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It was a dark and stormy night
(with apologies to Dracula)
by
Jim Low
copyright 1999

That really is how my story should start.

This year's adventure was a trip to Romania with the Toronto Centre of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, for the total eclipse of the sun of August 11th.

Of course, I use eclipse expeditions as an excuse to explore various exotic places of the world. Such trips never go as planned. There are always unexpected problems. One such problem became the highlight of our trip.

Having so much fun, we are, as usual, late in getting to our new destination: this time a hostel in the Carpathian mountains of Transylvania. It is a dark and stormy night of a new moon (it was just after the solar eclipse!) as our tour bus gets lost on a winding dirt road. Our loving bus --the one with the cracked windshield and broken front door that won't open -- has brakes that squeal and smoke at each hairpin turn. The working headlight gives a ghostly white appearance on the evergreen trees ahead of us, which suddenly turn black as the sky lights up with each lighting flash, every second or so. The scene appears as a positive and negative image alternating, as we look at it through the spider-web crack in the windshield. It becomes obvious where the inspiration of the Dracula stories came from. They are just stories, right? Right??

Just after midnight, we arrive at a building near the spot we were told our hostel was. It looks like a small deserted castle. No lights, and no other building in site. We are desperate, as we have been many hours on a bus with no washroom. Exploring, the men go off to mark their territories. The women, being more adventurous than men, find an open window in the darkened building. One woman crawls through and tries to open the front door, without luck. No one is home except for a couple of squatters. I'm not sure who is more surprised: the squatters or the women.

The women round up the scattered men and we continue to drive around another hairpin curve where we finally find our hostel -- in total darkness and visible only in the lightning flashes. A knock on the door, and a sleepy man, who could be mistaken for Dracula, answers. We found our hostel, but he was expecting us the previous day, and when we didn't show up, assumed we were not coming. But he finds room for most of us (a couple sleep on the floor). Next morning, one woman discovers what appears to be two mosquito bites on her ankle, about a centimetre apart. One fellow comments "Dracula is going fetish on us." Then, on Friday the 13th, we drive down the mountain in our bus with the same squealing and smoking brakes. We drove through Transylvania at night -- and lived to tell about it.

The eclipse? Oh, yes, we saw it in Bucharest, just before the storm moved in.

Jim Low



Weather Observations

during the
Total Solar Eclipse
Romania
1999 August 11
by Jim Low

Initially, we were set up at the primary site at Stafanesti. Weather observations were started at that location. Later, the decision to make a "run" to Buchaest was made, and there was a break in weather observations. We then set up at the sports stadium in Bucharest's, where full observations again began. While on the bus, attempts were made to observe sky cloud cover and sun obscuration.

Initially, observations were made with two thermometers: a digital, which recorded to the nearest tenth of a degree, and an analog, which had one degree markings and estimates were made to the nearest tenth of a degree. Later, Ted Bronson supplied a third digital themomenter which recorded temperature in degrees and relative humidity to the nearest percent.

All times are recorded in Coordinated Universal Time. Local civil time in Romania was three hours in advance of this time.

Temperatures are recorded in degrees celsius. All thermometers were shaded under a tripod covered with light towels, sitting on another light towel about 30cm above the ground. These thermometers were regular consumer thermometers, and accurance was not checked. The purpose was to record temperature changes during the eclipse.

Sky cloud cover is recorded in tenths, with 0 being no clouds, and 10 being total cloud cover. These are estimates made by eye.

Sun obscuration is recorded in fifths, with 0 being no obscuration at all, to 5 being total obscuration. These are estimates made by eye.

Time (UT)

Digital

Analog

Sky

Sun

Ted Bronson

Ted Bronson


C

C

10ths

5ths

C

% RH

From Stafanesti:







0420

25.2

23.2

8

5

-

-

0440

24.9

23

3

3

-

-

0500

25.4

24.7

4

3

-

-

0520

26

24.5

2

3

-

-

0540

26.5

25

3

3

-

-

0555

28

25.3

4

3

-

-

From Bucharest:







0940

33.1

32.8

6

5

-

-


(First contact)






0950

35.1

33.6

7

4

-

-

1000

38.3

35.8

7

3

-

-

1005

38.4

34.9

8

5

39

37

1010

37.4

33.4

7

4

37

38

1015

38.1

34.2

6

2

37

44

1020

37.6

34

6

2

36

44

1025

37

33.4

7

3

36

44

1030

35.7

32.6

6

3

35

44

1035

35.3

32.1

7

4

34

47

1040

34.3

31.6

6

4

33

46

1045

34

31.4

6

4

33

49

1050

33.7

30.9

5

2

32

51

1055

33.3

30.5

5

2

32

52

1100

32.7

29.9

6

2

31

55

1105

31.9

28.8

5

3

31

59


(TOTALITY)






1109

31.3

28.2

6

2

30

59

1110

31.2

28.2

6

3

30

61

1112

30.9

28

5

2

30

61

1115

30.8

28

5

1

30

62

1120

30.7

27.9

4

1

30

63

1125

31.1

28.4

3

1

30

66

1130

31.7

29

3

0

30

64

1135

32.4

29.5

2

0

30

65

1140

33

30.2

2

0

31

63

1145

33.7

30.9

3

0

31

65

1150

34

31.4

2

0

31

65

1155

34.3

31.6

2

0

31

60

1200

35.2

32.2

1

0

32

55

1210

36

32.8

1

0

33

58

1220

37.1

33.6

2

1

34

52


(Last contact)






1230

36.3

33.5

6

2

34

46

1235

36.4

33.5

8

5

35

41

1240

36.2

33.2

8

5

35

44

1245

36.1

33.1

8

5

35

44

1248

35.8

32.6

8

5

34

49




Notes: Temperature flucuations would be normal due to broken to scattered clouds covering the sun at irregular intervals. Temperature drop due to the eclipse appears to have been about 7 to 8 degrees, with lowest temperature being about 10 to 15 minutes after totality.

Just as the first diamond ring appeared, a roar could be heard from the crowds in the city. Venus was clearly visible during totality. A brilliant naked-eye prominence appeared about 15 seconds after totality began.


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