We Flew a Plane to Go See the Solar Eclipse
Over the weekend, millions of Americans crowded into the narrow celestial interstate from Oregon to South Carolina known as the “path of totality,” where a total solar eclipse appeared briefly on Monday. From Washington, D.C., it would have been about an eight-hour drive one way to get to the closest point along that path. We wanted to cover the total eclipse in person, but we didn’t want to drive. So we decided to fly — ourselves.
On Monday morning, White House Correspondent Zeke Miller, a pilot since 2014, piloted TIME Force One — a Cessna 172 Skyhawk we rented for the occasion — from the Leesburg Executive Airport to the Greenville Downtown Airport in South Carolina. Chris Wilson, TIME’s director of data journalism, was aboard for the ride to help document the journey. We’re updating this post with photos and tweets from our trip to see the eclipse. In Greenville, the moon began covering the sun shortly after 1 p.m. and reached its moment of complete obscuration for about two minutes at 2:38 p.m. And yes, we had the appropriate glasses with which to view it.
NEXT: Watch the Whole Total Solar Eclipse in 4 Minutes
Follow our journey below.
#TIMEForceOne is locked and loaded #EclipseDay pic.twitter.com/PhZ3mJAtBK
— Chris Wilson (@chriswilsondc) August 21, 2017
Passing over Old Rag in #TIMEForceOne en route to SC #Eclipse2017 pic.twitter.com/N79YkG37dA
— Chris Wilson (@chriswilsondc) August 21, 2017
The eclipse will be visible in Oregon in just about an hour, I believe, as @ZekeJMiller and I approach the border of North Carolina
— Chris Wilson (@chriswilsondc) August 21, 2017
Flawless landing by @ZekeJMiller in Greenville pic.twitter.com/9iRG1mMg0A
— Chris Wilson (@chriswilsondc) August 21, 2017
Karl Sanders, who has worked at the Runway Cafe at the Greenville Downtown Airport for six years, told us this was by far the highest flight traffic he’s ever seen at the location.
Partial eclipse beginning here at the Greenville Downtown Airport (KGMU)
— Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) August 21, 2017
— Chris Wilson (@chriswilsondc) August 21, 2017
50% obscuration @TIME pic.twitter.com/FHW9xHgprl
— Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) August 21, 2017
Wow pic.twitter.com/Pe7O17eBi8
— Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) August 21, 2017
Eclipsed sun emerges from brief cloud cover. Note sunset-tint to clouds pic.twitter.com/l9HLbSWh13
— Chris Wilson (@chriswilsondc) August 21, 2017