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Posts Tagged ‘Solar Eclipse’

Six years ago, I experienced my first solar eclipse. How did I manage to live my entire life without previously watching one? I was always in the wrong place at the right time, or the weather was non-cooperative. When I was a kid, an eclipse was predicted where I lived. Lacking proper eye protection, I followed instructions to make a cardboard pinhole camera, despite doubts it would really work. I didn’t get a chance to find out. It rained all day.

In 2017, a total eclipse was to pass through South Carolina, a mere 300 miles from home. I was determined to catch this one. Not only was I successful, I was hooked. You can read about it here. After this, I began tracking eclipses around the world, envying people who are able to fly to exotic places to view them. The next total eclipse will be in Arkansas on April 8, 2024. I plan to be there.

In the meantime, I caught several lunar eclipses from the comfort of my front yard. I wrote about one last year. You can read that post here.

Recently, I learned about an annular eclipse going through Texas on 10/14/23. Not a total eclipse, these are called “ring of fire” because the moon doesn’t totally occlude the sun. I wanted to go, but it had been a busy spring and summer. Besides, I was without a dependable traveling vehicle. I’d had to retire my loyal blue Roadtrek after it had racked up a half-million miles and increasingly frequent repairs. Not all was lost, however. The partial eclipse was to be visible for hundreds of miles on each side of its path. I dug out my eclipse glasses and stayed home.

So long, old friend.

I swear, the weather must check the eclipse schedule before making up its mind about what to throw at us. The forecast was for clear weather. It was foggy overnight. The fog lifted, but clouds persisted as time approached the 11:50 a.m. start of the eclipse. Finally, the sun came out, but puffy clouds kept scudding across the sky. Between scuds, I caught glimpses of the moon edging into the left side of the sun. Through eclipse glasses, the sun looked like a yellow cookie that a celestial Cookie Monster had bitten into. CM kept nibbling until the sun looked like a fat C. I could see the dark disk of the moon. Not quite as spectacular as a total eclipse, it was still an awesome sight.

Instead of the moon continuing across the sun, the bite mark slid downward. I’ve seen this during partial lunar eclipses. Eventually, the fat C was resting on its tips. Maximum eclipse was at 1:22 p.m. The bite crept up the left side of the cookie, to make a reverse C. Then Cookie Monster began to slowly regurgitate, taking increasingly smaller bites out of the cookie, before moving on.

About the cardboard pinhole device, a few Facebook friends said they used them and got a good image of the eclipse. One even posted a photo he’d taken of it.

Readers may notice I haven’t been posting as often as I once did. I stay busy with other endeavors, including novels and short stories. Two of my stories have received Honorable Mentions in Writers of the Future. “Family Plot” has been published in the 2023 Eckerd Review. I will post the story on this website when I get a chance. “The Legend of Mellington Swamp” is a finalist for the Royal Palm Literary Award. Keep your fingers crossed for me. Season of the Dove is a finalist for a BookFest Award. You can read Notebooks Hidden in an Abandoned House on Kindle Vella. I hope to have it in book form by January. And I’m working on a prequel of Trials by Fire.

Whew! No wonder I get tired. Meanwhile, I need to shop for a new camper van, then Arkansas April 2024 or bust!

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Sometime in our lives, we have an experience that words are inadequate to describe. I had one on 8/21/17, the day of the Total Eclipse. It was my first. I’d missed every other solar eclipse in my life by being in the wrong place or because of cloudy weather. I wasn’t going to miss this one. But summers are so busy. I traveled through eight states in three weeks. Serendipitously, a library in West Virginia had free eclipse glasses. I picked up a pair.

On my way home, I checked for available campsites at my favorite state park in South Carolina. They were booked. I returned to Florida a week before the eclipse, having made no plans, and my van needed TLC before it could make another trip. Despair was not an option.

 

Not my van, but definitely my sentiment.

 

Fate began to smile. My mechanic made the critical repairs in a timely fashion. When I told him where I was going, he said, “You must really like to drive.”

“No. I just like to go places.”

South Carolina campgrounds were full, but what about Georgia? Only about 100 miles from Orangeburg, Magnolia Springs State Park still had vacancies! Instead of a grueling six hour drive to Orangeburg, I faced a four hour trip to Magnolia Springs, followed by only two hours the next day. I made reservations.

Sunday afternoon, I headed north. With no rangers on duty when I arrived, I chose a campsite and enjoyed my evening at the park. Bright and early Monday morning, I reported to the park office, but the staff wasn’t ready to do business yet. I told them I was going to South Carolina to watch the eclipse. “You registered online?” they said. “Then just go! You can do the paperwork when you come back.”

