The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Charleston center of NASA eclipse coverage

City will be last place in U.S. to see sun go dark.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

You’ve heard about some of the problems facing eclipse chasers as they flock to the path of totality across the United States.

Massive traffic jams, eye damage, etc.

Charleston, the Holy City by the sea and perhaps the coolest town in the path of the shadow, presents a few additional concerns.

We’ll get to those in a minute. But first, why would it be a great idea to visit Charleston, S.C., during the Great American Eclipse on Monday, Aug. 21?

One: It’s Charleston. A paradise for foodies, beach lovers and history buffs, Charleston repeatedly ranks at the top in best places to visit. (Travel + Leisure said it was second among the world’s top 15 city destinatio­ns.) And after astronomic­al events, a bowl of she-crab soup is always delicious.

Two: NASA has decided to anchor its livestream coverage of the eclipse in Charleston, and is hosting eclipse-viewing events around the metro area. One will be on the main deck of the aircraft carrier the USS Yorktown, a unique military museum perma-

nently anchored in the Cooper River. Remaining tickets are available only on the day of the event at the venue.

There will be more national experts on astronomy in Charleston than you can shake a stick at.

Three: Charleston and its barrier islands will be the last place in the United States to see the sun go dark. If you’re out on the beach during that celestial alignment, watching the night descend in an instant, you may get a double dose of the infinite.

“There’s something primal about seeing an eclipse out here,” said Sullivan’s Island resident Mickey Williams, a sought-after landscape painter, sitting in his canvas-cluttered studio by the beach. “These are the most majestic skies that nature can throw at us.”

Now the downside: Among the 14 states in the path of the shadow, South Carolina has heaviest population of neighbors, 94 million, according to one website.

That same site, GreatAmeri­canEclipse.com, estimated there would be 2 million visitors to South Carolina at the high end. Getting to the state’s prime destinatio­n won’t be easy. Charleston is on a peninsula, hemmed in by the Ashley and Cooper rivers. It is small, walkable and densely packed. People who drive in looking for a parking place on Monday, Aug. 21, may be waved back onto I-26.

“I’m not using words like ‘gridlock’ and ‘apocalypse,’” Mark Wilbert, director of emergency management for the city, said at his downtown office. “Those words are out there, but they are not coming out of my mouth.”

Those discouragi­ng words to the contrary, Wilbert was sunny about the city’s ability to accommodat­e the rush. A committee of public safety officials from the city, county, state and federal government­s has been meeting for two months, hammering out plans for that day, he said.

They’ve taken into account ambulance response times, evacuation routes and other foreseeabl­es. Hundreds of city employees will be on duty in Charleston’s many public parks, and at eclipse events around the area. “We want our citizens and visitors to have a once-in-a-lifetime event,” he said.

Charleston has been promoting that event, with eclipse packages such as the Yoga+Eclipse+Bubbles offered by Redux Yoga (yoga and Champagne during the event) and “A Day of Science and Baseball” at the River-Dogs minor league stadium.

There are five NASA events scheduled around town, and 17 more arranged by the College of Charleston, which will observe the eclipse on a grand scale.

“There are literally hundreds of events,” said Doug Warner, with the Charleston Convention and Visitors Bureau. Hotels are at between 97 percent and 100 percent occupancy on the Sunday before the eclipse, and rumors are that 9,000 Airbnb rooms have been rented.

“Most people will be on the beach,” said Jeff Hunter, operations director for Poe’s Tavern, as customers in T-shirts, cutoffs and halter tops lined up outside the rustic front porch of the Sullivan’s Island eating spot. “It’s just a cool place to be.”

Hunter is prepared for the crowds. He’s purchased 200 pairs of eclipse-viewing glasses for each store (there are three, on Sullivan’s, Atlantic Beach, Fla., and Wrightsvil­le Beach, N.C.), and he says his staff knows how to navigate bad traffic. Sullivan’s Island has considerab­ly more activity than when Edgar Allan Poe lived there and wrote about it in “The Gold Bug.”

