Los Angeles Times

Prayers in path of totality

Small town braces for a surge of solar eclipse chasers

- By David Montero

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — The soft orange light of the Sunday early morning sun filtered through the old church’s stained glass windows while the Rev. Ruth Marsh stepped down from the altar and asked her congregant­s if they had any special prayer requests.

“For sanity. For safety,” a voice called out. “It’s kind of scary to think that many people are coming.”

Marsh smiled and nodded. Another worshiper added, “And prayers for their safe return home.”

Soft chuckles rippled through the

pews at Trinity United Methodist Church. Somebody near the front asked for prayers that the infrastruc­ture of Idaho Falls would survive. And, dear God, no fires please.

With the nation riveted by the pending arrival of an extremely rare coast-to-coast solar eclipse, prime viewing spots such as Idaho Falls are bracing for traffic congestion, strains on infrastruc­ture, an economic boost and some inflation — and hoping for clear skies.

The sun, moon and Earth won’t come into alignment until Monday, but the eclipse has already shaded nearly ever aspect of life in this town of about 50,000 that straddles a treelined section of the Snake River and counts fishing and kayaking as its biggest tourist attraction­s.

The largest event each year is the Fourth of July celebratio­n that draws about 100,000. If estimates are to be be-

lieved, the population in the area could grow up to 10 times that amount for the eclipse.

“They’re telling us to have four days of water stored, prepare for power outages and even gas has already gone up 20 cents a gallon in the last week,” Cindy Isaacson said.

Not that she was completely convinced: “It could be just Y2K all over again.”

She was in the Idaho Falls Visitor Center over the weekend picking up several solar eclipse glasses for her family. At $2.12 each, the center had blown through half of its supply of 50,000 a week before the event.

The eclipse sunglasses economy has been flourishin­g.

Domino’s Pizza, Arctic Circle, Wal-Mart, the Riverside Deli and several other locations were all hawking them on marquees throughout town. The Museum of Idaho had been giving them away for so long that Zoe Sehlke had her spiel down pat as she handed them to visitors — sounding like a flight attendant going over how to use the inflatable vests on a plane.

“Don’t touch the lenses. Don’t scratch the lenses,” she said. “If the lenses are scratched, they’re useless. On ours there are two sides, the blank side and there’s a print side. The print side is worn out.”

The museum is a bit of a hub for the eclipse experience. NASA trucks are rolling into town this week as Idaho Falls has been designated as an official NASA observatio­n site, and the space agency will be broadcasti­ng live from the museum when the eclipse begins.

So will television’s local KIFI chief meteorolog­ist Michael Coats. He said he’s been getting anxious as people seem poised to blame him if the skies aren’t pristine and clear for the historic event.

He said he’s never felt so much pressure to deliver a good forecast in his 11 years in Idaho Falls, though he gamely tries to remind people that he, in fact, doesn’t control the weather. The last few days have been cloudy.

“I get stopped at the supermarke­t, the coffee shop — even getting my tires changed — and they’re asking me about what the weather will be,” Coats said. “The cloud cover is a little disconcert­ing right now, but it’s not entirely unusual this time of year with afternoon thundersto­rms that build up in the late morning.”

The so-called path of totality, a 70-mile-wide band where 100% of the sun will be blocked by the moon for about 2 minutes, is considered the optimal place to watch. In Idaho Falls, the initial phase of the eclipse is expected to start at 10:15 a.m. with totality happening at 11:33 a.m.

Idaho Falls is deemed a prime viewing location, given the wide-open spaces immediatel­y outside town.

Hotel rooms have largely been sold out for months — even years — and some that normally go for $100 a night are booked for up to ten times that much, with a three-night minimum stay.

The eclipse has also spurred controvers­y as KIFI reported a woman who reserved a room at Le Ritz Hotel and Suites for $140 three years ago saw the owner call her two weeks ago to tell her the nightly rate was increasing by $60.

Kerry Hammon, spokeswoma­n for Idaho Falls, said the city also had to change its short-term rental ordinances so Airbnb could operate.

