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Wish I got to see it....


Dzimm
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This is once in a lifetime for me without traveling and I don't get to see it....... In Des Moines this is what we get to see of the 95% eclipse. Damn storm is coming through and will be in the center of it during totality.

ff5bdec0a4944779c560b56c445fd3ee.jpg

 

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This is once in a lifetime for me without traveling and I don't get to see it....... In Des Moines this is what we get to see of the 95% eclipse. Damn storm is coming through and will be in the center of it during totality.

ff5bdec0a4944779c560b56c445fd3ee.jpg

 

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I'm four hours east and I'm going see as much as Ray Charles.

 

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I am in Marion, Illinois for the day.  We had some dark clouds blocking the sun just 7 minutes before the start of totality.  But the clouds moved along and we got a good view from just before the start of totality.  Did not get as dark as I had expected.


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I am in Marion, Illinois for the day.  We had some dark clouds blocking the sun just 7 minutes before the start of totality.  But the clouds moved along and we got a good view from just before the start of totality.  Did not get as dark as I had expected.

 

Marion, IL is my hometown!  I stayed at home in MO though.  I expected a little darker also, but it was still cool.

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Same here. Got to see the very beginning of the crescent when the moon was first making it's pass, then black clouds rolled in and blocked everything. Soon as the eclipse was over, it cleared up instantly.  :(

 

Oh well, at least there will be another one in 2024.....

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Our home was in the path of totality in Central Oregon, but juuuuuuust barely. A beautiful clear morning made for a spectacular eclipse. It's the oddest thing having everything get dimmer and dimmer over the course of an hour, and almost suddenly dark. Temp dropped 15 degrees during totality too.

 

We had crazy crowds in Madras and Prineville and took the remainder of the day for traffic to clear up on 97 as Californians all headed south.

 

All in all, It was an amazing natural event to behold.

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I was just north of Idaho Falls on the way back from the Lemons Rally. Definitely happy we took the time to stop and wait. Perfectly clear skies, we saw stars come out during totality. It's one of those things I'll never forget. Just wish I had a better camera than my phone so I could've taken pictures.

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  • 2 weeks later...

That's been my view pretty well all summer. We've had better and worse weeks, but clear skies have been few and far between. It's been a bad fire season, somehow we've been lucky and haven't had one here yet, but all throughout the AB/BC mountains it's been bad. Just this weekend the wind picked up and blew a small fire over the continental divide, burning almost the entirety of Waterton Lakes national park, easily my favourite park, in about 12 hours. 

Climate change is a thing. More heat means less humidity, bigger storms with more lightening strikes... It's just going to get worse from here. 

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1 hour ago, gogmorgo said:

 

Climate change is a thing. More heat means less humidity, bigger storms with more lightening strikes... It's just going to get worse from here. 

 

Does more heat mean less humidity???

Warm air holds more moisture, not less.

Warm air over oceans mean more tropical storms.

Warm air has more energy, not less.??  Leading to more, larger weather swings???

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Really I didn't intend for this to deviate away from a light-hearted thread about the eclipse. 

More heat means the ground dries out faster, there's less water for plants, etc. Unless there's huge shifts in weather patterns, areas that are already in rain shadows won't get all that much more rain than they do already. A lot of dryer areas survive because of the dew that condenses at night. The hotter temperatures mean less dew is deposited and it gets pulled back into the atmosphere sooner during the day. Dryer ground means dryer vegetation and more severe fires. 

This year has definitely been one of extremes. 

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  • 2 weeks later...

I got home from an offroad trip, tossed my girlfriend into the camper, unhooked the car hauler and drove south for 9 hours to a little podunk town (pop of 1700) right in the middle of the path of totality. Got there at 2 am, went to bed, woke up at 8 and found myself blocked in. About 20,000 other people had the same idea.

 

Some of those had some seriously high dollar equipment with them, though. Not a cloud in the sky, experienced totality for a bit over two and a half minutes, and it was awesome.

 

April 8, 2024 will be much closer to home, with the edge of totality being 7 miles from my house.

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