Many of you on the Avlaon awoke to a “surprise” dose of snow overnight. To be honest I didn’t look at the forecast very closely yesterday but from what I did look it, nothing showed this much snow overnight. This winter just doesn’t want to go without giving up a fight it seems!Radar imagery suggests the snow is moving back offshore, and short-range forecasts indicate that it will continue as well. Some areas of the Southern Shore may see the snow sticking around into the early afternoon.
Short-range computer guidance continues to indicate that a large swath of western, southern, interior, central, and eastern Newfoundland will have a very good chance of seeing a period of clear clear skies around the time of our eclipse today. The partial eclipse starts around 4 and ends around 6. The total eclipse will be for a few minutes, around 5:12 to 5:15, depending on where you are on the Island. Under totality, it will get completely dark as the moon fully transits the sun.
During totality, the Sun’s corona will be visible on the outside of the moon’s shadow. If you’re watching an eclipse, this is the ONLY time you can look at it without eye protection. Before and after this, and if you’re in an area only seeing a partial eclipse, you must view it with eye protection. Keep in mind the sun has no more power today than it does on a normal day. But you cannot look at the sun with your naked eye and see this. The sun is too bright and it WILL damage your eyes.
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