Orlando Sentinel

Eclipse will obscure more than sun

Towns in ‘path of totality’ won’t be the same for a day

- By Deborah Netburn

It looks like an ordinary Nebraska cornfield, but Louis Dorland sees something more: an ideal place to observe the Great American Eclipse.

The horizon extends for miles to the west and the east, with few obstructio­ns to mar the view. It’s just a two-hour drive from his home in the Omaha suburbs, but because it’s deep in the country, he figures the area won’t be packed with skywatcher­s on the big day.

Dorland spent an entire day scouting locations in search of a quiet spot to spend about 2 unforgetta­ble minutes, when day will eerily give way to night.

The tricky part was making sure the guy who owned the cornfield wouldn’t mind Dorland’s setting up his binoculars and picnic blanket on the side of his property.

With some trepidatio­n, the retired IT worker hopped out of his minivan and approached the farmer steering a green tractor near the side of the road.

“I was worried he might not be pleasant about it, but he was absolutely fine,” said Dorland, who expressed his thanks by offering the farmer several pairs of paper eclipse glasses to share with his family.

Thanks to an unusual celestial alignment, the moon’s shadow will race across the United States on Aug. 21, tracing a 2,800-mile arc from Oregon to South Carolina.

It will take about 90 minutes for the eclipse to travel from coast to coast, plunging a roughly 70-milewide swath of land into a twilight-like darkness in the process.

Only path of in this totality so-called will the world grow dark enough to see the stars as the moon blots out the sun. The temperatur­e will drop, crickets will begin to chirp and farm animals will lie down and go to sleep.

If skies are clear, observers will be able to see the sun’s halo-like corona, which is usually obscured by the brightness of the photospher­e.

An estimated 12 million Americans are fortunate enough to live in the path of totality.

But for the rest of us, viewing the first total solar eclipse to stretch across the continenta­l U.S. since 1918 will take some good strategizi­ng.

Serious eclipse chasers often stake out their viewing spots years in advance of a total eclipse.

As awareness of the eclipse continues to grow, towns and cities along the path of totality are bracing for an onslaught of visitors.

Gordon Emslie, an astronomy professor at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, has been making plans for roughly 10 years now.

“I’m a solar physicist,” he said. “I follow these things.”

Emslie has experience­d totality in Turkey, France, Hawaii and Scotland.

But even a decade ago he knew the Great American Eclipse would be special. Plus, it would pass right over his stately campus.

Emslie didn’t want to seem crazy, so he waited six years to alert the school’s presidenti­al council about the celestial event coming its way.

“The reaction was, ‘OK, can you get back to us in 3 1/2 years?’ ” he said.

In less than a month, Western Kentucky University is planning to host the biggest science lesson inside Houchens Smith Stadium.

Now, the university is preparing to welcome 15,000 schoolchil­dren who will watch the eclipse from the football stadium.

Tens of thousands of other spectators are expected to flood the campus as well.

The town of Hopkinsvil­le, Ky., about 60 miles to the east, has not shown the same restraint.

“We put in a request with Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin to have 85 National Guard military police, simply to assist with the immense amount of traffic that we anticipate,” said Brooke Jung, who has served as Hopkinsvil­le’s full-time eclipse coordinato­r since September.

The town of about 30,000 is near the Point of Greatest Eclipse, which means it’s where the moon will look biggest relative to the size of the sun.

Not coincident­ally, it’s also near the place where the eclipse will last the longest. That makes it especially appealing to astronomy enthusiast­s.

Hopkinsvil­le began preparing for hordes of visitors about 10 years ago, when an eclipse chaser called the head of the Convention and Visitors Bureau to alert officials about the town’s designatio­n.

Since then, the community has enthusiast­ically embraced its role as eclipse central, even adopting the name “Eclipsevil­le” and painting a mural on the building next to Whistlesto­p Donuts, an iconic spot next to the railroad tracks that most everyone sees when pulling into downtown.

It is renting 15-by-15-foot viewing stations in local parks for $30, parking pass included.

“We have reservatio­ns from people in 34 different states and 12 different countries,” Jung said.

Ravenna, Neb., will honor its spot along the path of totality by hosting its first music festival, a parade featuring an active NASA astronaut and a cruise-in night for the town’s 1,300 residents to drive around in old muscle cars before enjoying an ice cream social.

The five hotel rooms on Grand Avenue have been booked for months.

“We had a guy fly in from Japan last year and personally book a room,” said Gina McPherson, director of the Ravenna Chamber of Commerce and the town’s eclipse coordinato­r.

Two hundred miles east, in the even tinier village of Steinauer, Neb., (population 75), preparatio­ns also are underway.

The night before the eclipse, residents and tourists will attend a star party in an open field, where a local astronomer will point out planets and constellat­ions in the night sky.

With the town’s three street lights turned off, the Milky Way should be easily visible.

Because there are no restaurant­s in the village, the Community Club will put on a big country breakfast at the church on Aug. 21, and the Altar Guild will make bagged lunches for people to take to specified viewing areas.

The eclipse will start at 1:03 p.m. local time and last for 2 minutes, 37 seconds.

Terry Wagner, the greatgrand­daughter of one of the town’s founders, is charging people $20 to spread out a blanket on a public field just south of town, to help cover the cost of the extra port-apotties.

It’s going to be a busy day, but Wagner said she can hardly wait.

“I want to feel what it’s like when the temperatur­e drops 20 degrees,” she said. “I want to feel my hairs stand on end because of the charge in the air. I want to see the aura of the sun.”

 ?? LAURA GREENE/HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE ?? Special filters and and glasses will allow observers to watch the Aug. 21 eclipse directly but safely.
LAURA GREENE/HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE Special filters and and glasses will allow observers to watch the Aug. 21 eclipse directly but safely.

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