For your soul, you need a -There's a little black spot on the sun today.
That's my soul up there.
I saw it in Austin, and the eclipse did not disappoint. The sky was overcast leading up to it, then magically cleared up and the eclipse was very visible.Disappointing here in Texas, as it's overcast and rainy. It got very dark, but no different from when a big thunderstorm rolls in.
Interesting to look at the traffic map leaving the totality areas now. Lots of red headed back to Oklahoma, St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, New York, Boston, etc. Be safe out there!
Nice! Great timing.I saw it in Austin, and the eclipse did not disappoint. The sky was overcast leading up to it, then magically cleared up and the eclipse was very visible.
Lived through multiple eclipses but was never in the path of totality. I think eclipses tend to be anti climatic, but totality is a game changer. 1 second and it feels someone flipped a light switch that darkened the room, if the room was the entire sky. And then it's a dark ball with fire behind it. It is incredibly cool.
Great post - thanks for sharing! I was as overwhelmed yesterday as you must have been in Bloomington, but didn't have the benefit of my daughters with me. My wife and I will be talking about it for a long time!I was so floored by the 2017 eclipse — roughly 95% totality where I was in Atlanta at the time. Even in August, we felt a chill in the air, and then the birds started their nighttime calls and the frogs started croaking. I was amazed by the eeriness, and immediately made plans for totality in 2024.
This weekend in Bloomington was truly memorable. I’m a Hoosier grad alum, and my 15-year-old was born in (now-demolished) Bloomington hospital. He and his brother were willing “tourers” all weekend long, gamely visiting the sites of the early stages of my wife and my marriage. (Sadly, wife couldn’t get out of work and daughter had missed too much school already.)
It was cool to see the boys’ brains churn as they considered their futures, and started to understand what college can look like, and it was also fun to see them pound BuffaLouie’s wings.
While the weekend would have been fun, as it turns out, even without the eclipse, totality truly was an amazing capper. The sky was azure blue, despite fears of cloudiness in the lead up. The park was packed. The boys were as amazed as I was, and I am now fully onboard with a “totality-only mentality”.
Within 30 minutes, daylight to haze to the last wisps of daylight WITH A GIGANTIC BLAZING DONUT IN THE SKY, and then back to haze and again to daylight. Pretty cool to join hundreds of other in applauding, uhh, nature.
I glanced directly into the a few times, with no apparent retinal damage. I live dangerously.
What a weekend.
Great job Cappy! It sure was an incredible experience. Thanks for the photos. Our Alaska pal would be impressed I'm sure.I convinced my family to take the drive to upstate New York given that I (naively) thought it would only be 3 hours each way. 11 hours and 523 miles later, it was completely worth it and one of the most incredible things I've ever witnessed. Most importantly, my wife didn't want to murder me after that much time sitting in traffic.
I'm no @Alaskawildkat, but I did get a few cool shots:
I convinced my family to take the drive to upstate New York given that I (naively) thought it would only be 3 hours each way. 11 hours and 523 miles later, it was completely worth it and one of the most incredible things I've ever witnessed. Most importantly, my wife didn't want to murder me after that much time sitting in traffic.
I'm no @Alaskawildkat, but I did get a few cool shots:
Definitely impressed!Great job Cappy! It sure was an incredible experience. Thanks for the photos. Our Alaska pal would be impressed I'm sure.
Definitely impressed!
At the appointed time I looked up into the Alaska skies and saw only the sun shining brightly. Glad you could get photos like that.
I have friends in Evanston who drove to Niagra Falls in the hopes watching the celestial phenom but not sure if the predicted clouds cleared sufficiently to get to see the sun's corona ringing the moon. Regardless, just experiencing the earth turn dark in mid day would have to be a memorable experience in and of itself.
Ah, we get another chance in 20 some years. "We" being persons much younger than some of us.
August 2, 2027, there will be a total eclipse over the pyramids of Giza. Totality will last for six and a half minutes. I hope to go, hope you all can join me.
It must have been eery in ErieFabulous viewing here on the shores of Lake Erie in Fairview, Pa. Totality occurred at 3:18 pm, but it started at around 2:00 pm. It was so dark at 3:10 that the lights came on in the parking area in the lake access area about a half mile from our house. Thousands traveled to the Erie Pa area to watch. Never to be forgotten!