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General => General Discussion => Topic started by: lonestar on April 08, 2024, 06:47:42 AM
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OK... Who's in the path? Who traveled to the path? Who's getting cock-blocked by clouds?
Were getting a lame 30% here, so let me live vicariously.
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I'll have perfectly clear skies and 92.5% coverage where I'm at.
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Travelled just under 300 miles and currently we have clear skies. It's a little unclear but high clouds might roll in around the time of the eclipse. Should be interesting
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I'll have perfectly clear skies and 92.5% coverage where I'm at.
I'm surprised with how much of a science geek you are that you didn't make the trip? For you it's just an hour or two, isn't it?
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94.9% from where I live.
We saw the ring of fire in 2017. It was glorious! All I could think of was Christopher Columbus.....
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I'm surprised with how much of a science geek you are that you didn't make the trip? For you it's just an hour or two, isn't it?
Yeah, but with the traffic, that hour or 2 could become 10+. I'm also leaving for Vegas next week, and I didn't want to burn through too much PTO this early in the year. I like to hoard it for summer and Q4.
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I’m across the state (MO) from where its path is for work so I’ll just see whatever partial it is. The last one in 2017 was directly over us and my work three a huge BBQ…..had the families come…..it was cool.
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I'm just north of the path of totality. I think we're still expecting something like 99.8% blackout.
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I'm near Chino (a little north, so maybe 0.1% more totality! :) :) :)) so that's good enough for me.
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I'll be completely socked in for it. I planned to take today off to drive someplace cool, but the only place that gave me particularly good odds was well into Arkansas. A four hour drive that could easily turn to 12 (not to mention killer storms on the drive back). It's actually quite impressive what a ballbreaker God's being today. A huge swath of clouds that shadows the path of totality, only for the few hours in which it's happening. Thirty minutes after it passes here the clouds will clear out here in Dallas.
Thankfully, I drove out to KT for the last one in 2017 precisely for this reason. I'd love to see this one, but having seen another relatively recently takes a lot of the sting off of it. For the one in '77 my 3rd grade teacher forgot to take us outside for it, so I was hellbent to catch at least one.
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I'm not sure if I'm actually in 100% totality, but pretty damned close to being right on the centre line.
Overcast here at the moment (11am). It's going to be touch and go, as the forecast is a mix of sun/cloud all day. Hopefully it's mostly clear skies between 2-4. Yesterday's weather was preferred - blue skies all day long.
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I think I'm the one guy that doesn't care all that much about it, but I like seeing everyone else excited about it.
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It's interesting to me, but I'm not going out of my way to see it or anything. The last major one in 2017 I had a co-worker who shared some cheap eclipse glasses with me and I took a quick peak but I don't think they were really any good and I had a spot on my eye for a bit. I'll wait for the images from the professionals this time. It's raining here anyway.
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I think I'm the one guy that doesn't care all that much about it, but I like seeing everyone else excited about it.
Just curious, but have you seen one before? It's actually a lot more dramatic than you expect it to be.
Sun's out right now in Dallas. With a little luck it might stay that way.
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I was too lazy to go find glasses, and by Saturday, they were a hot commodity. I'll watch from (inside) my house - in Chicago, we're supposed to get 90% to 95% totality.
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I think we are getting something like 82% where I am. I'm kind of regretting not taking the drive to see totality.
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Watching it happen in Mexico on the NASA live feed. It is pretty cool, but this is also a much better view that you can get with glasses and your naked eyes.
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Some high clouds right now, but sun still visible so we should be good. Partial started 15 mins ago :corn
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Just curious, but have you seen one before? It's actually a lot more dramatic than you expect it to be.
Yeah, I have, but not 100% totality.
Of course, it's only going to be 78% here, but hey, that's nothing to sneeze at.
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Yeah, I have, but not 100% totality.
Of course, it's only going to be 78% here, but hey, that's nothing to sneeze at.
When you get that 100% totality you look at it without the glasses on and it's a giant flaming hole in the goddamned sky. Like I said, it's really dramatic. Even 99.9 is too bright too see without glasses, unfortunately. That was the annular eclipse last fall. Totality really is something different.
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When you get that 100% totality you look at it without the glasses on and it's a giant flaming hole in the goddamned sky. Like I said, it's really dramatic. Even 99.9 is too bright too see without glasses, unfortunately. That was the annular eclipse last fall. Totality really is something different.
:tup
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Dallas actually did alright. There was enough high level cloud cover to filter it a bit, and low level clouds were coming and going, but we got a couple of minutes of good totality. Looks like I made the right call to stay at work rather than hit the road somewhere.
While I did get a few minutes of unadulterated totality, like the annular eclipse, the clouds actually made for far more interesting photography. Not my best effort, but cool nonetheless.
