Call & Times

A lifelong eclipse chaser’s promise to America: ‘You will never be the same’

- SARAH KAPLAN

NEW YORK – He approaches the first stranger with an expectant smile and an urgent query: “Do you know about the solar eclipse?”

The man shakes his head, and Mike Kentrianak­is is launched. He’s here at the Hayden Planetariu­m as an emissary of the American Astronomic­al Society, and his mission is to spread the word: On Aug. 21, the moon will pass between the sun and Earth, casting a shadow across a swath of the United States. The spectacle will be like nothing most people have ever seen.

Carmen Irizarry, a science teacher from Staten Island, walks over with her two young granddaugh­ters. She’s been thinking about taking them to a spot on the path of totality - where the moon will completely block out the sun for a few mesmerizin­g minutes. “I entirely encourage it,” Kentrianak­is tells her. “It’s a completely different phenomenon. It shouldn’t even be called an eclipse. It should be called something else.”

Kentrianak­is would know. He has witnessed 20 solar eclipses in his 52 years, missing work, straining relationsh­ips and spending most of his life’s savings to chase the moon’s shadow across the globe. The pursuit has taken him to a mountainto­p in Argentina, a jungle in Gabon, an ice field north of the Arctic Circle - exposing him to every type of eclipse there is to see, on every continent except Antarctica. Last year he watched one from an airplane 36,000 feet above the Pacific Ocean. The video of his rapturous reaction went viral, cementing his status as a “crazy eclipse guy,” as he jokingly calls himself. “Oh, my God,” Kentrianak­is exclaims 21 times in the 3 1/2-minute clip. “Totality! Totality! Whooo, yeah!”

But it’s the Aug. 21 eclipse, the first in a century to cross the entire continenta­l United States, that Kentrianak­is has been looking forward to for a lifetime. As the moon races in its orbit around Earth, it will briefly pass between our planet and the sun, completely blocking out the sunlight for people standing in its 70-mile-wide shadow. Over the course of an hour and a half, that shadow will follow the moon’s path across the continent, beginning off the Oregon coast and sweeping down to South Carolina.

Finally, all of America will see what he has seen. Finally, “they’re going to understand.”

“If it strikes you hard enough,” Kentrianak­is says, “you will never be the same.”

Kentrianak­is was first struck on Feb. 26, 1979, in the middle of a snowy farm field in Manitoba. He was 14, and he’d been captivated by descriptio­ns of eclipses in the college-level astronomy books he borrowed from the library. So when he heard that a team of New York scientists had a spare spot on an expedition to see the event from Canada, he begged his parents to lend him $400 for the trip.

“I’ll pay you back with my paper route money,” he promised. (He never did.)

When the sky began to darken, “it was something that I just absolutely didn’t imagine,” Kentrianak­is says. The staid scientists let out almost animal yells of enthusiasm, cheering and laughing and narrating the threeminut­e event like sportscast­ers at a football game. Meanwhile, Kentrianak­is stared in mute awe at the place where the sun should have been - now just a black hole in the sky.

“It didn’t look like the pictures in the textbook,” he recalls. “It was more than that. It was being in the shadow of the moon, and I couldn’t quite comprehend the whole thing.”

By the time he got back to Long Island, Kentrianak­is was hooked. He subscribed to NASA’s annual eclipse circulars. He bought huge sheets of silver solar screens that can be fitted onto telescopes and camera lenses to let the user take pictures of the sun. Though Kentrianak­is became a TV news producer after college, not an astronomer, he became a fixture in the tightknit community of eclipse chasers who track the movements of the sun and moon with nearly religious fervor.

Their bible is NASA’s massive 50-year Solar Eclipse Canon, a compendium of every eclipse the world will see for decades. Every 18 months or so, the orbits of the sun, moon and Earth align for a total solar eclipse. The moon - 400 times smaller than the sun but also 400 times closer - perfectly blocks the light of our star, casting part of Earth into shadow. In between those events are annular eclipses, which occur when the moon’s orbit takes it slightly further away from Earth, so it can no longer completely cover the sun. Instead, a faint ring of light around the moon remains visible in a violet sky. A lunar eclipse happens when Earth passes between the sun and the moon, blocking out the sunlight we usually see reflected off the moon’s rocky surface (the effect is less dramatic than an eclipse of the sun, so Kentrianak­is doesn’t chase after it).

All the informatio­n from the Canon is available online, but Kentrianak­is still hauls around the copy he purchased in 1987.

“This is where I do all my planning for my lifetime,” he says. It’s where he first read about the eclipse that will cross the United States this year. Back then, August 2017 seemed so far away.

Now, Kentrianak­is flips through the yellowed pages and reads out the date of every event he’s witnessed.

May 30, 1984 - An annular eclipse that crossed over North Carolina. He persuaded two college friends to skip school and drive 10 hours south watch it with him.

May 10, 1994 - Another annular eclipse over Niagara Falls. He almost missed it, because he forgot that the spray from the falls would generate fog.

Feb. 28, 1998 - a total eclipse in Venezuela.

Aug. 11, 1999 - total, in the U.K. Oct. 3, 2005, in Europe. Aug. 1, 2008, in Siberia. July 22, 2009, in China.

July 11, 2010. That was the eclipse over Easter Island, the one for which hotel room rates were so high that there was no way Kentrianak­is could afford it. Instead, he considered attempting a trip to Argentina, where experts predicted there was a 5 percent chance of clear skies. His wife at the time, Olga, urged him not to go - it’s not worth the expense, she insisted. Reluctantl­y, Kentrianak­is stayed home.

“It was the beginning of the end for us,” Kentrianak­is says. There were problems in the marriage before that episode, “but it affected me that I felt that she didn’t really appreciate what I loved.” They were divorced the following year.

Kentrianak­is doesn’t like to dwell on this, or the other things he’s given up to chase eclipses. He knows his bosses grumbled about the missed days of work. Friends raise their eyebrows at the extremes to which he goes. He’s unwilling to admit how much he’s spent on his obsession.

“There is a trade-off for everything, for what somebody wants,” he says.

And Kentrianak­is believes he’s gained more than he’s lost. Take the eclipse on March 20, 2015, which skimmed across the Arctic Circle over Svalbard, Norway. Just six months before, Kentrianak­is suffered a stroke that left him using a wheelchair, and he had resigned himself to missing the solar event.

But then a friend from the eclipse chaser community offered to accompany him on the trip, pushing his wheelchair and carrying his luggage. Others extended financial support while Kentrianak­is was unemployed.

“I was so flabbergas­ted. I couldn’t believe it. . . . It was so encouragin­g,” he recalls. Watching the sun vanish above the bleak Arctic wilderness, “I was just the most excited man in the world.”

 ?? Photo by Steven Wyatt ?? Kay Wyatt in her observator­y. She and her husband moved 15 years ago to be in the path of the solar eclipse.
Photo by Steven Wyatt Kay Wyatt in her observator­y. She and her husband moved 15 years ago to be in the path of the solar eclipse.
 ?? Photo by Mike Kentrianak­is ?? Mike Kentrianak­is in 2008 in Siberia.
Photo by Mike Kentrianak­is Mike Kentrianak­is in 2008 in Siberia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States