58 days and counting down to the total solar eclipse on April 8.
Anybody have plans for that event? Cheryl, I know you watched the 2017 eclipse, and you could get another opportunity there this time, too. If you head to Mexico, the path goes through parts of that country as well. I traveled to watch from a mountaintop in Wyoming in 2017, but won't travel this year - I'm burning all my vacation time right now, recovering from my neck 'oopsie'.
The path of totality (the POT) is narrow but goes over many large cities from Texas to Maine - and even includes Niagara Falls!
If anyone goes, please post what you capture, though I highly recommend setting up a camera to shoot without your intervention. Like everyone else on the mountain, I was overwhelmed during the 2017 eclipse and, though I was glad I have video to remember the experience, part of me wishes I had just stood there and 'felt' it.
I hadn't thought about filming it, but I suppose I should research how to do that. The bed and breakfasts and other accommodations are at capacity now for that event.
The last time the eclipse was near us in St Louis was 2017. We drove an hour south to a fairground to watch. I don't have any special filters or equipment. I shot a little video and took a few snaps of the crowd. It took us almost 3 hours to get home because of traffic. I'm not sure where we will watch this time, but again not taking any photos of the eclipse. It was so strange to have night time at 2 in the afternoon!
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aka Cheryl Intel i7 3770, Windows 7 Pro w/SP1, 64 bit, Intel 520 Series SSD, 32G RAM, 2 – 2T RAID, (1T external), GTX 550 Ti graphics
St Louis had a partial eclipse in the 1990s. The eerie part is how the birds go silent. At the fairgrounds it was noisy with people and a few cars had their lights on. I think next time I will find a cemetery to park and view. Or maybe the side of a road by a corn field.
aka Cheryl Intel i7 3770, Windows 7 Pro w/SP1, 64 bit, Intel 520 Series SSD, 32G RAM, 2 – 2T RAID, (1T external), GTX 550 Ti graphics
momoffduty wrote:St Louis had a partial eclipse in the 1990s. The eerie part is how the birds go silent. At the fairgrounds it was noisy with people and a few cars had their lights on. I think next time I will find a cemetery to park and view. Or maybe the side of a road by a corn field.
That's funny you mention a corn field. When I watched the 2017 eclipse we were in extreme western Wyoming and the eclipse approached through Idaho. I believe we were seeing potato fields in the distance. I originally thought it would be awesome to see the eclipse with mountains all around but, actually, the potato fields allowed us to see the shadow approach, unobstructed. I was amazed at how you could still see things clearly until just before totality and, after, the light returned just as quickly as it had disappeared. Someone in my video below comments that just after totality the light looked artificial, and I thought the same thing; sort of a flat gray type of light both before and after.
I don't remember birds, but we were at a high elevation and I'm not sure how many hang out on the mountaintop normally. I do remember the temperature dropped as the eclipse progressed. The summit is 9862 feet so by totality it was cold up there.
I, too, had hoped it would be quiet, but when totality began, everyone just let loose. Those aren't my howls in the video, but I certainly gasped several times! It was an incredibly emotional experience.
I shot on auto so my camera probably tried to make up for the lack of light and the video doesn't really do justice to the scene.
momoffduty wrote:St Louis had a partial eclipse in the 1990s. The eerie part is how the birds go silent. At the fairgrounds it was noisy with people and a few cars had their lights on. I think next time I will find a cemetery to park and view. Or maybe the side of a road by a corn field.
That's funny you mention a corn field. When I watched the 2017 eclipse we were in extreme western Wyoming and the eclipse approached through Idaho. I believe we were seeing potato fields in the distance. I originally thought it would be awesome to see the eclipse with mountains all around but, actually, the potato fields allowed us to see the shadow approach, unobstructed. I was amazed at how you could still see things clearly until just before totality and, after, the light returned just as quickly as it had disappeared. Someone in my video below comments that just after totality the light looked artificial, and I thought the same thing; sort of a flat gray type of light both before and after.
I don't remember birds, but we were at a high elevation and I'm not sure how many hang out on the mountaintop normally. I do remember the temperature dropped as the eclipse progressed. The summit is 9862 feet so by totality it was cold up there.
I, too, had hoped it would be quiet, but when totality began, everyone just let loose. Those aren't my howls in the video, but I certainly gasped several times! It was an incredibly emotional experience.
I shot on auto so my camera probably tried to make up for the lack of light and the video doesn't really do justice to the scene.