The Volokh Conspiracy
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Eclipse Report
My encounter with totality.
What a day! After two solid weeks of typical Vermont early spring weather - rain and snow and heavy cloud cover - Monday dawned bright and beautiful: blue skies, no humidity, and not a cloud in the sky. Along with a couple of old friends, we headed north from our house in southern Vermont in the early morning. We had originally planned to meet other friends in Burlington, but the weather reports were talking about clouds rolling in from the west, so we decided to find a spot up in Vermont's "Northeast Kingdom," near St. Johnsbury. We ended up in a great spot for viewing - a little local bar in the tiny town of East Burke, with a big grassy picnic area behind it with a great view, and maybe 40 or 50 so other folks, including lots of kids, hanging out and waiting for the Big Event.
The first hour leading up to totality was fabulous. With the glasses on, watching the moon - which was itself completely invisible - take a little chunk out of the sun, and then a bigger chunk, then a bigger chunk, … A gorgeous sight - the deep black of the moon's shadow against the intense gold of the sun, and the sharpness of the line between them, like it had been cut out with an Exacto knife. It occurred to me that this was the first time I had ever seen a crescent sun. And when your neck got tired and you took off the glasses and looked around, the light was getting all weird and soft, and it was getting ominously colder and colder. It was like being outside during a sunset, but all in much speeded-up time - and with the sun, oddly, still high in the sky.
It was breath-taking, sort of in the way that your first view of the Grand Canyon, or Niagara Falls, is breath-taking. But then the last sliver of the sun gets smaller and smaller and finally disappears, and everyone whips off their glasses to look, and people start yelling and laughing hysterically and jumping up and down and hugging each other … Like shipwrecked sailors who finally spy rescue ships heading their way, to borrow a phrase from John Banville. Me included. It is, to begin with, stunningly beautiful. Suddenly, it is night. In the sky is this big black disk - blacker than any black you'll ever see - lit from behind and shooting out rays of white light across the suddenly-deep-black sky. And with one little spot of pure intense gold - the "ring" of the diamond ring - hanging off of its bottom edge. No description (or photo) can do it justice.
But it's not just that the sight is incredibly beautiful - it is that you literally cannot believe what you're seeing. We've all got a zillion images stored in our brains of what "the sky" looks like. But this!?
It doesn't compute; how can the sky look like this? When it has never looked anything like it before? It's as though all of the dogs in the neighborhood, at some pre-defined instant, sprouted wings and began to fly. This can't really be happening. But there it is - right before your eyes.
And then, having started at around high noon, and having passed through sunset and then darkest night, suddenly it's dawn, as the sun starts to come out from the shadow - a kind of reverse dawn, not with the sun "rising in the east" but emerging out of the west. And then it's around high noon again. All in the space of two hours. It's as though the whole astronomical clock on which we base everything we do had gone completely haywire.
Having been desperate to see an eclipse for the last 50 years, I was a little afraid beforehand that my expectations were so high that it would all turn out to be a bit of a bummer. Uh-uh.
The Tour de France has a grading system for the difficulty level for climbing - 1 to 5, I think, with 5 being the highest. But then there are some climbs that are so steep that they get a special category - "hors categorie," in "the category that is beyond category." Unclassifiably steep, so steep it would be insulting to call it even a "5." That's what totality was like - hors categorie.
I will spare you a description of the drive back home. Turns out northeastern Vermont cannot handle 100,000 cars, all going south at the same time.
It does make you think: What the cavemen and cavewomen thought was going on if they ever happened to witness this display God only knows, but it must've scared the bejeesus out of them. It practically scared the bejeesus out of me, to be honest, and I knew what was happening (and, unlike the cavepeople, I knew it would be over soon).
And when you think that there's only one place in the universe (as far as we know) that has intelligent life on it, and that ours is the only planet in the universe (as far as we know) whose satellite moon, when viewed from the planet's surface, is precisely the right size and distance away from the planet to fit exactly over the (much larger and much more distant) star around which that planet is revolving … Like I said, it makes you think.
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Oh yes. I woke to a perfectly cloudless day in Cleveland and moseyed on down to a lakeside park with thousands of people. It was the most incredible thing I had ever seen.
Nicely described description!
.
. . . that we have a lot to learn..
My daughter lives in Burlington and was with the crowd on the shore of Lake Champlain. Luckily there was a clear sky. She sent me her video. She said it was “otherworldly”.
Yeah, nothing beat that eclipse back in 2017, that I got to watch from my backyard, while grilling burgers for visiting friends. I tried to convince my wife that we should see this one, but she was adamant: "We've seen one, let's do something else this year!"
Sure, we got a partial eclipse here this time around. But absolutely true! Nothing short of totality means much once you've seen a total eclipse. I took a couple glances through the eclipse glasses my employer thoughtfully supplied to us, but it was really quite meh.
I had to cajole my better half the take in he 2017 total eclipse. We had business in Omaha to attend to, so it was a simple task to extend the hotel for Sunday Night. The better half tolerated driving as I navigated a route to totality AND avoid slowing traffic.
BUT when totality happened, she was awe struck.
I also never considered leaving the area was going to by so crowded. But getting there had been happening for several days, but leaving, was all at once.
