While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a
privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
- You must reach a Gulch score of 10. You can earn points in the Gulch by posting content, commenting, or by other members voting up your posts.
- You may upgrade to a Galt's Gulch Producer membership to immediately gain these privileges.
Your current Gulch score:
fireworks seem silly. -- j
.
very dark welder's glass and passed it around for
the folks. . mighty neat! -- j
.
I just looked at Jackson Hole Wyoming and vicinity, with 5 seconds less of totality, but incomparable scenery. The fact that it has no East/West weather contingency routes doesn’t matter at all because absolutely every hotel/motel is already booked up! I better get Santa Clara Corvettes in gear, fast.
No relief would be had here in Alabama where the humidity holds in the heat.
Whenever a wandering thunder storm dumps a short rain here, all its passing manages to do is to steam things up.
Yeah, mischievous me started out talking crap, but now I am wondering if an eclipse in an arid place really WOULD create a short-lived small drop in the temp.
Does suddenly seem feasible.
so maybe there could be a coup. -- j
.
In the Chapperals of Sonora you should have a good shadow cast in the morning.
was June 8, 1918. A good reference book is Totality: Eclipses of the Sun .....by Litman , Espenek, Wilcox Recomended from comment section of article. Extraordinary awesome to potentially experience this event.I remember hearing of this event almost 50 years ago thinking
I would be lucky to live to see it.
Thanks johnpe1 for the heads up.