“I have arrived in the path of totality!” Ian Kluft announced on Sunday afternoon after pulling into Mesquite from Portland, Oregon, a 2,000-mile (3,200-km) drive.
![Sarah Beauregard, owner of the Range Vintage Trailer Resort near Ennis, Texas, holds a T-shirt made for Sunday’s eclipse-watching event. Photo: AP](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2024/04/08/7db7edef-e698-4db4-9ebb-878a4fa8187b_b3ee84ec.jpg)
A total eclipse happens when the moon lines up perfectly between Earth and the sun, blotting out the sunlight. That means a little over four minutes of daytime darkness east of Dallas in Mesquite, where locals such as Jorge Martinez have the day off. The land surveyor plans to “witness history” from home with his wife and their three-year-old daughter, Nati.
“Hopefully, she’ll remember. She’s excited, too,” he said.
Near Ennis, Texas, to the south, the Range Vintage Trailer Resort was also packed, selling out of pitches more than a year ago.
“I booked it instantly, then I told my wife: ‘We’re going to Texas,’” Briton Chris Lomas said from the trailer resort on Sunday. Even if clouds obscure the covered-up sun, “it will still go dark. It’s just about sharing the experience with other people”, he said.
In Cleveland, the eclipse persuaded women’s Final Four fans Matt and Sheila Powell to stick around an extra day after Sunday’s game. But they were debating whether to begin their drive home to Missouri Valley, Iowa, early on Monday in search of clearer skies along the eclipse’s path. “We’re trying to be flexible,” Powell said.
Best places to see the 2024 Great American Eclipse and 2023 ‘ring of fire’
Best places to see the 2024 Great American Eclipse and 2023 ‘ring of fire’
Even the eclipse professionals were up in the air.
Eclipse mapmaker Michael Zeiler had a perfect record ahead of Monday, seeing 11 out of 11 total solar eclipses after successfully relocating three of those times at the last minute for better weather.
“We are the complete opposite of tornado chasers, always seeking clear skies,” Zeiler said in an email over the weekend. This time, though, he was staying put in Fredericksburg, Texas, with his family, 10 of them altogether, and holding onto “a considerable ray of hope.”
Further north, in Buffalo, New York, Jeff Sherman flew in from Somerville, Massachusetts, to catch his second total solar eclipse. After seeing the US coast-to-coast eclipse in 2017, “now I have to see any one that’s nearby”, he said.
Kluft also enjoyed clear skies for the 2017 eclipse, in Oregon, and rolled into Mesquite wearing the T-shirt from that big event. As for Monday’s cloudy forecast across Texas, “at least I’ll be around people who are like-minded”.
![The moon begins to fall below the sun’s horizon during an annular solar eclipse on October 14. Photo: Getty Images / TNS](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2024/04/08/eeb38081-2d49-490f-af74-df1a439790a0_83112958.jpg)
Dicey weather was also predicted almost all the way to Lake Erie, despite Sunday’s gorgeous weather. The only places promised clear skies along Monday’s narrow 115-mile-wide (185-km-wide) corridor of totality were New England and Canada.
Like everywhere else, the weather was the hot topic at the Buffalo Naval and Military Park on Sunday. By midmorning, volunteer Tom Villa already had greeted tourists from several states, as well as from Canada and Brazil.
“They hope it’s like this tomorrow, of course, but you know, the weather is the weather,” he said.