Viewing party of one
For three hours Monday, the Lewiston Public Library ran a projector with NASA’s livestream coverage of the eclipse as it crept across the country.
With the time almost here, it had one taker, sitting alone in the cool, dark room.
She’d been there an hour. The woman, who declined to give her name, had seen plenty of posts online about how to make your own eclipse viewer. This seemed safer, she said.
As 2:45 p.m. approached, coverage of Charleston, South Carolina, covered the screen, that city moments from totality.
Excited crowds there cheered. Almost.
Blink.
Out.
“Impressive,” she said. “It’s hard to describe, something like this. It’s awesome and beautiful in its way.”
— Kathryn Skelton
Homemade lens draws beachgoers
At Kineowatha Park in Wilton, Georgette Starnes was reading a book while her grandson, Brendan, swam in Wilson Lake. She had tried to find a program in her hometown of Jay to attend, but the library was closed. They had made a makeshift projection screen at home but her husband, Dale Starnes, had called 20 minutes ago to say he had put two welding lenses together to view the eclipse and was on his way.
“I took advantage of the two events while my daughter works,” Georgette said. “It’s a gorgeous day. This is just fabulous.”
When Dale arrived, several beachgoers took turns looking through his lenses while Brendan made his way from the water.
“If this was a total eclipse, you might not see it. I used a Safety Number (SN) 9 and a SN 10, which is more than the SN 5 and SN 11 the internet said is needed to protect the eyes. It’s not linear — nine plus nine doesn’t equal 18,” Dale said.
As he looked through the lenses, Brendan exclaimed, “The world is all black!”
“It’s already changed,” Dale said when he looked again.
— Pam Harnden
The verdict in Auburn: ‘Super cool’
When the moon covered as much of the sun as it would Monday, 9-year-old Dominic Rainey sat in a chair on the lawn in front of the Auburn Public Library, his attention focused entirely on the book his hands, “Diary of a Wimpy Kid.”
But Rainey, who lives in Sabattus, wasn’t oblivious to the show overhead.
It’s just that he’d already looked up enough to determine that it was both great and “pretty cool.”
Rainey confessed, though, that his mom “dragged me here” to the viewing party at the library against his will. But, he said, he’s glad she did.
Rainey was one of about 50 people who gathered in little groups to gawk at the sun through all sorts of items that aimed to make it safe enough to see, from a little square of very dark glass to an Amazon box.
Matt Jones of Auburn watched the moon block out part of the sun through the box he’d taped up, putting holes through it so he could look at the sun’s reflection on a sheet of white paper.
“It’s super cool,” he said.
All around, people were nibbling on whoopie pies handed out to anyone who looked eager enough, capturing the circular nature of the celestial event overhead but containing quite a bit more calories.
George Stanley of Greene, wearing a T-shirt that bragged he was “literally the most awesome person in the universe,” looked upward in appreciation at the moment someone described as totality. It was closer to partiality because only three-fifths of the sun was obscured by the moon at 2:45 p.m.
Many of those who came were sitting and staring toward the heavens through little cardboard glasses with specially made lenses that were so dark that nothing could be seen through them except the sun.
“It’s amazing how small it’s gotten,” Jamie Pratt of Auburn said. She said it looked wonderful but she had suspected the sky would wind up darker than it actually was.
Bethany Merrill, also of Auburn, said the children had looked forward to the eclipse for a week. They didn’t know what to expect, she said.
But they echoed the verdict of many.
“Pretty cool,” Merrill summarized for them.
— Steve Collins
‘Classic solar view boxes’ from Ralph’s store used to view eclipse
MEXICO — Five Boy Scouts from Troop 580 in Rumford, their families and Scoutmaster Richard Masterson gathered at the Mexico Recreation Park an hour before the eclipse Monday to prepare cardboard boxes to view the rare spectacle in the sky.
There weren’t any eclipse-viewing glasses left in the area, Masterson said, so he got the boxes at his employer, Ralph’s Store-Deli in Rumford.
The eclipse occurs when the moon covers the sun, Connor Halacy, 11, said while working on his classic eclipse-viewing box.
After making the boxes and peering into them to see the white crescent-shaped reflection of the eclipse, the boys watched their scoutmaster try using some other items that weren’t quite as successful in producing the reflection — a colander and a binocular lens.
Scouts viewing the eclipse were Halacy, 11; Miles Smith, 10; Brandon Albanesi, 10; Shaun Child, 14; and Jacob True, 16.
Each scout will earn his Solar Eclipse 2017 patch after watching a clip about the eclipse and viewing it, Masterson said.
— Marianne Hutchinson
Hazy but very cool
FARMINGTON — Joshua Stinchfield stopped work for a moment and gazed through his special glasses to see a partially covered sun on Monday afternoon.
“It (the eclipse) has been built up for weeks,” he said. “We don’t get to see this all the time, so it was worth purchasing glasses.”
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