I announce soon after, we were making plans for 2024. This time joining up with the Grandkids and their parents.
Again, a great event. I wont have the opportunity to so easily see anymore total ecllpses
My wife and I saw it too. Amazing!
"It does make you think: What the cavemen and cavewomen thought was going on if they ever happened to witness this display . . . . "
I dunno . . . maybe ask a high school dropout from Tennessippi since I'm sure their scientific knowledge is on the same level as a caveman.
Amazing, even something as anodyne as this can still provoke nastiness…
I dunno, I think a better place to look is the Democrat House of Representative caucus. The have great minds like Hank,"Guam might tip over" Johnson. Or Sheila Jackson "the moon in mostly gas" Lee.
The Democratic Party has some dopes.
The Republican Party is mostly disaffected, half-educated, superstition-addled, bigoted stains on society.
None of that is a problem the culture war is not already sifting.
Also inspiring, the Trump eclipse ad.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zmP0Q45XbM
Made an easy drive from Eastern Massachusetts the day before, arriving around 2 p.m. at Millinocket, Maine. That was convenient. The sun's location then afforded a preview of the area of sky required for viewing the next day, during the time of the eclipse.
The approach to Millinocket served up impressive views of Mt. Katahdin, one of the more imposing peaks east of the Rockies. The Appalachian Trail has its northern terminus atop Katahdin.
Millinocket lies at only about 350 feet elevation, so Katahdin with a peak elevation of 5,269 feet presents considerable local prominence. An April storm a couple days previous dignified Katahdin with a snowcap which extended about half-way down. Even the Rockies seem to grow when a storm puts snow on top. So did Katahdin. It put me in mind of the incomparably larger and loftier, but only slightly more locally prominent, Mt. Borah, in Idaho, where I had last gone to watch an eclipse.
The Maine trip this time was my third try, and the first fully successful one. Perfect cloudless sky. Low dew point. Still air.
A bit of chill set in as sun intensity faded, at first gradually. About a minute before totality, the rate of darkening seemed to accelerate, as if someone turned down a cosmic rheostat. As the eclipse neared totality, the diamond ring effect appeared, with the diamond near the top. At the last split second—just as the sky darkened to deepest blue to perfect the contrast—the remnant bit of blazing sun at the top seemed instantly transformed into a blaze of the purest white light I ever saw. It was as if a star many times brighter than Sirius had suddenly flashed into existence in the sky, and then instantly disappeared. That may turn out to be my most vivid memory.
Then came the corona, just for an instant preceded by low-contrast ripples of light and shadow sweeping across the ground, looking like ripples in a pond. Then a solar flare became evident, as a tiny feature just visible to the unassisted eye, near the bottom of the corona circle.
The period of totality presented so strange a visual aspect that to mention that seems almost the best way to describe it. Nothing had prepared my mind for a visual impression of a sun exactly the size and perfect roundness of the accustomed one, but inverted with regard to light, so that the perfect, sharply-defined circle of blackness inside the corona now appeared notably the blackest bit of sky I ever saw, even at midnight. Like everyone around me, I barely noticed any passage of time while a stared at the spectacle.
It ended abruptly, with another brilliant flash of pure white against the deepest blue background sky, followed by more light ripples across the ground. Then rapid brightening.
A notable bustle of activity began around Millinocket, as eclipse viewers competed to get ahead of each other down the one road exiting town toward Interstate 95. I elected instead to try a back-door exit, onto a smaller road through the Maine woods. I was rewarded with good luck and light traffic. I rejoined Rte. 95 far south, and ahead of most of the oncoming crush of eclipse traffic. I was back in bed at home before midnight.
I offer this solely for those who might wonder about whether to chase an eclipse (and about the relative qualities of differing eclipses):
After experiencing a few minutes of total eclipse on Monday, I would travel for hours -- hundred of miles by automobile -- to experience another total eclipse, especially with children.
After experiencing a partial eclipse from my front yard a few years ago, I would walk outside my front door to see another partial eclipse -- but probably wouldn't travel past my property line if I had already seen a partial eclipse.
(I won big at a $10 slot machine shortly after the eclipse (it beat being mired in traffic). That was bad timing (after some spectacular timing, of course) -- if that had happened a couple of thousand years ago, there would be a religion named after me. Maybe I would be more impressed by superstition if a fiction-based religion were named after me.)
Travelled to North Carolina to see the last eclipse in 2017. Clear sky and totality was amazing. Made plans to see this one as well in Buffalo with good friends. Sadly, sky was cloudy and only saw the sky darken, amazing in itself, but not the totality. And then ten minutes later, the sky cleared and could see the retreating moon and partial remaining eclipse. Somewhat disappointed but at least saw once. Now planning to go to Spain in 2026 for the next opportunity. Possibly take a cruise on a ship that can move around and look for clear skies.
Even Cleveland had better luck. Buffalo was off to the side yet again.
Had a similar starting point. Ended up sticking with plan to go just south of Burlington. Very light cirrus clouds were present & considered going farther east where I could see an end to the line of clouds. However, we stayed at the brewery & I don't think the clouds were much of a hindrance at all. I'm glad I got to see one & am trying to tell everyone how much better it is than just a partial eclipse.