Waterloo Region Record

Big crowd takes advantage of UW’s celestial party

- Jeff Hicks, Record staff

WATERLOO — The clouds parted. Alex Cochrane, 10, let out a wonder-fuelled gasp.

“I can see it now! It’s coming out! It’s coming out!” said the Kitchener boy, surrounded by hundreds of fellow sky gazers along a grassy knoll at University of Waterloo during one of the climactic moments of Monday’s solar eclipse viewing party.

“Oh, my gosh! It looks like a giant bite has been taken out of the sun.”

And all the while during the two-hour, 40-minute show, Cochrane wore a wide grin as he wrapped his special safe-viewing eclipse glasses tight against his eyes.

His mom Meagan sat beside him in a fold-out chair. She had pulled him out of summer camp for this. He loves space. Always has. Alex even wore his best solar system T-shirt as a partial eclipse rolled across the region.

“He’s been talking about it for weeks,” his mom said.

But it was also pretty humid during Monday’s neck-tilted festival for sweltering skywatcher­s, who happily shared the 390 eclipse viewing glasses the university’s Science Outreach and Faculty of Sci-

It was, by all accounts, the most observed and most-photograph­ed eclipse in history, documented by satellites and high-altitude balloons and watched on Earth through telescopes, cameras and cardboard-frame protective eyeglasses.

The Earth, moon and sun line up perfectly every one to three years, briefly turning day into night for a sliver of the planet. But these sights normally are in no man’s land, like the vast Pacific or Earth’s poles. This is the first eclipse of the social media era to pass through such a heavily populated area.

In Boise, Idaho, where the sun was more than 99 per cent blocked, the street lights flicked on briefly, while in Nashville, Tenn., people craned their necks at the sky and knocked back long neck beers at Nudie’s Honky Tonk bar.

Passengers aboard a cruise ship in the Caribbean watched it unfold as Bonnie Tyler sang her 1983 hit “Total Eclipse of the Heart.”

Several minor-league baseball teams — one of them, the Columbia Fireflies, outfitted for the day in glowin-the-dark jerseys — briefly suspended play.

At the White House, despite all the warnings from experts about the risk of eye damage, President Donald Trump took off his eclipse glasses and looked directly at the sun.

The path of totality, where the sun was 100 per cent obscured by the moon, was just 96 to 113 kilometres wide. But the rest of North America was treated to a partial eclipse, as were Central American and the upper reaches of South America.

Skies were clear along most of the route, to the relief of those who feared cloud cover would spoil the moment.

“Oh, God, oh, that was amazing,” said Joe Dellinger, a Houston man who set up a telescope on the Capitol lawn in Jefferson City, Mo. “That was better than any photo.”

For the youngest observers, it seemed like magic.

“It’s really, really, really, really awesome,” said nine-year-old Cami Smith, as she gazed at the fully eclipsed sun in Beverly Beach, Ore.

NASA reported 4.4 million people were watching its TV coverage midway through the eclipse, the biggest livestream event in the space agency’s history.

“It can be religious. It makes you feel insignific­ant, like you’re just a speck in the whole scheme of things,” said veteran eclipse-watcher Mike O’Leary, of San Diego, who set up his camera along with among hundreds of other amateur astronomer­s in Casper, Wyo.

John Hays drove up from Bishop, Calif., for the total eclipse in Salem, Ore., and said the experience will stay with him forever.

“That silvery ring is so hypnotic and mesmerizin­g, it does remind you of wizardry or like magic,” he said.

More than one parent was amazed to see teenagers actually look up from their cellphones.

Patrick Schueck, a constructi­on company president from Little Rock, Ark., brought his 10-year-old twin daughters Ava and Hayden to Bald Knob Cross of Peace in Alto Pass, Ill., a more than 100-foot cross atop a mountain. Schueck said at first his girls weren’t very interested in the eclipse. One sat looking at her iPhone.

“Quickly that changed,” he said. “It went from them being aloof to being in total amazement.”

Schueck called it a chance to “do something with my daughters that they’ll remember for the rest of their lives.”

Astronomer­s, too, were giddy with excitement.

NASA solar physicist Alex Young said the last time earthlings had a connection like this to the heavens was during man’s first flight to the moon, on Apollo 8 in 1968. The first, famous Earthrise photo came from that mission and, like this eclipse, showed us “we are part of something bigger.”

NASA’s acting administra­tor, Robert Lightfoot, watched with delight from a plane flying over the Oregon coast and joked about the space-agency official next to him.

“I’m about to fight this man for a window seat.”

Hoping to learn more about the sun’s compositio­n and the mysterious solar wind, NASA and other scientists watched and analyzed it all from the ground and the sky, including aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Citizen scientists monitored animal and plant behaviour as day turned into twilight. About 7,000 people streamed into the Nashville Zoo just to see the animals’ reaction and noticed how they got noisier at it got darker.

The giraffes started running around crazily in circles when darkness fell, and the flamingos huddled together, though zookeepers said it wasn’t clear whether it was the eclipse or the noisy, cheering crowd that spooked them.

“I didn’t expect to get so emotionall­y caught up with it. I literally had chill bumps,” said zoo volunteer Stephen Foust.

In Charleston, S.C., the eclipse’s last stop in the U.S., college junior Allie Stern, 20, said: “It was amazing. It looked like a banana peel, like a glowing banana peel, which is kind of hard to describe and imagine, but it was super cool.”

The last coast-to-coast total eclipse in the U.S. was in 1918. The last total solar eclipse in the U.S. was in 1979, but only five states in the northwest experience­d total darkness.

The next total eclipse in the U.S. will be in 2024. The next coast-to-coast one will not be until 2045.

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