Good morning! Happy day-after eclipse day! (lots of words before pics)
My parents were supposed to fly in on Sunday so we could go eclipse chasing on Monday, but my dad didn't like the forecast and canceled. I decided that we live too close to totality for this one to not go a bit out of my way to try. At home, we were getting about 94.7%, which seems like a lot, but this was "totality or bust!" I have been fascinated with this astronomical phenomenon since I was young and saw the phases gloriously documented in a National Geographic edition. I know we had an annular pass not too far from here back in October, but from all of the pictures I'd seen over the years, the effect of totality seemed really worth the effort.
I had reserved a parking spot in a little town called Hillsboro that was expecting 4 minutes and 24 seconds of totality. They made several international lists of "best places," and it was only a 3-hour drive. As the forecast models started to sure up, my plans started to look iffy. In fact, most of Texas was starting to look iffy. North/Northeast seemed to be the way to go and a lot of people pivoted midweek and made a shift towards Texarkana or Arkansas...some shifting as far as NY, VT, and ME. I felt bad for all of the little TX towns that were dreaming of this extra business from the tourists. In the end, I think it hurt the small towns much more than the cities that served as better access points and hill country vacation homes with less flexible cancelation policies. I didn't have as much flexibility, but had looked at shifting to about 20 different spots and had hotel reservations in about 6 of them at one point (something I only thought to do after I learned about crowds). I initially settled back on Hillsboro and drove up Sunday morning. They had done a lot to welcome visitors and their festivals drew a decent level of people Sunday night. Still, it wasn't mobbed like the reports I was hearing out of the Austin area.
After staying in the nastiest motel of my life, I woke up yesterday to dense cloud cover. I knew it could burn off, but the forecasts were still saying to head northeast. I also wasn't thrilled about watching from the parking lot of an old outlet mall...even with 96 porta potties available for my convenience. Around 7:20 a.m. yesterday, I packed up and drove to Ennis, TX. The eclipse chasing group I joined on Facebook earlier in the week was a tremendous help (also cool to be working with so many people all over the US and coming in from overseas). There's a Buc-ee's in Ennis, so I figured I'd at least stop to top off the tank for the possible gridlock I'd face afterwards. I had a tip on a parking lot nearby, but Buc-ee's seemed like a great spot. If they let me park and stay...that would be a real win! The little towns I drove through to get there were shuttered up like some apocalypse movie, but things livened up when I got into Ennis. Not only was Buc-ee's allowing people to park and stay (and I still had lots of spot options), they were also disabling the parking lot and pump lights during the eclipse. So yay for better viewing conditions...as well as super clean bathrooms, great food options, and a wide array of other provisions that hadn't been subject to price gouging.
The clouds were dense when I got there. Just a few glimpses of sun here and there. As the first phase approached, we started seeing patches of blue sky. This was a trend for the first 50%. The clouds would shift here and there, affording us views of each of the early stages. The farther we got into it, the bigger the gaps and the more the clouds grew thin. Between 75-90%, the clouds started to just disappear...an awesome meteorological effect I was happy to experience. This was that phase where the sky color started to change, temps became noticeably cooler, and animal behavior was altered. I was in a parking lot off of a major highway, so most of the sounds weren't obvious (chose to just listen to Holst's
The Planets- on my running headset so I could still hear around me). I saw hawks and falcons start patrolling the sky for their ritualistic "dusk" hunting. The noisy grackles in the trees dotting the lot went silent. Around 95%, we had crystal clear skies and it became evident that we were about to get the full show. Ennis was expecting 4 minutes and 23 seconds of totality, so I felt like I'd won the cloud lottery. I've been in partial eclipses and witnessed it grow really dim, but it was almost a light switch effect going in and out of totality. The abrupt shift took me by surprise. That surprise led to a decision that I may or may not regret. I decided it wasn't worth trying to fiddle with camera settings. I used my big lens like a telescope and saw details I never would have seen with the naked eye. I took pics while in auto mode knowing that they'd be a bit overexposed, but it felt like the smartest thing to do in the moment. The luxury of a lengthy totality also gave me some time to take a quick video of the planets visible in the sky. It also gave me enough time to just soak it in and be in the moment. I'm not afraid to share that there were some tears early on. I'll spare you all of the random pics and cloud pics tracking the disappearance, but this is a small sample of what I took. I may go back and edit some to see if I can clean up the corona, highlight the colors of the prominences, and look for flares. You can see a sunspot before it gets covered up. I regret not taking video on the big camera, but it is what it is. Here's a sample...
View attachment 778095
View attachment 778096
View attachment 778097
View attachment 778098
View attachment 778099
View attachment 778100
View attachment 778101
View attachment 778102
View attachment 778103
View attachment 778104
Share your videos with friends, family, and the world
www.youtube.com