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Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Why I watched the solar eclipse with my kids, a goose and 2,000 trees

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Hamilton, Ontario — After a nail-biting week of “mostly cloudy” forecasts, the bright sun finally emerged over Hamilton’s Royal Botanical Gardens (RBG) just in time for the moon to take a bite out of its side.

The first partial phase of the April 8 total solar eclipse had just begun. A crowd of roughly 100 eclipse chasers, including many young families, had gathered for a viewing event in the garden’s arboretum — a rambling, hilly sanctuary of more than 2,200 trees perched above the western tip of Lake Ontario. Solar eclipse glasses in hand, all were hoping for the rare chance to see totality, the fleeting moment when the sun’s disk is entirely blocked by the moon and daylight is engulfed by sudden darkness. 

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