Richard Bellia and Sylvie Chavret
A couple from France we met in India with whom we saw the 1995 eclipse.
Dear Talaat, Dear Kryss,
Thank you for your mail.
I will tell you briefly how the eclipse was for us : absolutely magnificent.
We were in the North east of France (my hometown is called Longwy, you can
find it on the Nasa book). The weather forecast was not very good, stating
that it would be a case of 50/50 chance (cloudy or clear). Many friends had
turned up from Paris, Geneva, London, Lyon and even Guadeloupe (where we saw
the 98 eclipse). I found a field 15 mile away from home, I felt it was the
right place. All of us, about 30 people went to that field early in the
morning, the sky was cloudy everywhere.then the sky literately "opened up"
for thirty minutes, there was a "blue window" (sorry,when it comes to
writing poetry, I am 13 years old) in the sky where we could perfectly see
the totality. At the same time, it was raining at home !! Ten minutes after
totality, the sky was cloudy again. We were extremely lucky.
I must tell you that I have been a consultant for "Radio France
International" the French world service about the eclipse. That radio
station bought me a plane ticket for the eclipse : they wanted me to fly in
the Concorde. You must have heard about it, this plane followed the eclipse
for 7 minutes over the Atlantique. Only trouble : there were 4 persons per
window. The plan was to ask every person to watch Totality for 1 minutes 35
sec, and then let someone else look through the window. I turned down that
offer. Considering what we saw in that field with my friends, family and my
parents, I know I did the right choice.
Talaat, Kryss, if we have become so hooked up on eclipses, that's because
you showed us the right things to do back in 95. Now, Sylvie and I have seen
4, and have become quite good at sharing eclipses with friends. But you were
there at the first place, you were our teachers in a way. I must thank you
again for that. I hope that one day, we will watch another eclipse together.
A très bientôt.
Sylvie
Richard
Angelo Lamme
Dear Kryss,
I truly hope your next eclipse is more visible to you. I saw you had a bit of a
cloudy experience... This page is one for the links on your eclipse page.
It's a story of my expedition (The Phoenix Public Observatory - Netherlands) to
France (Le Havre) to see the eclipse. It contains a LOT of pictures (photos) I
took.
http://www.nerdnet.nl/~angelo/phoenix/eclipse99/index-en.html
Kind regards,
Angelo Lamme.
Eric Flescher
Greetings black sun eclipse chasers
I just got in from Budapest late last night. I have hundreds of emails to
catch up with. A short note about the eclipse of 11 August and the results from the
eclipse tour by Out and About Travel tour that I was co-leader.
We were staying in Hevis, near Lake Balaton after a beautiful time in Vienna.
That night brilliant starlight skies. We could sleep easily after all that
worrying today.
3:30 in the morning woke up to blinding rain and storms. Coming down to
breakfast feeling our chances were cooked just like the hard boiled eggs, we
saw there was a big blue patch in the sky from the west and growing. Wow
there is hope!!!!!!!!
After seeing the conditions and calculating the weather flow , (four of us went
around Lake Balaton the night before to check out Siofok), I decided we
should change our plans and not to go to Siofok, on Lake Balaton.
At 8am we headed out, me in the lead car with two others and our full bus
behind. After looking at the sky and thinking about the it , I directed the
group of 40 to a small town called Nagyvazsony almost parallel to Baltonfured
on the centerline but a little to the north and west. We camped in a big
field (after getting permission) with 360 degree full view and Nagyvazsony
600 yards (0.5 km) to the south and a small town to the south 1/2 mile (1 km) away. We were
up on a little hill. elevation not sure.
The clouds swirled around and moved to the South east. We had great
conditions. Pretty clear all the way. We were in a big clear patch and this is where I
decided we should stay. People set up equipment.