(https://i.imgur.com/ydzELei.jpeg)
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That looks great, we have clear skies here but only 60% totality.
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That's a great pic, Bart!
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That's an awesome pic!
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Love that picture!
Where I was it got a little dim - like it was an hour before dusk we were about to get a down pour or something (thanks Chino!) - the crickets came out for about four minutes, then back to normal.
EDIT: Brian had a better way of describing it. That's EXACTLY what it was like.
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Love that picture!
Where I was it got a little dim - like it was an hour before dusk or something - the crickets came out for about four minutes, then back to normal.
It looked like we were about to get a heavy downpour where I'm at in Waterbury. Light cloud cover came in about 15 minutes before totality, but they got out of the way a bit about 4 minutes after peak. I still ended up getting a cool view through my glasses.
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Total lunch bag letdown here. Totality was from 3:18ET to 3:22ET, and we only got a few gaps in the clouds between 2:00-3:10. After that, total cloud cover (and still now - not a sliver of anything visible. Like Bill said, it was neat seeing Mother Nature hit the dimmer switch, and everything went to dusk within like 30 seconds - all my solar night lights came on, and it was like 9pm for 4 minutes, then the same in reverse. Kinda neat, but otherwise this "once in a lifetime" event was a dud. Yesterday's weather would've been fucking dope.
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I would up going downstairs with some coworkers to pass around some glasses and get a looksee. Pretty neat, I guess. Not a cloud in the sky here.
It got a little dim.
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Something around 90% here in NJ. Went outside to watch since my coworker had the glasses that we shared. It did get a bit darker and noticeably cooler during the eclipse, but it honestly was not that interesting for me. Need to be in totality to really enjoy it. I think if no one had told me, I might not have even noticed :lol Cool to see many people did get the cool experience :yarr
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GKqpYQBWcAA24dg?format=jpg&name=900x900)
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Didn't even bother going outside for 30%,but the shits on CNN from Mexico were dope as fuck.
My kid got to see totality, so happy for her at least.
In 2045 we got one about an hour north of the bay area, so fingers crossed I last that long.
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Didn't even bother going outside for 30%,but the shits on CNN from Mexico were dope as fuck.
What now?
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What now?
Shots. My phone has a case of the Joes it seems.
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I love the eerie daylight of the eclipse. It was more prominent last year but even driving home from work was a cool experience. Students had those special sunglasses and I was able to see it decently covered up, it was a trip.
Cool pic Bart!
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My professor let us out of class 10 minutes early to try and see it, but I didn't have any solar glasses so I couldn't see the partial where I lived. Perfect weather though, so I feel kind of silly for not preparing for it.
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Wanted to share a time lapse I took that shows the shadow of the moon moving in.
https://youtu.be/bUrspSgZ4rg?feature=shared
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Awesome photo Bart!
My top #1 phenomenon to see is the aurora borealis, can't shuffle off this mortal coil without having seen it first, but a total eclipse would come second I guess.
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Wanted to share a time lapse I took that shows the shadow of the moon moving in.
https://youtu.be/bUrspSgZ4rg?feature=shared
Seems fake - the clouds in the sky don't move a single bit, so I'm having trouble believing that one isn't doctored.
Here's one mrs.jingle shared with me from someone locally (to me).
https://twitter.com/ConsumerSOS/status/1777450936681603143
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Seems fake - the clouds in the sky don't move a single bit, so I'm having trouble believing that one isn't doctored.
Ha! I'll take that as a compliment I guess. I used set my phone for a 10X I think like 6-8 minutes before totality and left it there, that's what came out. Those were high clouds and very slow moving.
Here are some quick shots I took:
(https://i.imgur.com/r8uiF2k.jpeg)
(https://i.imgur.com/e04kWO3.jpeg)
(https://i.imgur.com/yXuuOGb.jpeg)
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Great shots!
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Clevelander here–was pretty wild, not gonna lie.
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We're in an area that had 95% coverage, but apparently 95% coverage isn't jack. It got a little darker outside for a few minutes, right at the peak. We came back inside and watched the live coverage on TV for a while, then I went back to work. I guess I was thinking 95% coverage would at least be more noticeable, a bit more interesting. Oh well.
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Th earthquake trumped the eclipse as far as excitement for me
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Ha! I'll take that as a compliment I guess. I used set my phone for a 10X I think like 6-8 minutes before totality and left it there, that's what came out. Those were high clouds and very slow moving.
Here are some quick shots I took:
(https://i.imgur.com/r8uiF2k.jpeg)
(https://i.imgur.com/e04kWO3.jpeg)
(https://i.imgur.com/yXuuOGb.jpeg)
The Moon Landing... The Amityville Horror... now Lonk's eclipse photos........ HAHAHA, I kid. I don't think that at all.
