by Cudedog » Mon Mar 18, 2024 10:28 am
For those thinking about the eclipse. . .
I went to the eclipse that happened here on the west coast a couple of years back. . . I think it was in 2017. It was a bit of a drive for me (432 miles - Madras, Oregon).
At the very last minute I decided to go - I think it was only a week or so before it happened. I got very lucky after spending at least a full day searching for reservations - a state park that I had checked several times before suddenly had a vacancy, and I snapped it up.
It was a total eclipse, as I remember. Really astonishing and amazing, and I am, and always will be, glad beyond measure that I went. It was one of those life experiences not to be missed.
The traffic, however, was something else. For the afternoon after the eclipse I had made reservations at a campground about 35 - 40 miles north of Madras. The eclipse happened about 8:00 a.m., if I remember correctly, I figured a quick drive to the campground and then all day to relax.
Well. . . not so much.
It literally took me four hours to drive the thirty-five miles - on a two-lane road, bumper-to-bumper traffic the entire way. With a LOT of angry people, doing weird things with their driving in the crush. Middle-finger-pointing, fist shaking, cursing, honking, unsafe lane changes, near fender-benders - the works.
AGAIN: Four hours to drive thirty-five miles.
Luckily, I had no where to go, and all day to get there (except the campground, and I didn't need to be at the campground until late afternoon). The campground, when I finally got there, was in a low spot on the banks of the Deschutes river, and I could see the bridge over the river from my camping spot. The bumper-to-bumper traffic crossing the bridge was still going strong well past dark as headlights came on.
I was VERY glad to be out of it.
I was thankful that I had made a reservation at that particular place - my next destination was Mt. St. Helens volcano in Washington state. Which would have been an easy day's drive from Madras, usually. Definitely not on that day.
For any of you planning to go to the current coming eclipse, I suggest that you plan on staying overnight at the same spot wherever it is you plan to view the eclipse from.
If I had it to do over again, I would have stayed the rest of that day and following night right there in Madras.
Anne