Hank S
En-Route
Speaking of totality
"Totality" or like "totally" dude . . . . .
Speaking of totality
Maybe one can refresh the 'night currency' during the eclipse? Save the adult beverages until later.
Even Guernsey, WY is booking...translation: ain't no hope.
I'm planning to drive to be in the totality, that way if the world ends at least I'll have a car.
I won't be in the I 25 cooridor. I've driven it too many times. Wadworth north, ft Collins, laramie, Rawlins, Casper. Easy-peasyGo early. CDOT says I-25 northbound usually handles 86,000 cars a day. They're expecting 600,000 vehicles headed up into Wyoming. They think the I-25 corridor will see something near 400,000.
We both know those numbers won't work.
Here's a sectional view: http://wms.chartbundle.com/charts/eclipse
In Oregon, Madras has been booked up for months.
You don't think they're overestimating the number of people that will give enough of a crap to relocate to see it. I suspect many living in the path won't get off the couch to walk outside.Go early. CDOT says I-25 northbound usually handles 86,000 cars a day. They're expecting 600,000 vehicles headed up into Wyoming. They think the I-25 corridor will see something near 400,000.
We both know those numbers won't work.
You don't think they're overestimating the number of people that will give enough of a crap to relocate to see it. I suspect many living in the path won't get off the couch to walk outside.
I'm not sure I follow your math. The total population of Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado comes up to 14.5 million people. Even if all 600,000 cars on I-25 were single-occupant, that's 4% of the total population. Front range is supposedly 70% of Colorado population, call it 3.9 million people, of which 600,000 comes to a little over 15%. If those cars average 2.5 people per car, you're talking almost 39% of the front range population. I don't think that's an unreasonably high estimate, but it's not 0.5%.Probably not. Their estimate is only 0.5% of the humans living in just the Front Range, let alone anyone traveling into Colorado from the south, headed north, who wants to be in the path of the totality.
There's other ways to get through CO up into WY, but I-25 is the only north-south Interstate highway from the east side of the Rockies until you get to the other side of Kansas. West of here the next one is through Salt Lake... this isn't the east coast. Clark's route he mentioned is not the obvious route for most folks.
I suspect their estimate is low. A small percentage of every State south of us, from the desert southwest north? That's a lot of people.
Highway is built for (and regularly jammed at) 80,000 per day north of Denver, according to CDOT. 0.5% of the Front Range's population planning to go see it, doesn't seem like an out of whack estimate at all.
As far as seeing the eclipse, all my dreams are getting crushed here. I was going to fly to Casper, watch the world get dark, then continue to Cheyenne for Joe Bonamassa's concert that night. But Casper apparently won't allow me to land. Then I was thinking about flying to maybe Rapid City and renting a car to get to Alliance, but if the Alliance airport is already full I am sure the roads won't fare much better and I'd want to drive in a few days ahead of time.
Fly to Laramie, rent a car. Plenty of hotel space and can still make the concert. Or fly to Rock Springs, or fly to Rawlins. Okay, car rental in Rawlins is a little tougher but there is a used car dealer who will rent cars. If you do go to Rawlins use my rule that you don't leave Rawlins without a full tank of gas. I understand that Coyotes need food too but that is no reason to violate my rule.I'm not sure I follow your math. The total population of Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado comes up to 14.5 million people. Even if all 600,000 cars on I-25 were single-occupant, that's 4% of the total population. Front range is supposedly 70% of Colorado population, call it 3.9 million people, of which 600,000 comes to a little over 15%. If those cars average 2.5 people per car, you're talking almost 39% of the front range population. I don't think that's an unreasonably high estimate, but it's not 0.5%.
As far as seeing the eclipse, all my dreams are getting crushed here. I was going to fly to Casper, watch the world get dark, then continue to Cheyenne for Joe Bonamassa's concert that night. But Casper apparently won't allow me to land. Then I was thinking about flying to maybe Rapid City and renting a car to get to Alliance, but if the Alliance airport is already full I am sure the roads won't fare much better and I'd want to drive in a few days ahead of time.
I don't have any television broadcast channels, so I guess I'll just watch the eclipse on YouTube. May as well just check out a previous eclipse and save myself the waiting.
I'm not sure I follow your math. The total population of Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado comes up to 14.5 million people. Even if all 600,000 cars on I-25 were single-occupant, that's 4% of the total population. Front range is supposedly 70% of Colorado population, call it 3.9 million people, of which 600,000 comes to a little over 15%. If those cars average 2.5 people per car, you're talking almost 39% of the front range population. I don't think that's an unreasonably high estimate, but it's not 0.5%.
As far as seeing the eclipse, all my dreams are getting crushed here. I was going to fly to Casper, watch the world get dark, then continue to Cheyenne for Joe Bonamassa's concert that night. But Casper apparently won't allow me to land. Then I was thinking about flying to maybe Rapid City and renting a car to get to Alliance, but if the Alliance airport is already full I am sure the roads won't fare much better and I'd want to drive in a few days ahead of time.
I don't have any television broadcast channels, so I guess I'll just watch the eclipse on YouTube. May as well just check out a previous eclipse and save myself the waiting.
Don't much care about the sun being blocked by stuff. Orbits do that. Definitely not interested in the mass exodus and return.
