Difference between revisions of "2023-10-14 40 -116"

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(Achievements)
 
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And DON'T FORGET to add your expedition and the best photo you took to the gallery on the Main Page! We'd love to read your report, but that means we first have to discover it! :)
 
And DON'T FORGET to add your expedition and the best photo you took to the gallery on the Main Page! We'd love to read your report, but that means we first have to discover it! :)
 
-->{{meetup graticule  
 
-->{{meetup graticule  
| lat={{#explode:{{SUBPAGENAME}}| |1}}
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| lat=40
| lon={{#explode:{{SUBPAGENAME}}| |2}}
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| lon=-116
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| date=2023-10-14
 
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== Location ==
 
== Location ==
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At sunrise, I grabbed my eclipse-watchin' glasses and hiked the 1.5 km in to the hashpoint, which was another of the semi-desert landscapes that I've been exploring a lot on this trip.  I was about a half-hour early for the eclipse, so I got in touch with nature by getting out my phone and playing Wordle, Waffle, Worldle, and so on.   
 
At sunrise, I grabbed my eclipse-watchin' glasses and hiked the 1.5 km in to the hashpoint, which was another of the semi-desert landscapes that I've been exploring a lot on this trip.  I was about a half-hour early for the eclipse, so I got in touch with nature by getting out my phone and playing Wordle, Waffle, Worldle, and so on.   
  
Despite the desert landscape, it was a pretty cloudy morning and actually rained for a while.  But, by the time the full eclipse came along, there were enough intermittent cloud breaks that I got a pretty good view of the action, sometimes through the filter glasses and sometimes through the clouds.  By the way, although the photos make it look like an orange fire in a black sky, it turns out that daylight is pretty much daylight in a full annular eclipse.  The light is... a bit dimmed, and kind of weird-looking, but if you were busy with something else it would be entirely possible to go through it without ever noticing that anything unusual was happening.
+
Despite the desert landscape, it was a pretty cloudy morning and actually rained for a while.  But, by the time the full eclipse came along, there were enough intermittent cloud breaks that I got a pretty good view of the action, sometimes through the filter glasses and sometimes through the clouds.  By the way, although the photos make it look like an orange fire in a black sky, but that's just the filter talking.  It turns out that daylight is pretty much daylight in a full annular eclipse.  The light is... a bit dimmed, and kind of weird-looking, but if you were busy with something else it would be entirely possible to go through it without ever noticing that anything unusual was happening.
  
 
== Photos ==  
 
== Photos ==  
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== Achievements ==
 
== Achievements ==
 
{{#vardefine:ribbonwidth|100%}}
 
{{#vardefine:ribbonwidth|100%}}
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{{Graticule unlocked
  
 
     | latitude = 40
 
     | latitude = 40
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__NOTOC__
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{{Eclipse
<!-- =============== USEFUL CATEGORIES FOLLOW ================
 
Delete the next line ONLY if you have chosen the appropriate categories below. If you are unsure, don't worry. People will read your report and help you with the classification. -->
 
[[Category:New report]]
 
  
<!-- ==REQUEST FOR TWITTER BOT== Please leave either the New report or the Expedition planning category in as long as you work on it. This helps the twitter bot a lot with announcing the right outcome at the right moment. -->
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    | latitude = 40
 +
    | longitude = -116
 +
    | date = 2023-10-14
 +
    | subtype = annular
 +
    | type = solar
 +
    | name = Michael5000
 +
    | image = 2023-10-14 40 -116 g.jpg
  
<!-- Potential categories. Please include all the ones appropriate to your expedition -->
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}}
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[[Category:Expedition planning]]
 
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[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 
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--><!-- or if you failed :(
 
[[Category:Coordinates not reached]]
 
-- and a reason --
 
When there is a natural obstacle between you and the target:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Mother Nature]]
 
 
 
When there is a man-made obstacle between you and the target:
 
[[Category:Not reached - No public access]]
 
 
 
When you failed get your GPS, car, bike or such to work:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Technology]]
 
   
 
When you went to an alternate location instead of the actual geohash:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Attended alternate location]]
 
 
 
(Don't forget to delete this final close comment marker) -->
 

Latest revision as of 02:47, 23 December 2024

Sat 14 Oct 2023 in 40,-116:
40.5873906, -116.9453599
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox

Location

Just south of Battle Mountain, Nevada.

Participants

Michael5000

Expedition

After the debacle at 2023-10-13 40 -111, I got some coffee in Heber City, found I-80 in Parkdale, stopped for a short run in Salt Lake City, stopped again for a short bike ride at Knolls in the Great Salt Flat, and refueled myself and the vehicle at nightfall in Wendover, at the Nevada-Utah state line.

From there, I continued for an hour or two until I got to Elko, where I found a dark residential street, put down the seat back, got out my blanket, and slept a couple of hours in the car. Waking at 2 a.m., I felt pretty alert, so I drove another hour to Battle Mountain and then a few miles south to the entry point for the hashpoint. I parked at the side of the country road, and then got another two or three hours of sleep.

At sunrise, I grabbed my eclipse-watchin' glasses and hiked the 1.5 km in to the hashpoint, which was another of the semi-desert landscapes that I've been exploring a lot on this trip. I was about a half-hour early for the eclipse, so I got in touch with nature by getting out my phone and playing Wordle, Waffle, Worldle, and so on.

Despite the desert landscape, it was a pretty cloudy morning and actually rained for a while. But, by the time the full eclipse came along, there were enough intermittent cloud breaks that I got a pretty good view of the action, sometimes through the filter glasses and sometimes through the clouds. By the way, although the photos make it look like an orange fire in a black sky, but that's just the filter talking. It turns out that daylight is pretty much daylight in a full annular eclipse. The light is... a bit dimmed, and kind of weird-looking, but if you were busy with something else it would be entirely possible to go through it without ever noticing that anything unusual was happening.

Photos

Achievements

Graticule unlocked.png
Michael5000 earned the Graticule Unlocked Achievement
by being the first to reach any hashpoint in the (40, -116) graticule, here, on 2023-10-14.
Eclipse.png
Michael5000 achieved level 3 of the Eclipse achievement
by observing an annular solar eclipse at the (40, -116) geohash on 2023-10-14.
2023-10-14 40 -116 g.jpg