As long -lens photographers, in St. Andrews, along with Water Street on the coast of Pasmquaudi Bay -in the sea, New Breanswick, Canada, they all talked the same talk on their LCD screen. Not an adopted sunrise, but a herd against a red dawn
The low horizon, across the bay, began to shine as a sunrise, the unirrigated community of L’Etete. It was low tide, and stunning colors were reflected in puddle in the Gulf. Then, it was time The Sun Being present. Astronomy writer and photographer said, “We could only see trees light up like small horns, and the sky was getting lighter.” Allen dyer“I felt that we were going to see it burning through the cloud – and then it just faded.”
Eclipse chaser, photographer, and astronomers landed on this historic seaside city, knowing that the clear vision over the water would maximize the view. Unlike an eclipse in the afternoon, where the sun is high and powerful, this phenomenon offered an unusual opportunity to see the Earth’s most thick atmospheric layers on the horizon, to see refracted solar horns.
For those properly deployed along the sunrise line, the Sun was to get up as a ‘smiley face’, which was with horizontally chicken oriented. This alignment rarely saw on the ground, making St. Andrews a prominent place for the eclipse chaser after a rare vision.
There was no such vision. For delegates Akash Experience II In the Algonquin resort in this seaside city of the South -West New Breanswick, it was a bitter disappointment, but in the day, not an unexpected. We were ready to rise at the ADT at 7:15 am, while 86% of the eclipse, in the north of the east, was slightly north. Almost the cloud cover was covered in almost the entire sky, the horizon was clear in the north -west and north – and almost around the sunrise point. We missed seeing some stunning from a few degrees.
Whenever I come in an eclipse, I feel like a journey in someone else’s big event. After all, where you live, a unique view of an eclipse from where you live is really rare and unique. For people organizing this incident – especially in Justate Astroturism expert Stephen Picard Cliff Valley Astronomy – It was difficult to remember the scene of this eclipse. “We were so close,” he said, crestfollen after the eclipse. “The horizon was lighting.” Was I sad for her and the community? Yes, of course – but maybe not as much as I can. Finally, exactly one lunar year ago (12 classes of Earth Moon), The region enjoyed a three -minute totality during a clearly clear clan. Solar eclipseTu
In addition, Picard had ensured that it would be a memorable experience, no matter the weather. “Astronomy involves watching objects beyond the horizon, while Astroism focuses on creating a unique experience within the horizon,” he said during a lecture that day later. By that end, Picard has invited members of the indigenous community to participate and share in stories – and much more.
Cloud-outs about half an hour before sunrise, while the horizon was bright orange, two elderly-concentrations of beaver clan and Synthia Sewell-Le Smuding were performed in the MI’GMAQ community in the Pubinue First Nation, a function in which a song was welcomed after the burns. The song entered a crowd of eclipse Chaser, while birds barking the herd and some passing dogs. Constance Sewal said, “For us, eclipse is like a renovation, a restart and an imbalance in our life and the world,” noted how differently it was for the total solar eclipse of April 8, 2024, which he had also experienced. “I was surprised this morning. The birds were flying around, and the dogs were reacting – but in the last eclipse, the total was quiet.”
So why did we go to St. Andrews, and why did we live? “Locations are required to gather people. We can go on some random road between New Breanswick and inspect alone, but it’s not fun,” said Royal Astronomical Society of Canada (RASC) Executive Director Jenna Hinds after the eclipse. He blew up from Toronto to Rasc to be with others. “We wanted to see the eclipse together.”
For St. Andrews and New Brearswick, the next partial solar eclipse will be here on August 12, 2026, when the sun of 26% eclipse after lunch will appear above the Gulf of Funi. The next total solar eclipse is not until 1 May, 2079, when a partial eclipse will begin in the exact moment of sunrise and will be constructed for the totality lasting 1 minute 32 seconds.