Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're pulling our middle-schoolers out to fly to Texas, so they'll miss 3 days of school (and meeting about a dozen family members there).
Like other posters have said, it's just not that big a deal unless you see totality. And that is amazing to experience.
This will be my kids' second eclipse (they were little in 2017 but they remember it)!
Wasn’t this when Trump almost burnt his eyeballs looking up at it directly? I was driving up rockville pike and pulled over. Will it be seen locally?
We saw totality in 2017. I cannot imagine needing or wanting to see it again, let alone buying plane tickets for it! (And we travel often!)
Anonymous wrote:My parents live in a city that is very close to the path of totality for the solar eclipse on 4/8. Like maybe a 20-30 minute drive away from totality and even at their own place they will be extremely close and should see most of it. Is it worth pulling the kids from school to see it? K and 2nd grade but the 2nd grader has missed a lot of days already this year (I think 6 so far?) due to illness and we’d have to miss 4/9 as well for a travel day. Maybe I could have him write a science report on it, hah.
Anonymous wrote:Won't everyone have just returned from spring break? We fly home on the 30th.
Anonymous wrote:My parents live in a city that is very close to the path of totality for the solar eclipse on 4/8. Like maybe a 20-30 minute drive away from totality and even at their own place they will be extremely close and should see most of it. Is it worth pulling the kids from school to see it? K and 2nd grade but the 2nd grader has missed a lot of days already this year (I think 6 so far?) due to illness and we’d have to miss 4/9 as well for a travel day. Maybe I could have him write a science report on it, hah.
Anonymous wrote:We're pulling our middle-schoolers out to fly to Texas, so they'll miss 3 days of school (and meeting about a dozen family members there).
Like other posters have said, it's just not that big a deal unless you see totality. And that is amazing to experience.
This will be my kids' second eclipse (they were little in 2017 but they remember it)!