Been planning this trip for over fifteen years.
We only managed to convince one of the kids to go - my daughter - and brought my son in law and their son as well. Staged for Sunday night in Savannah, GA, and headed out early Monday morning.
Did a lot of analysis work on traffic, weather, climate, etc... months ago, had everything prepared and ready to rock. Built a sun funnel for the Transit of Venus in 2012, and was able to use it for this event (remember that?
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=8667 ). The sun funnel really worked out, actually. The whole group was able to watch it safely and without glasses. We had enough pairs of eclipse glasses, but trying to convince a 3-year-old to only look at the sun with the glasses on was a little tricky... but looking at the sun funnel was a piece of cake.
https://eclipse2017.nasa.gov/make-sun-funnel We drove to Cross Hill, South Carolina. Planned a great route that would keep us from seeing any traffic - and boy did that ever work! I don't think we saw five cars total on some of those back, back, back roads. Very nice little town. 600 people, three streets. Stopped at a little church, where probably a hundred other people were.
From first contact until maybe 50%, the skies were dotted with clouds but visibility was good. At 50%, we hit a big ol' cloud that obscured vision until down in the 20% range, and then the clouds stayed away after that.
Actual totality was perfect. Just perfect. Everyone turned into raving lunatics. I heard someone screaming and yelling near me, and then realized it was me. Darkness fell swiftly. We managed to see shadow bands, which are pretty rare, apparently.
https://www.thrillist.com/news/nation/s ... nds-snakesGoing from 99.9% to actual totality is a world of difference. The whole crowd was whooping and hollering and gasping. After the excitement died down, everything got completely silent (except the crickets). Birds went to roost, crickets started chirping. Parking lot lights came on. Temperature dropped ~10 degrees. Even the clouds seemed like they deflated. You could see Venus, and some stars. The horizon, 360 degrees around, was like a deep sunset. The rest of the sky was the deepest possible midnight blue. And that orb in the sky, a perfect black disk surrounded by white haze, looked like it was about 30 feet off the ground.
The pictures don't do totality justice; none of them I've seen anywhere have done it. A total solar eclipse is
10000x better than any picture on any website.
The drive home was awful. We had to stop in Orlando to drop someone off, so I thought we'd at least make it to there before sunrise. Instead, after 8 hours of driving in South Carolina at 5mph, we called it a night and waited out the traffic. I-26 and I-95, as well as many side roads, were just jam packed with the most people I've ever seen.