Getting ready for four minutes of totality |
We could have
attended other rallies, and the weather getting there in late March can be
dicey (it was), and the odds of a clear day in Greenville weren’t that good
either. But the campground at the fairgrounds had full hookups, it was close to
the Airstream factory and three major museums: Armstrong Aerospace, the Wright
Brothers, and the HUGE US Airforce which featured three Air Force Ones. Photos of those places are in the photo link below.
Marcelene, MO, the hometown of Walt and Roy Disney. |
Willa Cather's hometown. After the museum we downloaded 'O Pioneers, which perfectly described the countryside we were driving through |
Ten days later
we arrived. The sky cleared and we got a
magnificent four minutes of totality to the tune of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon playing on someone's boom box. Unlike the Central Oregon one, we didn’t
have hills and coniferous trees blocking the 360° view of twilight that seemed
to last forever. Definitely worth the trip!
The amazing 360° dusk |
This time sequence and the two dusk photos above are courtesy of fellow Airstreamer Walter Lundahl from northern Ohio |
Our trip home was longer, but not long enough. We would have loved to have driven all the way from Nashville to Natchez, MS on the 404-mile Natchez Trace Scenic Parkway (see photo link) and spend more time in Utah. But we had commitments back home.
Capitol Reef NP. Europe has nothing like this! |
One other surprise was how full the National Parks in Utah were. Most campgrounds had been booked months earlier, many by foreign tourists renting RVs. We can’t blame them—Europe has nothing like the desert SW.
"What We Can, While We Can."
"What We Could While We Could."
Last evening of spring from our deck |
First road bike ride of summer to the hills of Polk County from the old Willamette River RR bridge in Salem |