I have a friend heading to Texas because there is a lower chance for cloud cover. Cities along the route in Texas are almost sold out.
![Image](https://science.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/eclipse-map-2024-1920-1.png?w=768&format=webp)
I'm sorely tempted to just hop in the car and drive through an affected area.
"I have really good eyes, really good....incredible, some say, in fact my doctor says they are the best he's ever come across. Completely amazed, says I have the eyesight of a 20 year old. Never seen that before. Really an incredible thing. Says I could look at bright lights all day, nothing stopping these peepers."
Thinking about this flight. I wonder what it will really look like. Will it be just like a normal night-time flight, or will there be a weird sense that you're flying in the shadow, and see darkness below, but looking off to the left or right side of the plane would you still be able to see where the sun still illuminates the earth? Seems like at 39,000 ft you can see a few hundred miles off to each side.km1125 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:27 pmhttps://www.wxyz.com/news/delta-adds-sp ... ar-eclipse
Delta adds special flight from Austin to Detroit in path of totality for total solar eclipse