Check out the lesser known airports not on the exact line but within 70 nm, which will experience the totality. There's Torrington (KTOR), Phifer (KEAN), Converse (KDGW) Lusk (KLSK) - give 'em a call.I'm not sure I follow your math. The total population of Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado comes up to 14.5 million people. Even if all 600,000 cars on I-25 were single-occupant, that's 4% of the total population. Front range is supposedly 70% of Colorado population, call it 3.9 million people, of which 600,000 comes to a little over 15%. If those cars average 2.5 people per car, you're talking almost 39% of the front range population. I don't think that's an unreasonably high estimate, but it's not 0.5%.
As far as seeing the eclipse, all my dreams are getting crushed here. I was going to fly to Casper, watch the world get dark, then continue to Cheyenne for Joe Bonamassa's concert that night. But Casper apparently won't allow me to land. Then I was thinking about flying to maybe Rapid City and renting a car to get to Alliance, but if the Alliance airport is already full I am sure the roads won't fare much better and I'd want to drive in a few days ahead of time.
I don't have any television broadcast channels, so I guess I'll just watch the eclipse on YouTube. May as well just check out a previous eclipse and save myself the waiting.
65 and 95 dollar parking places on Casper mountain. I imagine the hamburgers will be 20I'm wondering if anyone will try to sell $100 hamburgers.
Ahh take nap after eclipse then drive home at leisure. Map study last night revealed a route that avoids Rawlins and it involves several roads I haven't traveled before so will use it. Sure you don't want to go along or give the Dodge a backroads mission?
I'm wondering if someone will try to sell $100 hamburgers.
Are you saying that, for you, the nightly total eclipse when the Earth gets in the way of the sun is all the same as the kind where the Moon does the job? Maybe I should get on board with that and stay home without regrets!Oh BTW @iamtheari - I forgot to add, yes. I dicked up the math. LOL.
Still. A boatload of people planning to be on that highway and it isn't built for that.
I'll probably be home peeking in on the traffic cams to see if there's either one big traffic jam, or if the dire predictions were real. Either way, that's the fun part for me.
Don't much care about the sun being blocked by stuff. Orbits do that. Definitely not interested in the mass exodus and return.
Your later post predicting economically-misinformed complaints of price gouging makes me wonder how many will take the tollway and how many will just suffer on through the city.
I always thought that was a serious problem for CD in a real "the earth ends" scenario. They need robots.
Not too hard to manage **** that happens every night. LOL.
"Ermagherd! 1% of our local grid capacity is down!"
"Should we tell the natural gas peaker to spin up another turbine?"
"****, no. Are you kidding?"
Here's a sectional view: http://wms.chartbundle.com/charts/eclipse
In Oregon, Madras has been booked up for months.
Looking for the fine print that says, "Not to scale."I'm wondering if someone will try to sell $100 hamburgers.
Anyone flying out to get this view?
Stay indoors on the 21st, and your world view won't be challenged.
We decided to do Fireball shots during max eclipse.
FDC 7/9994 ZDC AIRSPACE WI 30 NM OF A LINE FROM PACIFIC CITY OR. TO GEORGETOWN SC. TEMPORARY FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS WI AN AREA BOUNDED BY 454209N/1240906W (ASTORIA VOR/DME AST16627.7) TO 323904N/0755009W (GRAND STRAND VOR/DME CRE22011.3) TO 325200N/0793703W (CHARLESTON VOR/DME CHS10021.5) TO 444209N/1240906W (NEWPORT VOR/DME ONP34507.8) TO BACK TO THE ORIGINAL POINT SFC-18000FT. EFFECTIVE 1708211700 UTC UNTIL 1708211900 UTC. TO PROVIDE A SAFE ENVIRONMENT FOR ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATION BALLOON ACTIVITY. PURSUANT TO 14 CFR SECTION 91.137(A)(2) TEMPORARY FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS ARE IN EFFECT. ALL AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS ARE PROHIBITED EXCEPT FOR: APPROVED LAW ENFORCEMENT, MILITARY AND UNITED STATES AIRCRAFT DIRECTLY SUPPORTING THE NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION (NOAA) APPROVED AIR AMBULANCE FLIGHTS, AND REGULARLY SCHEDULED COMMERCIAL PASSENGER AND ALL-CARGO CARRIERS OPERATING UNDER ONE OF THE FOLLOWING TSA-APPROVED STANDARD SECURITY PROGRAMS/PROCEDURES: AIRCRAFT OPERATOR STANDARD SECURITY PROGRAM (AOSSP), FULL ALL-CARGO AIRCRAFT OPERATOR STANDARD SECURITY PROGRAM (FACAOSSP), MODEL SECURITY PROGRAM (MSP), TWELVE FIVE STANDARD SECURITY PROGRAM (TFSSP) ALL CARGO, OR ALL-CARGO INTERNATIONAL SECURITY PROCEDURE (ACISP) AND ARE ARRIVING INTO AND/OR DEPARTING FROM 14 CFR PART 139 AIRPORTS. ALL EMERGENCY/LIFE SAVING FLIGHT (MEDICAL/LAW ENFORCEMENT/FIREFIGHTING) OPERATIONS MUST COORDINATE WITH ATC PRIOR TO THEIR DEPARTURE AT 313-234-5789 TO AVOID POTENTIAL DELAYS. JENNY TUTONE TELEPHONE 816-867-5309 IS IN CHARGE OF THE OPERATION. WASHINGTON ARTCC (ZDC) 202-234-5789 IS THE FAA COORDINATION FACILITY. EFFECTIVE 1708211700 UTC UNTIL 1708211900 UTC.
Is that bogus(and/or a joke)?, I see:Y'all have fun out there!!