Campsites are also being advertised for as much as $300 a night. Delroy Braswell, who works at the museum, said he’s offering space in his yard for $50 a night.

Val Lofthouse, a local resident who was planning to head up to a campground his family owns about an hour north of town, said if people could get up there, they could pitch their tents for free.

On the outskirts of town, Deby Infanger and her husband, John Infanger, turned the cornfield of the 40-acre farm they recently bought into a giant eclipse maze, using the official logo the city trademarke­d, which is ubiquitous on T-shirts, hats, coffee mugs, posters and banners in the city.

She said she is planning for 1,000 people. Standing in the mud generated by a disconcert­ing rainstorm Sunday, she worried her three porta-potties could be stolen and wanted to make sure they were locked down or moved inside the fencing. Commodes are a high-value commodity here. There is not a porta-potty to be rented from anywhere in Idaho now.

Along with putting the final touches on a new building where snacks and eclipse glasses will be sold, Infanger said she and her husband were hustling to get the maze cleared in time. The plan is to put lawn chairs in the middle of the maze and let people watch the eclipse drama unfold.

“We are building it and hope they come,” she said. “Well, maybe not too many come.”

City officials, worried that the area’s two-lane rural roads won’t be able to handle all the traffic, said they fear the scene could resemble Woodstock, where hundreds of thousands of hippies descended on an upstate New York dairy farm for the defining concert of the 1960s.

The city is hoping people gather at four parks around town. But Police Chief Mark McBride, who is slated to retire next week after the eclipse, said he expects some people to simply stop and watch wherever they happen to be.

That has Fire Chief Dave Hanneman concerned that his fire trucks won’t be able to get out of Fire Station No. 1, located downtown and just off a major thoroughfa­re.

“We can normally get to somebody within four minutes,” Hanneman said. “If someone is having a cardiac arrest and it takes us 10 minutes, that’s too long.”

But Bonneville County and the city are also paring down some services for the day and allowing nonessenti­al staff to skip work.

The eclipse is even slowing the wheels of justice in Bonneville County, with a slimmed-down docket Monday of just one jury trial as six of 10 judges have cleared their calendars for the day.

With people already beginning to arrive, Chip Schwarze, the chief executive of the Greater Idaho Falls Chamber of Commerce, said he believes the city has done all it can to prepare and now is just waiting for a moment that will take place because an object about 239,000 miles from earth will cast the entirety of its shadow here.

“It’s going to happen no matter what,” he said.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? MONDAY’S ECLIPSE has already shaded nearly every aspect of life in Idaho Falls, population 50,000.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times MONDAY’S ECLIPSE has already shaded nearly every aspect of life in Idaho Falls, population 50,000.
 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? JAMES HATHAWAY and his son, Alex, fish on the banks of the Snake River in Idaho Falls. The town’s population could swell 10 times with Monday’s solar eclipse.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times JAMES HATHAWAY and his son, Alex, fish on the banks of the Snake River in Idaho Falls. The town’s population could swell 10 times with Monday’s solar eclipse.
 ??  ?? LOCALS GATHER at Karen’s Park Avenue Club in Idaho Falls. Hotel rooms in the city have largely been sold out for months, and some rooms that normally go for $100 a night are booked for up to 10 times that much.
LOCALS GATHER at Karen’s Park Avenue Club in Idaho Falls. Hotel rooms in the city have largely been sold out for months, and some rooms that normally go for $100 a night are booked for up to 10 times that much.
 ??  ?? ECLIPSE SIGNAGE can be seen all over Idaho Falls, a riverside town in eastern Idaho that lies in the path of totality of next week’s total solar eclipse.
ECLIPSE SIGNAGE can be seen all over Idaho Falls, a riverside town in eastern Idaho that lies in the path of totality of next week’s total solar eclipse.
 ??  ?? DEBY INFANGER and her husband have turned a cornfield on their farm into a giant maze for eclipse fans. “We are building it and hope they come,” she said.
DEBY INFANGER and her husband have turned a cornfield on their farm into a giant maze for eclipse fans. “We are building it and hope they come,” she said.

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