Highlights
(1) I set up my camcorder on the tripod to capture the darkening and the
shadow, First contact- mostly clear as the children climbed the 20 foot (6 m)
haystack and, people ate lunch and set up. It was starting to get exciting
and I thought - imagt's rapid advance and then it was half covered. I shouted
to look at the swallows that came out to feed on the insects that were all of
a sudden coming out - 20 minutes before totality. The sky was bluer and the
temperature got cooler. A dog near some campers from the Czech Republic we
could see was getting nervous.
(3) The thin cumulus clouds rolled over the sun but I was not worried as the
circulation was bringing clear skies from the northwest. The other clouds
near the horizon to the northwest stuck there. A thin crescent appeared.
(4) The shout - "shadow bands" around 2 minutes 2nd contact before rang out.
I looked but could not see them as everyone shouted there they are as they
raced over the white paper on the pasteur ground.
(5) Here it comes. Shadow obscured a cumulus cloud and a horizontal bank of
clouds about 7 degrees about the horizon (I have on videotape). The shadow
moved in after rising above the cloud bank. The blue over took us as I
swivelled the video camera to the sun after capturing the shadow darkening.
(6) The diamond ring spread gold all around the sun. Even as it glinted for a
long time , I could see the inner corona. We had full 360 degree view of ring
of fire. Bells rang in the town to the south.
(7) I looked up after recording the corona. I zoomed in and out to get
prominences which some saw with naked eye but I could not. The golden corona
with the spikes were glorious. The golden color of the corona reminded me of
that blue gold color on the landscape near Brandon in Canada in 1979. The
spikes in the corona were all around just as the SOHO satellite had pictured
it a week before the trip. More spiky and pointed but such a pretty GOLD.
White Venus was easy to spot below. The corona was much more a yellow gold
then the Caribbean eclipse and it stood out more against the sky then
settling into the azure blue background like the 1998 eclipse off Montserat.
(8) It was darker then the 1998, 1979, 1991, 1973 eclipse. Not as dark as
1972 in Arasaig.
(9) I kept zooming in and out and the prominences were at 7, 3 and 1 o'clock.
(10) 3rd contact and the diamond ring and 5 seconds later the light clouds
skirted the sun. I could not take the video off it but I did. I didn't want
to let go if there beautiful moments. This was my 6th total, my wife's 2nd
and son's first. The group was talking about everything we saw.
There was an eclipse festival in town 1800 yards (1650 m) and they had telescopes
still set up, sold eclipse stamps and more. An amateur still had his
telescope linked to his computer and webcam. It was great day indeed and
everyone.
I looked at my video in the car as were going back to Hevis. I got great
shots of the corona, darkening, landscape and much more. That was my main
goal. I was really pleased about how the video came out. Only thing I forgot
to do was zoom out again slowly to get Venus and the stars. Maybe I can see
it when I zoomed in.
Budapest had some real beautiful views.
My plans - edit the videotape and make a tape of it for our trip and include
not only the eclipse but the trip too like I did last year. It should be an
even better tape then last year! Also I will isolate frames with my Mac to
get more pics.
I will then put up poetry and accounts of the people on our trip (and others
who want to contribute ) - on the black sun website have special section about
the eclipse and trip.
We were lucky as others did not see it or have as good a conditions as us.
Plans for 2001 starting now- the eclipse elixir makes you that way. (Coming
the eclipse elixir poem).
Looking forward to sharing accounts. More later.
Dr. Eric Flescher (KCStarguy@aol.com)
Eric's Black Sun Eclipse Website
Out and About Travel eclipse tour August 5-15, co-leader
Subscribe to the Black Sun Eclipse Newsletter
John, Nikki, Joanne, Sophie and Tom Harbour
Friends from the early 1980s. John saw the 1991 eclipse with us. They saw the 1999 eclipse while on a barge holiday in France.
Clouds. We had a good view of the sun just after 1st contact and just
after 3rd contact, but none during totality. Still, the darkness was very
impressive (much darker than I remember it being in Mexico - I can't think
why) and everyone enjoyed the experience.
Hope to see you soon.
