2017 Eclipse

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Eh, no aliens, super powers, or apocalypse.

2/10, would not eclipse again.
I got superpowers, but they mostly occur offscreen due to the writer's strike.[DOUBLEPOST=1503346248,1503346034][/DOUBLEPOST]Wait---sorry---I mean "abilities".
 
I screamed at the TV this weekend. The host said that you don't feel the sun damaging your eyes because you have no nerve endings in you eyes.


WHAT!!!!!

No pain receptors sure, but no nerves?
 
My uncle got some really good pictures. Chief among them, this shot:

View attachment 25323

He has given me permission to repost as long as credit is given. So, picture by Dr. John W. Brice, MD, Esq., and all around great guy. :)
That's phenomenal! He did an amazing job. I'm now totally embarrassed to post mine lol.[DOUBLEPOST=1503352357,1503352169][/DOUBLEPOST]I didn't think that I was going to get a chance to get any pictures, but a friend of ours was here today with a viewing shade thingy and let me borrow it to try and get a picture. I took this with my infrared camera through a welding mask-type thingy. Super amateur for sure, but I tried. I had a super hard time focusing.

IMG_9833 wb adj.JPG
 
The totality was pretty amazing and I'm glad it's something I got to see in my life. 2024 goes through buffalo but who knows if the weather will be ok/if humanity will still exist by then.
 
Back in the thread. Great photos btw.

Here's my last one, of the maximum we had here (55%-ish)
IMG_20170821_154151.jpg


Again, smartphone looking through telescope eyepiece. But you get the idea. It's funny seeing some of the stuff behind me in the reflections from the eyepiece as well!
 
Made the 4 hour drive down to Cookeville, TN to be in totality. I have been eyeing this day for 15 years, but only realized about 6 months ago that the family farm where I spent many summers & holidays in my teen & college years was within the path of totality (Smithville). Unfortunately the family sold the farm a few years ago, but we still had somewhat of a family reunion gathering in Cookeville with family coming in from Seattle, Iowa, Central Illinois & us coming down from Lexington.

I am so glad I did. There is a HUGE difference between a partial eclipse & totality. I can also see why everybody was stressing so much the need for glasses until totality. The diamond ring effect was absolutely piercingly bright. Being my first eclipse of any kind, I found it interesting what you could actually see with the glasses on... the sun & nothing else. So much so that when totality first occurred, it took me 5 seconds or so to realize I needed to take the glasses off.

Anyways - the video here is from the park where I was & isn't mine. It's exactly the reason I didn't take many pictures or videos. I'd rather just experience the moment & I knew someone else out there would do the heavy lifting

 
We had to change our planned location due to rain. It was still cloudy, but we could see the eclipse through the cloud cover. That actually turned out for the better, because we weren't standing under full sun and getting roasted.

Due to having to drive an extra 40 miles, we had to hurry with the setup and forgot to clean the lenses on the telescope, so the photographs all have particles on them (we'll just call those "sunspots" :awesome:). And we didn't have time to set up the camera properly, so also kinda blurry. But that's okay. Experiencing totality was amazing.
 
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Eh, no aliens, super powers, or apocalypse.

2/10, would not eclipse again.
Have you tried going swimming near where the US Navy machine-gunned those barrels of toxic waste off the coast of New Jersey? (Also if you go supervillain please tell me your disposable henchman uniforms are less skimpy than @Emrys's. I feel so exposed.)
 
Attempted to sleep through it. My wife was watching a friend's 2 girls. Oldest is, like mine, ADHD. Neither were medicated.

Also, Savannah was overcast and rainy, so the point was moot.

Maybe I'll visit Texas for that one.
 
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