madrid where the weather would likely be better, and do a stopover in Iceland for up to 10 days either going out or coming home. Yeah I saw Play and Icelandair go direct from BWI to Reykjavik. Much shorter flight than I expected too! I may PM you with some questions at some point if you’re ok with that. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted May 6 Share Posted May 6 We're thinking of going to coastal Maine next March to try for this one at sunrise: https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/in/usa/portland-me?iso=20250329 Here's the whole map: No one gets totality but we're into partials too. :-) https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/map/2025-march-29 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse_of_March_29,_2025 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrinceFrederickWx Posted May 21 Share Posted May 21 The previous photo I posted, but adjusted even darker. This more closely approximates what it looked like in person. (I'm still learning photo editing) 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
09-10 analogy Posted May 21 Share Posted May 21 Something I’m really glad we did, in retrospect. Will never forget It, just like January 2016 or June 2012. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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