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Fleeting Darkness in the Land Down Under

By Dennis di Cicco, Senior Editor, Sky & Telescope                 

   
 

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    Ask eclipse chasers to fantasize about the "perfect" solar eclipse, and you'll hear stories of 7-minute-long totalities with the Sun overhead in crystalline skies. So with last December's eclipse lasting barely 2 minutes, it wasn't a likely candidate for anyone's top 10 list. But eclipse travel is more than just seeing eclipses; it's also a chance to explore exotic lands. And in that regard December's event more than made up for a shorter-than-average totality.

    With the narrow eclipse track beginning in the South Atlantic, crossing southern Africa, and sweeping over the Indian Ocean before ending shortly after making landfall in Australia, December's eclipse offered several exciting observing venues. TravelQuest International and Sky & Telescope took advantage of this and organized three
 

Photo by Alex McConahay

separate tours, including one headed to game reserves in South Africa, another offering extended sightseeing in Africa and eclipse viewing from aboard the Marco Polo, and one to Australia.
 
    As participants began signing up for the tours, the disproportionate numbers selecting Australia intrigued me. Roughly half the participants on our three tours picked Australia, as did the majority of those venturing to the eclipse by any means. Since totality in Africa was three times longer than in Australia with the Sun much higher in the sky, I figured the attraction for Australia was mainly the sightseeing. And while that was the case for some, I was soon to learn that it was not the only reason.

    Our adventure began in Sydney with tours of the city, suburbs, and renowned Bondi Beach, as well as a luncheon cruise of famed Sydney Harbour. Many in our group used some of their free time to visit historic Sydney Observatory 
 

Photo by Dan Hurley

on a hill overlooking the harbor. Beautifully restored, the main building features many fascinating exhibits and one of the world's few functioning time balls. In the days before modern communication, time balls were a way of visually marking time so that clocks, and especially ship's chronometers, could be set accurately. Each day the ball, large enough to be visible from great distances, would be raised on its central column and dropped to mark the precise start of an hour, typically noon.
 
 
Bondi Beach
Photo by Doris Hill  

Photo by Bob Stephens

 
    From Sydney we were off to Cairns on the northeast coast of Queensland, gateway to the Great Barrier Reef. One highlight of our stay in this tropical setting was a visit to the nearby mountain village of Kuranda and a 7.5-kilometer (3.5-mile) "Skyrail" trip on cable cars above a tropical rain forest. Another was a daylong snorkeling and diving excursion to the reef aboard the Quicksilver high-speed catamaran. Even for novice snorklers such as myself, it was one of the most outstanding aspects of the trip, and one not soon to be forgotten.

    A day of travel took us from Cairns via Adelaide to our eclipse-staging area at Parachilna, in the Outback of South Australia. As a "town" with a full-time population
 

Photo by Carter Roberts

that numbers in the single digits, Parachilna might seem an unlikely spot for a hotel, but the nearby Flinders Ranges is one of the Outback's most popular tourist destinations. With a lively bar and award-winning cuisine that includes kangaroo, camel, and emu (I'm not making this up), the Prairie Hotel provided some of the most memorable accommodations during our trip. There was also the spectacular Outback sky at night, with rich offerings for everyone, whether they observed with the naked eye or any of several telescopes set up by tour participants.
 
 
Photo by Carter Roberts  

Photo by Dan Hurley

   
   
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  Copyright  2007 TravelQuest International.  All rights reserved.   800-830-1998
Revised: January 06, 2007.

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