Such a miserable attitude.Lake08 said:
I am gonna laugh if it's cloudy or raining that day.
Such a miserable attitude.Lake08 said:
I am gonna laugh if it's cloudy or raining that day.
Rabid Cougar said:
You have a typical football crowd at Kyle Field descend on a county with a total population of 18,000 with a David's supermarket, three Dollar Generals, two Allsups and three stop lights...
Do the math.
BCG Disciple said:
Dead giveaway you have never experienced a total solar eclipse.
The Incas used to think it meant the sun god was mad and required human sacrifice to pacify.eric76 said:
I don't understand driving or flying hundreds or thousands of miles to see it get dark for four or five minutes.
If you are making scientific measurements, sure. But just to go see it
I guess the big cities may have problems with darkness, but around here, it gets dark every evening. I can see it get dark without having to go anywhere.
That said, freedom is golden. We are free to go see it get dark just about wherever we wish.
A human sacrifice? I can think of a few twits who would be good candidates for that.Robert C. Christian said:The Incas used to think it meant the sun god was mad and required human sacrifice to pacify.eric76 said:
I don't understand driving or flying hundreds or thousands of miles to see it get dark for four or five minutes.
If you are making scientific measurements, sure. But just to go see it
I guess the big cities may have problems with darkness, but around here, it gets dark every evening. I can see it get dark without having to go anywhere.
That said, freedom is golden. We are free to go see it get dark just about wherever we wish.
Really makes you think.
Only if I can pick the means of the sacrifice.C@LAg said:so you are volunteering?eric76 said:
A human sacrifice? I can think of a few twits who would be good candidates for that.
If that map is accurate we are just outside of the red line. By outside I mean less than 5 miles as the crow flies.Guppy91 said:BCG Disciple said:
Dead giveaway you have never experienced a total solar eclipse.
Indeed! Rex: Skip out to Bremond, Cameron, Rosebud if the weather is favorable. It will be unbelievably different than the B/CS experience …and you can be home before sundown. Get on or beyond this red line:
You and the 3 people who starred this had a really good joke. I mean, you can't be serious so it must be a joke. Only the biggest pathetic loser POS would wish that on an event that will be a lot of families spending quality time together.Lake08 said:
I am gonna laugh if it's cloudy or raining that day.
Augusta, GeorgiaGuppy91 said:
Augusta is not in the path of totality. Your closest approach would be just west of Buffalo or west of Palestine. Awesome map here: http://xjubier.free.fr/en/site_pages/solar_eclipses/TSE_2024_GoogleMapFull.html
I do like to gamble, but no bet! Could very well be!C@LAg said:
Seattle is going to be the brightest major city that day
I don't think there's anything nefarious other than the media love to create panic and generate clicks/views. So they'll stir things up as much as possible to reinforce this panic behavior so they can have more clicks and views.Rapier108 said:
Good grief, is the OP really implying that there is something nefarious going on with the eclipse?
It is nothing more than small towns and rural counties preparing to have tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people flood in on Sunday or Monday and probably a good number hanging around until Tuesday.
Imagine if you're a town of 10,000 people and all of a sudden your population swells to 100,000. Your infrastructure simply cannot handle it so better to prepare in advance. The disaster declarations, as others have stated, is about freeing up extra $$$ to be ready for it.
Now watch, on April 8th, Texas will be completely covered by clouds.
Can you describe the experience? Tell us what it was like .... total darkness? ... did you need a flashlight? ... how long did it last? ... did anything strange happen? ... etc., etc., etc.BCG Disciple said:
This is a total solar eclipse, not a partial like in October. The last total solar eclipse anywhere in the mainland US was 2017, and before that was 1979 (barely touched the northeast)! There won't be another one in mainland US until 2044 (in Montana and the Dakotas only).
In Texas, it has been more than a century since we have had a total solar eclipse. The last is technically in 1919, but it was an annular solar eclipse (the moon is in its closest orbital pattern to the sun and doesn't have totality like a total solar eclipse).
In short, it is a very rare occurrence and no one alive has ever seen one in the state of Texas. Im in my early 40s and have only experienced the 2017 even in my lifetime. It is a fascinating event and something that will be memorable to you and your family and help us all put down our devices and get outdoors and experience a very rare event!
AC Hopper said:Can you describe the experience? Tell us what it was like .... total darkness? ... did you need a flashlight? ... how long did it last? ... did anything strange happen? ... etc., etc., etc.BCG Disciple said:
This is a total solar eclipse, not a partial like in October. The last total solar eclipse anywhere in the mainland US was 2017, and before that was 1979 (barely touched the northeast)! There won't be another one in mainland US until 2044 (in Montana and the Dakotas only).
In Texas, it has been more than a century since we have had a total solar eclipse. The last is technically in 1919, but it was an annular solar eclipse (the moon is in its closest orbital pattern to the sun and doesn't have totality like a total solar eclipse).
In short, it is a very rare occurrence and no one alive has ever seen one in the state of Texas. Im in my early 40s and have only experienced the 2017 even in my lifetime. It is a fascinating event and something that will be memorable to you and your family and help us all put down our devices and get outdoors and experience a very rare event!
I'm just trying to get in a humble brag. I'll watch it at Hooters with Daly.C@LAg said:partial, yes. total? no.TyHolden said:
Again, are we sure this is visible from Augusta, Georgia?