Sean wrote:
At totality, we could see the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Jupiter, and Earth. Very cool.
Very cool, indeed!
barrym95838 wrote:
The dimming was barely noticeable here in central CA [...] a ~30% chunk missing
In order to witness totality, my friend and I left Stratford and headed south about 100 km. Traffic had gotten pretty heavy by the time we approached Port Bruce on the north shore of Lake Erie, and the town itself was jammed. Even the country roads in the adjoining farmland were beginning to run short of space, but luckily we were able to park without any serious difficulty.
Judging by the daylight, I thought we'd have some time to kill before the action started. But much to my surprise, a peek through the eclipse glasses showed the sun already about 30% occluded (just as Mike observed). Only at the 98% point did the dimming begin to seriously take hold.
Although my photos don't clearly show the occlusion itself, I think you'll notice the eerie quality of the sky, and of the remaining daylight at ground level. Also I'm attaching a screen shot from
timeanddate.com. The purple dotted line through Lake Erie shows the path of the center point of the totality shadow, and the solid purple line is its northern extreme. The spot marked "C" is Port Bruce, well within the path of totality! (which, at that location, lasted just over 2.5 minutes)
-- Jeff
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