I missed my chance to see the 2017 eclipse. The totality centerline was within 400 nm of my home, so it was kind of dumb not to make the minimal effort it would have taken. I thought for sure I'd miss the chance to see this one, too, and have to wait 20 years for the next eclipse to come to me. I started out last January thinking that I should book a hotel or AirBnB in Niagara Falls. I ended up not doing that, and I'm glad I didn't given the stories I've heard about reservations getting cancelled for spurious reasons (all because the profiteers didn't plan ahead like their reserved guests did) although my main reasons were lack of buy-in from my family to meet up there and the relative likelihood of cloud cover in that location.
As it was, I just barely got a plan scraped together at the last minute and departed on the first leg of the flight to see the eclipse on Thursday morning with about a 50-50 chance of scrubbing and just going home after my meeting that day. We finally got back in the air around 5:00 p.m. and had to play a bit of an escape room game to get to our lodging 8 hours later. We repositioned a couple days later to stay with family slightly closer to the eclipse path without imposing on them quite so long. And then, yesterday, called for my IFR clearance and departed into a wild adventure dodging storms. We didn't get to the centerline, but made it comfortably into the totality band and out of the clouds in time for the show. A helpful controller at Little Rock (who, after I thanked him for letting us fly the wrong direction for 10 minutes, said he stepped out and got to see the eclipse as well) and a healthy altitude a couple miles up gave us a great show.
We stopped two more times for fuel and food along the way home and dodged some more weather (snow this time) for a landing just before 3:00 a.m. Then I had to get up and drive a couple hours for a meeting at 9:00 a.m. today. I would be exhausted even without the 2,560 nm of flying (not counting diversions) that added 19.9 hours, 2.0 IMC, and 8.1 night to my logbook. I won't mention which FBO outside but near the path of totality had let some very discourteous person take the courtesy car for a 3-hour drive to a "fly-out" event to see the eclipse, but I hope he at least had the excuse of his plane having blown an engine that exact morning.
I have no basis for comparison with viewing from the ground. But watching from the air was awesome. Even in our plane 2 miles up, it got markedly cooler during totality. As the moon swept over the sun, the lighting and colors started to feel very wrong. Totality was awesome. If any of my pictures turn out, I'll try to post them here.
This was not an easy trip and the outcome was in doubt until the sunlight began to dim. But I would do it all again in a heartbeat.