On Monday, April 8th, a Total Solar Eclipse passed over Mexico, North America, and Canada. One of our SDHS students, Kenny Smith, traveled over five hours to experience and photograph the event in complete totality.
Kenny, his mom, his sister, and his friend, Micah, all traveled to Evansville, Indiana. This was Kenny’s first travel through and to Kentucky and Indiana. They got themed snacks for their experience, Kenny said they got “Sun Chips, Starbursts, Moon Pies, Star Crunch cakes, and Eclipse gum.” Their journey consisted of a five and a half hour drive to and from their viewing site, an open and empty field. He “just had to see it” and specifically made the commute to view the eclipse. They drove up on Sunday, stayed the night, and watched the eclipse.
They chose Indiana because it was on the path of total totality. The eclipse in Indiana lasted from 12:45 p.m* to 2:05 p.m. Kenny began to take pictures at 2:02 p.m. and took his last one at 2:05 p.m.
Kenny checked out a school camera and used it to capture the eclipse. Here are a few of the photos Kenny took and edited:
Kenny said “it was just weird, I don’t know what else to say about it. It was insane, a lot bigger than I thought.”
*Times are written in central time