Even with cloud cover, seeing it at home was something special. I know what it's supposed to look and sound like at that hour. It wasn't the same as night - I could still see sunlight on the horizon all around me. I could sense that the wildlife was confused by it - all the birds just flew to the tops of the trees and were trying to make sense of what was happening. The bugs went quiet, and we were all whispering for no apparent reason - it just felt appropriate. The slow descent into darkness was unsettling, especially under cloud cover - it felt like we were under the gaze of a passing giant we could not see. I was surprised by how relieved I felt when the light started to return. It wasn't what I was expecting but the strangeness of it didn't disappoint, and I don't think seeing it away from home would have been quite the same.
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Who the hell witnesses totality "every year and a half"? Moron.
the likelihood that you get an eclipse with totality near enough to you where you can see it.
Is basically zero.
Once in a lifetime on the current track maybe. But the next one after this one happend in 2033.
I was 20km from the path of the totality. The next one I'll even be able to see a partial eclipse isn't happening until ~2045.
Hey, you can't tell people in the past that! They might figure out the moon gets destroyed later. You want the time authority to vaporize you or something?
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Saw it with totality.
Worth it.
Even if you only get a once in a lifetime shot, do it.
I saw the 2017 one and I’m curious what you mean by worth it? Like, worth the effort to go outside and look up? I personally wouldn’t go out of my way to see it again. It was cool but not, $1000 dollar for a campsite cool.
Yeah, after seeing a total eclipse, all those partial eclipses seem like nothing. I'm not sure I'll even bother watching a partial or annular eclipse again.
Glad you were able to see it without cloud cover. I ended up changing my destination this morning due to cloud forecast.
I just did too. It was really cool!
You're thinking of Haley's comet. Easy mistake.