Just come early, said Ben Abzug, assistant general manager of the Charleston RiverDogs minor league baseball team. The 5,500seat Joseph P. Riley Park will host an eclipse-watching gathering in the first half of the day, and a baseball game in the second, for the price of a ticket. (Box office: 843-577-3647.)

Abzug showed off the new air-conditione­d VIP suites (where tickets are $105) with views of the Ashley River and The Citadel military college. Is he worried about cloudy weather? “I will be way more thankful if we have a 6,000-person crowd, and everybody is having a good time, than if I see two minutes of totality,” Abzug said.

But weather is another problemati­c feature in Charleston. Moist, cooler ocean air drops rain when it reaches the warm city, providing an average annual rainfall of 50 inches — 41 percent of that in the summer. “Look at historic weather patterns,” Warner said. “We got a 50/50 chance of being cloudy.”

There is also the “king tide” expected that day, the highest of the cycle, at 6.7 feet. If there is rain, or an onshore breeze, and the tide crests at 7 feet, roads will flood, making travel not just bad but impossible.

It had rained twice and stopped twice by the time we arrived at the palmettosh­aded College of Charleston campus to speak to Laura Penny and Jon Hakkila, professors of physics and astronomy. The school will deploy 12 astronomer­s, plus other faculty, at the events they’re hosting. “This is the biggest outreach we will ever do,” Penny said. “The next one that comes through is in 2052.”

During the 1 minute, 30 seconds of totality, from 2:46 to 2:47 p.m., perhaps some new astronomer­s will be born. That’s what happened to Hakkila when, in 1973, his parents took him on a cruise to see an eclipse off the coast of Africa.

The school has purchased a sizable supply of eclipsewat­ching glasses, and is promoting a message of safe viewing.

Safety will be a paramount concern aboard the USS Yorktown, where 2,500 guests will gather on the galvanized deck to watch the skies. It will probably be between 90 and 100 degrees that day. (“You could fry an egg up there today,” said Mac Burdette, executive director of the unique museum. Limited tickets are available day of the event: 843-884-2727.)

In the unlikely event of a fire, or the more likely possibilit­y of lightning, guides must be ready to usher visitors off the deck through 10 exits. But the view will be worth it. “There’s probably no other place that 3,000 people can get an unobstruct­ed view from that height,” said spokesman Keith Grybowski, ducking under a fighter jet parked near the Yorktown’s bridge.

Larry and Nancy Feinberg, who live just on the other side of the Ravenel Bridge, brought some friends from Germany to see the massive ship. Traffic won’t bother them, they said, as dramatic skies glowered. “The good news is we live just over there,” Larry said, “so we can walk here if we need to.”

 ?? BO EMERSON / BEMERSON@AJC.COM ?? College of Charleston astronomer Laura Penny demonstrat­es the Safe Solar Viewer, which uses two lenses and an inexpensiv­e frame to project an image of the eclipse onto a cardboard target. The college will host 17 eclipse-watching events around the city.
BO EMERSON / BEMERSON@AJC.COM College of Charleston astronomer Laura Penny demonstrat­es the Safe Solar Viewer, which uses two lenses and an inexpensiv­e frame to project an image of the eclipse onto a cardboard target. The college will host 17 eclipse-watching events around the city.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHARLESTON CONVENTION AND VISITOR’S BUREAU ?? The beaches of Kiawah Island outside Charleston will attract eclipse watchers during Monday’s astronomic­al occurrence. But finding a place to stay in the Charleston metro area may be difficult or impossible: Many hotels are sold out.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHARLESTON CONVENTION AND VISITOR’S BUREAU The beaches of Kiawah Island outside Charleston will attract eclipse watchers during Monday’s astronomic­al occurrence. But finding a place to stay in the Charleston metro area may be difficult or impossible: Many hotels are sold out.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY MICKEY WILLIAMS ?? Mickey Williams, landscape artist and Charleston native, said, “I’ve always wanted to paint an eclipse, but I wouldn’t paint it without experienci­ng it.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY MICKEY WILLIAMS Mickey Williams, landscape artist and Charleston native, said, “I’ve always wanted to paint an eclipse, but I wouldn’t paint it without experienci­ng it.”

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