John
Tony Sargeant
dear Kryss
sorry to boast but i saw totality in cornwall (perranporth),
the morning started with a fairly clear sky but the like everywhere in
cornwall the clouds came rolling in so thick and low you could have hung
from them, i felt so down and miserable,
i had waited for 25 years to see my first eclipse, then with only about
5 minutes to totality my wife noticed the crescent of the sun poking
though the clouds, i got quite excited at seeing that, then just as
totality approached a million to one chance a patch of blue sky appeared
and there it was the total eclipse i had waited to see for all those
years it lasted until the diamond ring then it was lost to the clouds
again, but wow what an emotional feeling i admit i had tears in my eyes.
not expecting to see this i had not even setup my camera, i managed to
get one photograph which turned out blurred but i don't mind i will
always have the memory and emotions of cornwall 1999. cant wait till
2001.
tony sargeant.
Alison Goodall
Hi
I thought you may have been interested in this as I was just a few miles (kilometres)
away from St Agnes at Perranporth, above the beach on the grass dunes.
We were luckily enough to see totality for the whole two minutes and about a
minute after the sun reappeared it was covered over, probably by that big
black cloud that ruined the view for you. We didn't see a large corona, but
we could see purple and red prominences and a great diamond ring - although
I don't recall seeing the first one. It really was one of the most exciting
and emotional moments in my life. I'll have to start saving to see another!
When I saw the weather in the morning I knew in my heart of hearts that I wasn't going to
see an eclipse, but a small part of me wouldn't accept it as I'd waited and
looked forward to it for so long. When we were sitting on the headland
freezing my boyfriend said that perhaps we should have just stayed in and
watched the TV instead, but I said imagine how gutted you'd feel if you
heard that everyone had seen it. So my perserverance and optimism paid off!
There was a family sitting next to us with kids from about ten to fifteen.
They did nothing but whinge, but afterwards they were glad their parents had
dragged them out.
As for the weather, it was just sod's law that the afternoon before and the
day after was just beautiful. I recorded the BBC programme and watched it
the other night (fast forwarding through a lot of Philipa Forrester) and I
felt so sorry for poor old Patrick Moore sitting in the rain. Although like
you, he'd seen it all before, he looked so disappointed.
But anyway, it seemed that everyone had a great time and there was quite a
lot of the good old Dunkirk Spirit, so worth it just to be there whatever
you did or didn't see.
Alison Goodall
Internet Systems Co-ordinator
PSK
Cousin.
We managed to find a hole in the clouds a couple of kilometres north of
the centre line in France just minutes before 2nd contact.
It was quite incredible. We could see the shadow rushing towards us over
the clouds just before totality. Then the sun disappeared completely and
the corona flashed into view along with Mercury and Venus. It got dark
as night within a few seconds yet we could still see a ring of bright
sky low down on the horizon all around us. It was as if we were standing
under the hole of a huge doughnut-shaped cloud.
About 5 minutes After totality a thin veil of cloud moved over the sun
and we could see the partial eclipse clearly without having to look
through a filter. Then the sun disappeared and it started to rain!
We celebrated our fantastic eclipse week in Paris with champagne
cocktails and caviar at the Ritz Vendome Bar while a black lady with a
beautiful voice sang the blues for us. What a week!
As you can see, we only just made it. People only half a mile from us
saw nothing at all except the darkness. One of my passengers navigated
with a compass, the GPS unit and a large-scale map while I drove like
mad during the few minutes that everyone was supposed to get off the
road towards the only patch of clear sky for miles (on tiny country
roads). (it was illegal to drive during the eclipse and all lorries were
banned between 11am and 2pm.)
The only downside was that my camera refused to work and I spent half
the eclipse standing in the dark trying to fix the damn thing. I came to
the conclusion that the battery was flat and gave up. I got a new
battery when we got back to Paris and it still didn't work, so I opened
it up and found that the film hadn't taken-up on the winding spool :-(
Never mind, I hope to make up for it in Africa next time around - see,
the bug's bitten me now :-)
I think just 'being there' is half the fun. Anyway, you've seen so many
already, now you can say you've also experienced one under a cloudy sky.
