This was a truly AWESOME experience!
The moon casts a 90-mile wide shadow that races along the path shown in the map. The red tag is where we watched from.

My brother met us there. He's a pro photographer/videographer, so he's sure to have better stuff eventually. I brought along my 91-yr-old mom and her friend. None of us had ever before experienced a total solar eclipse. Definitely gotta do this again!

It is so freaky! The moon's shadow is like an open portal into space. It's a totally dark night-time sky, with stars visible, but down below it's still broad daylight all around the horizon, along the edges of that 90-mile wide disk.

It took about an hour from when the moon first touched the edge of the sun until full coverage, then only 3mins 8secs of darkness as the shadow raced over us (totality), then another hour until the sun was completely uncovered.
Here are three videos for y'all. The time-lapses are really neat because I think we totally missed seeing a lot of this happening at the time. We were blind while looking through those dark eclipse glasses. Because it happens so slowly in real time, we didn't really notice the approaching (and subsequently leaving) shadow in the sky.
During the 3 minutes of totality it's safe to look directly at the sun without eclipse glasses and you can see the corona of the sun's atmosphere. But the moment the first tiny sliver of sun becomes uncovered again, it's immediately far too bright and dangerous to look directly at the glaring sun. If I ever get this chance again, I'll leave off the special glasses and skip trying to look at the sun, instead just concentrate on watching what's happening all around us.
1-Minute Time-lapse.
1-Minute Time-lapse from the Mavic Mini drone's view.
6-Minute 360° Spherical View with sound using an Insta360 One .
Click-and-Drag on the video while it's playing to rotate the viewing angle to see all around the horizon!
If you have the time, here's an earlier 23-minute video from Destin ("SmarterEveryDay") enthusiastically explaining why you *HAVE TO* go see an eclipse. He interviews Dr. Telepun (Mr.Eclipse), who created the Solar Eclipse Timer app that I used on my phone. Dr. Telepun shows the various science stations that he sets up to document and explain all the various phenomena to watch out for during an eclipse. Really good video!
It was an AWESOME experience!
If you missed this opportunity, here's where to start planning for the next one...
The moon casts a 90-mile wide shadow that races along the path shown in the map. The red tag is where we watched from.

My brother met us there. He's a pro photographer/videographer, so he's sure to have better stuff eventually. I brought along my 91-yr-old mom and her friend. None of us had ever before experienced a total solar eclipse. Definitely gotta do this again!

It is so freaky! The moon's shadow is like an open portal into space. It's a totally dark night-time sky, with stars visible, but down below it's still broad daylight all around the horizon, along the edges of that 90-mile wide disk.

It took about an hour from when the moon first touched the edge of the sun until full coverage, then only 3mins 8secs of darkness as the shadow raced over us (totality), then another hour until the sun was completely uncovered.
Here are three videos for y'all. The time-lapses are really neat because I think we totally missed seeing a lot of this happening at the time. We were blind while looking through those dark eclipse glasses. Because it happens so slowly in real time, we didn't really notice the approaching (and subsequently leaving) shadow in the sky.
During the 3 minutes of totality it's safe to look directly at the sun without eclipse glasses and you can see the corona of the sun's atmosphere. But the moment the first tiny sliver of sun becomes uncovered again, it's immediately far too bright and dangerous to look directly at the glaring sun. If I ever get this chance again, I'll leave off the special glasses and skip trying to look at the sun, instead just concentrate on watching what's happening all around us.
1-Minute Time-lapse.
1-Minute Time-lapse from the Mavic Mini drone's view.
6-Minute 360° Spherical View with sound using an Insta360 One .
Click-and-Drag on the video while it's playing to rotate the viewing angle to see all around the horizon!
If you have the time, here's an earlier 23-minute video from Destin ("SmarterEveryDay") enthusiastically explaining why you *HAVE TO* go see an eclipse. He interviews Dr. Telepun (Mr.Eclipse), who created the Solar Eclipse Timer app that I used on my phone. Dr. Telepun shows the various science stations that he sets up to document and explain all the various phenomena to watch out for during an eclipse. Really good video!
It was an AWESOME experience!
If you missed this opportunity, here's where to start planning for the next one...

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