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Originally Posted by kb9522
(Post 28731307)
The one in 2019 is not far away either... Argentina and Chile.
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Originally Posted by Tanic
(Post 28731873)
EZE airport will be on the edge of 100% totality.
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Originally Posted by sethweinstein
(Post 28731492)
It might be "once in a lifetime" in that I don't know if I'd make the same effort again, having done it once, but I'm sure glad I did it once.
(actually, I'd probably do the same with 5 hrs and a chance of clouds, having already seen it once. But 2 hours for me is a go) For others who are curious - it's a mid-afternoon Monday again. |
I watched it near Salem. Traffic was hell and we slept in a Farmer's front yard on Sunday night...but it was totally worth it. Don't even bother watching an eclipse unless you are in the path of totality. The difference is literally night and day.
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points to ponder:
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I ended up driving to Madisonville, KY to see the total eclipse. As everyone else has said, it was totally worth the trip!! So much more to it than the 2 minutes of totality. Even having to deal with miles and miles of backed up traffic crossing from Evansville into Kentucky didn't seem so bad due to the anticipation.
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Originally Posted by andyh64000
(Post 28732316)
I watched it near Salem. Traffic was hell and we slept in a Farmer's front yard on Sunday night...but it was totally worth it. Don't even bother watching an eclipse unless you are in the path of totality. The difference is literally night and day.
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Originally Posted by DavidDTW
(Post 28733019)
I ended up driving to Madisonville, KY to see the total eclipse. As everyone else has said, it was totally worth the trip!! So much more to it than the 2 minutes of totality. Even having to deal with miles and miles of backed up traffic crossing from Evansville into Kentucky didn't seem so bad due to the anticipation.
A close second to seeing the corona was seeing the sun illuminate the ground in all directions outside of the moon's shadow. 360° sunset! |
Originally Posted by jrl767
(Post 28732337)
points to ponder:
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Originally Posted by Tanic
(Post 28733087)
A close second to seeing the corona was seeing the sun illuminate the ground in all directions outside of the moon's shadow. 360° sunset!
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Was in Madras, OR
Subj. It was beyond cool! It was AWESOME!
Don't regret 800 miles driving, Bay Area->Eureka->Grand Pass->Madras with waking up at 3AM in Eureka and then driving for 7 hours, sleeping in the car at Madras airport lot, etc - everything worth it, including what was going on ground. Regarding the whole experience on ground - I think close to total madness without manifestation of the madness itself - 400 private planes landed and took in 2 days. People came in 10000 cars and RVs, 120000 people came in town of 6000. What I have learned that difficult is not to get in, but get out. The first car was able to leave parking lot drive off at 2PM - 3h after the eclipse and there was absolutely no movement on roads for 3-4 hours. I drove off at 4:30PM and at 1:30AM I was able to reach Weed, CA, where I had one night at a motel. BTW, findling any lodging that night anywhere between OR and CA was a considerable challenge. Now I plan to travel to places where eclipse is going to happen. For the next one in Chile/Argentina - which location would have better weather? |
Originally Posted by invisible
(Post 28737485)
What I have learned that difficult is not to get in, but get out. ... there was absolutely no movement on roads for 3-4 hours.
we got into the car about 20 min after totality ended, and an hour and twenty minutes later were maybe halfway along the paved access road from the field to the highway ... it took another four hours until we were back at the hotel |
Originally Posted by jrl767
(Post 28737506)
we drove ~60 miles from our hotel in Boise to a "large field" in Smiths Ferry where we had secured a reserved parking space for $20 about three weeks earlier ... about an hour and twenty minutes (pretty much what I expected) for the northbound drive, mostly on two-lane highway
we got into the car about 20 min after totality ended, and an hour and twenty minutes later were maybe halfway along the paved access road from the field to the highway ... it took another four hours until we were back at the hotel |
the first mile to the highway took 1+20; 19 miles to the next junction took close to two hours (maybe 25 min for the first 13 miles, an hour and a half for the last six); the next 21 about an hour (again 2/3 of the time to cover the last four or five miles); then maybe 45 min for the last stretch on four-lane highways and city streets
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Originally Posted by jrl767
(Post 28737570)
the first mile to the highway took 1+20; 19 miles to the next junction took close to two hours (maybe 25 min for the first 13 miles, an hour and a half for the last six); the next 21 about an hour (again 2/3 of the time to cover the last four or five miles); then maybe 45 min for the last stretch on four-lane highways and city streets
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