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Hazo
Dec 30, 2004

SCIENCE



It was cloudy where I lived in South Carolina in 2017. I had the glasses and everything too. poo poo sucked.

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Hazo
Dec 30, 2004

SCIENCE



Probably been posted here before but this USA Today article has an interactive map that lets you click on any location and it shows you the time, percent of totality, and likelihood of cloud cover.

I’m bummed my schedule didn’t work out and I couldn’t visit family in Indianapolis but it looks like ~66% chance of cloudy skies and I would be furious if I got skunked by clouds like I did here in South Carolina for the 2017 eclipse.

Hazo
Dec 30, 2004

SCIENCE



I was in downtown Columbia this morning and remembered that when I worked at the local children’s museum, we ordered like 2,000 pairs of glasses for the 2017 eclipse. So I swung by on a whim to see if they still had any, and I was able to score a couple pairs :toot:

Hazo
Dec 30, 2004

SCIENCE




:eyepop:

Hazo
Dec 30, 2004

SCIENCE



Porfiriato posted:

https://twitter.com/burgwx/status/1778123500907368644

Surprised how far out the effect is measurable. Looks like it shows up as far away as Colorado and Florida.

I didn’t get a screenshot but my home weather station recorded a drop from 82 to 75 during the partial in South Carolina.

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