Best regards to all; Lots of Hugs too :-)
Steven Bass
kryss...
just found your site about eclipses. from where you said you saw the
eclipse reckon i was pretty close to you - we watched from st agnes beacon.
i am reckoning that you were there too or maybe by the tin mine we could
see from our position.
i wanted to find out more about the next total eclipse and the best
location to see it. do you know of any sites that you could recommend or
any travel agents? have you got far in planning a trip to that one yet?
please let me know if you have the time.
thanks
stephen
Maxime
Hello Kryss.
I' ve seen your site and i like it very much. It's complete and interesting. It's the only site where i found pictures of the landscape during the totality, and not only pictures of the sun....
I'm just 15 years old and i've seen my first eclipse during this summer, in Belgium, my country. I had luck : during all the partial phase, the weather was horrible: clouds, rain, etc... But just before the totality the sun appeared and i saw it !!!
I had seen a partial one in 1995, in Cambodia where i was living, at 80% but it was not the
same.
I'd like to see as much eclipses as i can, and i like your point of view : when you travel to
countries so far, why stay there only for 5 minutes? Seeing how people from different cultures
react, visiting the country is very interesting.
But i've got a question, how do you manage to travel so much? How do you find enough
money? Enough time ?
I'd like to know more about how the people react during the totality, ceremonies they make
etc. Could send me more pictures? Like pictures of ambiance during eclipse, people landscape etc?
My mail: Max.litt@swing.be
Hoping you'll answer fast...
Bye.
Max.
Jennifer Dudley Winter
Floating somewhere inside our unconscious minds is a perfect place. We pass quickly through it each night on the way toward dreamland, momentarily conscious that the world around is free of the rules and laws inflicted by order and physics. We see things we know can't be real, and pleasure in watching these special effects of the mind. I have been shown the place on earth where this place is real. Where rules of order are bent and warped as we
observe absurd happenings around us in awe and disbelief, within the path of a Total Solar Eclipse.
The plan and the journey sound just as absurd too, when we chose to plant ourselves in an invisible mathematical path in an empty spot on the plane of a distant country. I had seen the pictures, I had seen the movies, and watched reactions of others, but had no idea what I was about to experience.
Tensions built, anxiety heightened and whispers of anticipation grew into a near frenzied uproar in those who were destined to be there, as the magical day and hour approached. We prepared our equipment and tapped our feet, nervously pacing in anxious excitement. Having sold our shirts to endure resistance and conquer obstacles to reach this place, we each fret the possibility of failure up until that last real moment of first contact.
"No Clouds!". It's whispered. It's announced. It's shouted across the valley as the moon creeps invisibly closer to the disk of the sun. A timer beeps and releases the cry, "First Contact!" It's happening we know; but still we must wait.
I paced like an expectant father, impatient enough to discard the introduction and hurry ahead to the main event. But when I placed the glasses to my face and looked up at our disc, it began to hit me that I knew nothing. This was the same spot I had seen, examined and been accompanied by every day of my life, being snipped into, frame by frame from some invisible thing. As the back half of my brain was trying to rationalize how something could dominate our sun and be logically acceptable, the front half continued to see the oddities compound. I watched in disbelief as the temperature gauge we had set moved down through the numbers as if it were unplugged or malfunctioning. I wanted to shake it to be sure of what I saw. It was an illogical effect and was moved back to the shelf with the growing stack of improper observations.
As the light dimmed, into twilight, I noticed I was blinking and blinking to clear the fog from my eyes. The white stayed white, but color evaporated into the cooling air and disappeared with
the degrees. No dimmer switch could make this odd light. No special effects crew stood behind the mountain with fans and switches.
I noticed over the mountain to the west, that a darkness of looming stormclouds was building and spreading toward us in mounting apprehension. But I knew there were no clouds. So, I had
begun to absorb this peculiar display just as that little moment of bliss when our eyes are only shut long enough to drift away.