I drove through fog, optimistic the sky would clear. There was little traffic on US 301 although the interstates were jammed. I arrived in Orangeburg at 9:45 and found a shady parking spot at Edisto Memorial Gardens. With hours to spare, I walked around the Rose Garden and decided this was where I wanted to watch the eclipse. Workers were busy mowing and weeding. I thought, what a great job they had—being paid to experience the eclipse!

When I returned to the parking lot, it was full. I’d been wise to get an early start. Half the cars, it seemed, had Florida tags. I strolled through the Sensory Garden and rang the farm bell. Then I went down to the Azalea Garden, where other folks awaited the big event. From time to time, I heard the farm bell ring. Despite growing numbers, the atmosphere was peaceful, friendly, upbeat.

I asked those I encountered, “Where are you from?” Many were from Florida. A mother and daughter from Orlando had driven all night and slept at a rest stop in their Mini Cooper. A couple of ladies came up from Georgia. One couple was from Denver but had been vacationing at Hilton Head. Family members wore matching eclipse shirts. Some had brought their dogs. All races were represented, and many nationalities. I heard accents I could only dimly place, and one group spoke German.

Every so often, I put on my eclipse glasses and looked at the sun. It looked like an orange cookie. The sky cleared and clouded again. Some expressed concern that we wouldn’t be able to see anything (Oh you of little faith!) but others were, like me, optimistic that the weather would be kind.

I walked through a sunny area where families had set up canopies. As I approached a scattering of trees, someone called my name! Who here would know me? It was fellow writer Jessica Elkins and her husband. They’d stayed in a motel in Statesboro, Georgia and were enjoying a little picnic of fruit and cheese and crackers. I joined them.

About 1:30, people wearing eclipse glasses stood pointing at the sky. The sun looked like someone had taken a bite out of the orange cookie. Over the next several minutes, the bite grew larger. Then a cloud occluded the sun and we couldn’t see anything. The cloud gave us some relief from the heat, but many were anxious we’d miss the eclipse. I kept saying, “The cloud will move on and then the sky will clear.”

Eventually, that cloud moved, but another took its place! Blue sky lay all around, but that cloud seemed happy to stay put.

The weather was kind. After a very long 20 minutes, the cloud went away and the crowd went, “Ahhh!” The sun now looked like a crescent moon. The light around us was subdued, as though clouds still shaded the Earth. The crescent grew slimmer. Around 2:20, I took leave of my friends.

On the way to the Rose Garden, I passed a group of Seminole Indians who were drumming and chanting. The light continued to dim. I sat down on the ground in the middle of the Rose Garden.

Dusk is falling.

By 2:35, the sun was only a thin sliver and the air was noticeably cooler. Dusk had fallen. Then it grew dark. The crowd cheered. We clapped with excitement. We laughed with delight. The drummers increased the volume of their chant. I took off my eclipse glasses.

In the sky was a silver white ring—the most beautiful thing I have ever seen!

Streetlights came on. At 2:45, a band of sunlight appeared on the north side of the garden. The crowd went, “Ohhh!” I glanced up to see a tiny jewel of sunlight on the edge of the silver ring. It was time to put the eclipse glasses back on.

Pictures don’t do it justice. (Photo by Jake McElveen.)

Daylight returned. People stirred, their eyes lit with wonder, exclaiming, “Wow.” “Cool.” “Incredible.” As I made my way back to my friends, I encountered a phenomenon that wasn’t visible on the lawn of the Rose Garden. The asphalt was covered with little crescents of sunlight filtering through the leaves of trees, as though the image of the crescent sun had been shattered into a thousand pieces and  projected onto the ground. A stander-by said they’d been present before the totality, facing in a different direction.

A Thousand Crescent Suns

There were no strangers. Everyone was overcome with awe. One said, “There are no words to describe it.” Another, “Words are inadequate.” A lady said she now understood why people get addicted to solar eclipses and will go anywhere in the world to see them. I’d heard that the experience was a life-changing event. It’s true.

Jessica began to talk about the next one, in 2024, and said she intended to watch it. Yes, I thought, me, too. The wonderment buoyed me all the way back to my campsite. That night, all I could think about was that beautiful silver ring that was the sun. It still remains in my mind’s eye.

The next total eclipse in Florida is August 12, 2045. I’ll be…how old by then? In the meantime, there are others in parts of the world I have yet to visit. On April 8, 2024, less than seven years from now, a total eclipse will begin in Mexico, cross Texas and Arkansas (where I have family), the Midwest, and into western New York and New England.

Arkansas, 4-8-24, here I come!

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