I think those photos are outstanding, and particularly love the first two for different reasons.
Where did you end up going?
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Plattsburgh, NY. I considered going east to VT, but figured the additional 3-4 hour drive wasn't worth the slightly better chance of weather. Glad I stayed in Plattsburgh!
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Here are some quick shots I took:
Awesome
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Plattsburgh, NY. I considered going east to VT, but figured the additional 3-4 hour drive wasn't worth the slightly better chance of weather. Glad I stayed in Plattsburgh!
Plattsburgh is a cool town. I enjoyed my stay there. :tup
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(https://i.imgur.com/yXuuOGb.jpeg)
(https://i.imgur.com/nKQLrS2.png)
Lovely shots!
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We're in an area that had 95% coverage, but apparently 95% coverage isn't jack. It got a little darker outside for a few minutes, right at the peak. We came back inside and watched the live coverage on TV for a while, then I went back to work. I guess I was thinking 95% coverage would at least be more noticeable, a bit more interesting. Oh well.
That was our feeling as well. Yeah, it got darker, basically like it does around sunset, then it got lighter.
So many of our neighbors called their kids out of school for the day, which I found to be a little obnoxious. Yeah, it's cool, you can use glasses to look at the sun for an hour, but in reality, we weren't under total darkness. So your kid missed an entire day of school for 20 minutes of mostly-darkness during the day. :huh: Didn't seem worth it to me.
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That was our feeling as well. Yeah, it got darker, basically like it does around sunset, then it got lighter.
So many of our neighbors called their kids out of school for the day, which I found to be a little obnoxious. Yeah, it's cool, you can use glasses to look at the sun for an hour, but in reality, we weren't under total darkness. So your kid missed an entire day of school for 20 minutes of mostly-darkness during the day. :huh: Didn't seem worth it to me.
I was thinking this myself. I know some schools in NJ had half days so the kids would be home before the eclipse, but like... if you didn't know there was an eclipse, you wouldn't know. Seemed like life could have continued as normal.
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Plattsburgh, NY. I considered going east to VT, but figured the additional 3-4 hour drive wasn't worth the slightly better chance of weather. Glad I stayed in Plattsburgh!
We - my company - has a plant there. Never been, but I'd like to go.
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Not total here in RI, but around 3:30 it got pretty dark (it looked like near dusk) with this eerie bluish glow.
My brother in upstate NY had totality. He sent a pic of the eclipse "sunset" on the horizon which was pretty cool.
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(https://i.imgur.com/nKQLrS2.png)
Lovely shots!
:lol :clap:
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(https://i.postimg.cc/4yxhNfxB/FB-IMG-1712704888579.jpg)
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Posted this on FB yesterday with the comment "So Blessed to have been able to see this eclipse up close....what an experience. Didn't even need glasses"
Was walking through the parking lot at a job site and couldn't resist being a huge dork and going for low hanging fruit.
(https://i.imgur.com/vrMJujD.jpg)
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Watching it happen in Mexico on the NASA live feed. It is pretty cool, but this is also a much better view that you can get with glasses and your naked eyes.
I know the Eclipse is already old news, but I meant to respond to this comment because what ElBarto wrote below:
When you get that 100% totality you look at it without the glasses on and it's a giant flaming hole in the goddamned sky. Like I said, it's really dramatic. Even 99.9 is too bright too see without glasses, unfortunately. That was the annular eclipse last fall. Totality really is something different.
I don't think there is any amount of videos or pictures that can provide the same experience as being under totality. Partial eclipses are cool, but nothing really special. the visual of totality combined with everything else comes with it is a very unique experience. The one thing that videos do show is all the different emotions it can cause on people.
Also, while not necessarily a very prestigious achievement, the guy that taught me some night sky photography stuff was featured on the Astronomy Picture of the Day for his eclipse picture. He's been featured a few times already though, so not a first for him.
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap240409.html
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Seems there was a spike on Google in the search for "why do my eyes hurt" yesterday :lol
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Posted this on FB yesterday with the comment "So Blessed to have been able to see this eclipse up close....what an experience. Didn't even need glasses"
Was walking through the parking lot at a job site and couldn't resist being a huge dork and going for low hanging fruit.
(https://i.imgur.com/vrMJujD.jpg)
:rollin :rollin
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Seems there was a spike on Google in the search for "why do my eyes hurt" yesterday :lol
I tell you what....I had the glasses and obviously know better than to look straight at the sun....but, you really have to stay focused on 'not' doing it :lol With the attention drawn to the eclipse there's a tendency there to just 'look' that I thankfully was able to control but I'm gonna lay off making fun of those folks because it took some will power :lol
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My wife was outside looking at the Eclipse and called me over and my first instinct was just to take a gander with some safety squints but luckily I stopped myself. I can totally understand how it happens.