But this wasn't the end... It was only the beginning. That bizarre effect of light and dark and cool and still was only the introduction... Moans and screeches welled up in harmony in the
crowd as the cold and dark grew just as our roller coaster car began to crest it's tallest hump.
The sky was now alive and celestial objects had grown the skill to slide and move visibly upon each other! The moon took one last breath and slid its body boldly over the sun in a magnificent act of glory! One last brilliant stream of light erupted in a heavenly spectacle from the sun as if in a final stabbing effort to defeat death. But only as brief as the moment of death, faster than the eye could perceive, these actors were replaced with a new mystical icon.
Wings of pure hypnotizing white light sprayed softly out from its body made of that hole where our logic had spilled. The crowd fell away and I was surrounded by utter muffled silence. It was real! It was happening! I could see it and feel it and hear the truth of what this event was and then fell to my knees in surrender and awe as the blind man healed now with divine power to see. I turned my head away to look around, blinking the stream of tears from my eyes and saw only more twilight reality frozen in time around me.
Scrambling to remember my tasks I had planned, I realized I was horribly derelict in my duties of recording the event. "I can see it!" I repeated, and reeled in the knowledge that the miraculous act of finding myself here was dwarfed by the magnitude and magnificence of the experience. So what was the point of snapping shots that can't represent the encompassing phenomenon of this moment?
I went ahead and wasted my time and performed my jobs as assigned, though only as far as necessary while frozen jaw down and eyes up at this "THING". But hark! I began to see detail. Molten ruby eruptions of glassy light swirled in pockets around the disk. I could notice the strings of soft flailing light had patterns pulling out from blackness - or in - you wouldn't know.
I remembered suddenly, to look for Venus in the dark sky and backed my focus away enough to glimpse the bright spark only quick enough to keep from blinking. Just as a leprechaun is bound by the ties of your stare, I didn't dare lose hold of this line of sight for it might blink away. I heard in the distance, the motorized clicks from our other cameras, then was returned
to only the dim sound of solar wind against the water.
Shaking my head in disbelief, I could feel the bulge of anticipation as an inevitable end edged in upon us. First, a glow of discernible lightness crept in around the moon's edge. Then a spark, and just as sudden as the last, that giant shard of white crystal light burst triumphantly in the sun's ultimate victory. I watched it heave the exhausted moon over across itself and push it off to slide back away again.
More dramatic than a battle or sports victory, or the end of a pressing and involving tale, I turned my glance away in streaming tears, now needing to find the others and share our joy. We are a family of survivors now. Not survivors of the experience. Survivors of the life that we must endure knowing we are not in this place for more than those few fleeting moments. It was gone. The darkened room looked natural and normal as we floated around on the cold sand. Our measurements showed a 40-degree drop. So what. "Did you see that?" How rhetorical to ask, but everyone did. I looked back up again; but only forced to filter the sight with my protective goggles. It was slipping away. I blinked again and again, gawking up into the sky. "It happened! It was real!" The logical brain was now shouting to my skeptical consciousness.
So, we all wandered around in the euphoric glow of the dark, from embrace to smiling embrace. I could hear each sniffle and shout from the crowd that was only minutes earlier, as
silent to me as the sea. We rewound our film and chuckled about or lapses in reason as we went about the careful preservation of our images. But then, with the disappointment of the child after all the presents are opened, I watched in growing dismay as all the cases and cameras and equipment were disassembled and packed quietly away into their trunks. The murmur of camaraderie wandered quietly away as the crowds moved to our waiting busses and dissolved into nothingness. "Come on, sweetie. It's time to go." He said, ten paces off. "You mean we're done?" I whined. It can't be over. It only lasted a second. I didn't want it to end and stood stubbornly for a moment, grieving the event's passing. I closed my eyes and wished so hard that I could place myself back onto that twilight zone.
But just like that perfect lucid dream state... I can't go back and will spend the next 18-month long day wishing my way toward that next accidental rift in space as it streams across us once again.
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