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10:25 AM
Morning o/
 
 
3 hours later…
1:00 PM
Morning
 
1:21 PM
o/
 
 
1 hour later…
2:25 PM
NASA made a map showing where the next two solar eclipses that fly over the US, and the path of those eclipses... svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5073
 
@Tiffany imo, total eclipses are worth putting significant amounts of effort into getting to see. No videos or pictures do it anything like justice.
 
3:02 PM
These two I'll actually get to experience, and I'm excited
I live in an area where they will be easy to travel (well, outside of the traffic from other people wanting to see the eclipse)
 
3:28 PM
If there is a high vantage point within driving distance, being able to see a long way and being able the cloud line would be good. I was low down, so I couldn't see the shadow moving across the ground, and I got so lucky with the clouds. go away clouds, yay, no clouds.
 
4:15 PM
Yes, very very much well worth seeing this.
Also, traffic will be terrible - plan ahead.
@Danack Did you travel to australia for it? I went to see it in france in 1999
 
I got to experience total solar eclipse a few years ago for almost 4 minutes- it was INCREDIBLE!
Street lights came on, crickets started chirping, it was so odd and incredibly amazing all at the same time to see the sun get completely blotted out by this large body.
 
words can't really describe it
 
@Derick was living in Australia at the time. So only had to travel 2000km.
 
ah, right.
I saw 2012 and thought 2022.
 
@Tiffany oh that's awesome. Going to go fly through the path of totality in 2024 since it's not too far from me here :D
 
4:22 PM
Mine was August 21, 2017.
 
The only big thing on my must see list is an active volcano. I've done nothern lights, solar eclipse...
 
@Derick if you define active loosely, I got to see krakatoa smoking up close and personal (from the edge of the volcanic crater) back in 2015. This was before the most recent eruption...
 
Like lava streams
 
Am I remembering correctly that Andesite is the explosive kind, more where the plates fold over each other, whereas Basalt is the bubbling/flowing kind where the plates move apart?
 
I prefer Iceland's touristy volcanoes...
 
4:39 PM
Just doing a quick search, it looks like Iceland has both, but the touristy ones seem to be Basalt, flowing rather than exploding.
 
@Derick I still want to see northern lights.
 
Do it!
It's getting easier now with the Sun nearly at full activity.
 
5:12 PM
so Ian lives close to the point of totality, but the place he suggested was a highway that will have a lot of people for it... will see if there's somewhere else we can go with a higher vantage point... but it will still have a lot of people, possibly more than the highway...
There's a trail near me that has three inactive volcanoes. It's pretty neat.
The surrounding area looks so empty, leading up to the volcanoes
 

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