Eclipse!!
The Great Solar Eclipse of 2017 crossed the continent, from Oregon to South Carolina, and gave millions of people the chance to witness one of the most awe-inspiring events in the natural world.
Nik's photo of the August 21 eclipse, photographed from Glendo, Wyoming. The star, Regulus, is barely visible to the lower left of the solar corona.
But you had to be within the "path of totality", a
narrow band across the earth's surface several thousand miles long but only about 70 miles wide. Outside that band you would only see a partial eclipse, not a total eclipse.
And there is no such thing as a "partial total eclipse", despite the impression blogs and the news media might give.
I honestly think that's why so many people misunderstand the utter beauty of the spectacle; they may have seen a partial eclipse in the past that was total somewhere else, and even though they weren't in the path the news kept gushing about it being a
total eclipse, so they assume they must have seen a total eclipse and just didn't find it all that impressive.
Posted by Dan 08/29/2017, revised 09/06/2017
(Our kids have grown and are no longer posting blog stories here.
Below are some highlights from past posts.)
Traveller Beware!
Thailand is generally considered to be a safe country for travellers
to visit, but if you plan a trip to Thailand it would be wise to avoid the island of Ko Tao.
You wont find this in your Lonely Planet but many tourists who venture to Ko Tao never return.
The island, considered to be one of the best places in Asia to get scuba certified, is packed with over 40 dive companies
and the instructors and divers that go with it. All on an island small enough to walk across in an hour.
Nearly everyone on the island is here to dive, and to party, and everyone does alot of both.
If you're not familiar with the dive community, they are the most laid back, fun people you'll ever meet.
By diving or enrolling in a course you immediatley make friends and get plugged into the local scene.
The problem? The island drags you in. Countless many people have the same story; 'Yeah, I came here for a week long vacation and never left..'
Within 6 hours of arriving it was plain that our original 1 week target was totally unrealistic.
Posted by nik 09/21/2008
Thick rain, freight train
21 de junio, Estacion de Biodiversidad, Tiputini
Today, I experienced the arrival of a storm in a freight train of senses.
I sat in a wooden canoe in the middle of a lake in the Amazon rain forest. In the distance, thunder mumbled and tumbled across the dense land. The sky got darker, the air got thicker. The storm made no attempts to sneak up on me, but rather used a range of pathways to indicate its arrival, in a persistent and relentless manner. It urged me to pay attention to it all, to each aspect of its existence.
In a calm, quiet lake I sat. An unmistakable hush started from far off, moving decisively closer, growing and building quickly into a clamor, a rushing train headed straight for me, through the trees and washing over the green land. I knew it was arriving. I heard it arriving. Then I saw it arriving, sliding across the water from the bank, prickling the surface of the lake as it pressed towards me.
Then I felt it. It hit my skin, it pattered off my arms, it moved in lapping waves around me, gentle yet, but sure. Then the wind. It galloped over the treetops, stirring up excited energy, and swept me up in it. It swiped across the thick drops splattered on my skin, sunk into my clothes, soaked into my hair. It blew my energy around, lashing at my previous sense of calm. The tumbling thunder moved closer, grew stronger, and urged my little boat of surrendered appreciation decisively from the center of the lake to the embrace of the bank.
This was not a dramatic flash of monsoonal expression of Power. This was Power built thick and heavy. Arrival was not simply the first step of Departure. Arrival was the arrival of a guest that stayed and settled into the corner of the couch with its feet kicked up. There wasn't a Departure, the storm simply slowly and imperceptibly faded away after time - a heavy mist snaking away to the heavens and leaving a weighty blanket sitting over everything.
It was a magical experience that colored my day... and it was, I believe, the thickest rainstorm I have ever been in.
Amazon photo album: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.864167170098.2372447.19700757&l=fbd26288a4
Posted by Whitney 06/26/2011, revised 06/26/2011