Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sun was behind clouds at 2:42. My pinhole projector was working at 2:00, but showed nothing at the big moment. This was 90% hype and 10% actually something to look at in my neighborhood. My poor dd is very, very disappointed.
Why didn't you start watching before that?
It started an hour earlier, OP, and is still going on!
Anonymous wrote:Is there some reason everybody here is being party poopers? Is it just your default setting to go through life poo-pooing things or looking for only the negative side of an experience?
I have a picture of the sun through my glasses right around 2:42. In Vienna it wasn't behind clouds.
Around 2:30 maybe a little before after, the gnats came out in full force. It was insane. The eclipse looked pretty spectacular through the glasses and it was fun to do the projections on paper too.
I had friends who are down in South Carolina post pictures through your cameras. They all seemed really happy with their experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasn't pitch black here in Taccoa, Georgia (two minutes of totality). That being said, it was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. The darkness escalated rapidly the last few minutes. It was eerie and dim, but the best was actually directly viewing the shadow of the moon during the safe period.
I was at Tallula Gorge and agree, not absolute blackness but it was awfully dark. I think it's the full experience of it going from light to dark to light.
Could any of you see the stars?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasn't pitch black here in Taccoa, Georgia (two minutes of totality). That being said, it was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. The darkness escalated rapidly the last few minutes. It was eerie and dim, but the best was actually directly viewing the shadow of the moon during the safe period.
I was at Tallula Gorge and agree, not absolute blackness but it was awfully dark. I think it's the full experience of it going from light to dark to light.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
That's why people made an effort to get to the path of totality. It gets pitch black and the stars come out, and animals get a little concerned.
I would have traveled if I could. The kids and I just went out to observe with our glasses and I explained that the sun is so powerful, even covered at more than 80%, it's practically broad daylight.
I don't think it got pitch black. I haven't seen that online.
It did NOT get pitch black. I know people in the path of totality. They were not going crazy over what they saw - they expected more for making the trip (paying for airline tickets, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasn't pitch black here in Taccoa, Georgia (two minutes of totality). That being said, it was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. The darkness escalated rapidly the last few minutes. It was eerie and dim, but the best was actually directly viewing the shadow of the moon during the safe period.
I was at Tallula Gorge and agree, not absolute blackness but it was awfully dark. I think it's the full experience of it going from light to dark to light.
Anonymous wrote:Wasn't pitch black here in Taccoa, Georgia (two minutes of totality). That being said, it was one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. The darkness escalated rapidly the last few minutes. It was eerie and dim, but the best was actually directly viewing the shadow of the moon during the safe period.
Anonymous wrote:
That's why people made an effort to get to the path of totality. It gets pitch black and the stars come out, and animals get a little concerned.
I would have traveled if I could. The kids and I just went out to observe with our glasses and I explained that the sun is so powerful, even covered at more than 80%, it's practically broad daylight.
Anonymous wrote:How many people here saw the eclipse IRL, in real time, per above?
:crickets: