Coronavirus, Covid 19 Discussion and How It Has Affected Your Daily Life Chat Thread

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I might have to do that! Hahah and wow that’s amazing!! :eek: and they don’t get sick!?
If you stand at the equator, you're moving at about 30 km per second ... or roughly 67,000 mph. Everything else is moving at the same time, so you don't feel it. Check this cool site out to find a bit more info - including how to figure out the speed you, personally are travelling, based on where you are on Earth. It's pretty cool!
https://www.space.com/33527-how-fast-is-earth-moving.html
 
If you stand at the equator, you're moving at about 30 km per second ... or roughly 67,000 mph. Everything else is moving at the same time, so you don't feel it. Check this cool site out to find a bit more info - including how to figure out the speed you, personally are travelling, based on where you are on Earth. It's pretty cool!
https://www.space.com/33527-how-fast-is-earth-moving.html
That’s awesome!! Thanks! Also a bit complicated 😂🙈🙈🙈 the math part of it! But awesome! 😁
 
My Dad loved numbers, and always kept the day's time changes in his head all year, On any given day, you could ask him how much longer or shorter today was than yesterday - and he'd have your answer immediately. It was a fun game for us. Never once, in all my years, was I ever able to stump him. It was cool!
He also used the sun to teach us how to count into triple digits and do quick calculations in our heads. As soon as someone asked when Spring was, he'd send one of us for the Farmer's Almanac to look up the Vernal Equinox. We would then sit down at the kitchen table and count back from the "First Day of Spring." We actually numbered the calendar blocks in tiny numbers penciled into the lower corner. Once the calendar was up, we were all fair game. He would constantly ask us how many days it was 'til Spring. More often than not, we'd have to think back a few days to the last time he'd asked or picture the larger number on the next Sunday's block and do the math quickly in our heads. It was a matter of pride to not get caught out unawares!
We started the same game with my children as soon as they learned their numbers. They're nearly grown, now, and still "play" the game with me and each other. Daddy's been gone for a few weeks, now, at the ripe old age of 84, but I'm sure the game will live on for generations.
Rest in Peace, Daddy, and in case you were wondering, it's 89 Days 'til Spring. 🌷
What a wonderful dad! I’m sorry for your loss but happy for you that you are left with such meaningful memories!
 
Weeeelll.....where's the pics?!

Raining here...and almost always cloudy.
I didn't say they were good, but my regular Kodak could not focus on it at all. The first is earlier, not zoomed, and from my front porch. In person it was easier to see than the pic looks. Second is later and zoomed all the way in, plus cropped. Again, not good. But to the naked eye each planet was obvious. It was easy to see that Jupiter, the bigger, fuller planet, was in front...and Saturn was smaller and not as visible. Flatter and not as bright either.
With binoculars it looked like headlights in the distant. One new, one old. Like an old car.

If you click the first pic, then hit the zoom feature in the upper right, you can even see two distinct shapes. Kinda blobby, but it's there.
20201221_202517.jpg


20201221_202343.jpg
 
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We drove to the coast. It's about a 20 minute drive for us with mountains on either side until you come down to the shore. Anyway, we got a great view of it. ...altho for a long time we were looking at it without realizing that was it. We were looking more SW and lower in the sky until someone nearby pointed it out.

He also pointed out that if we looked closely we could see the red shadow of Jupiter behind Saturn and we could see it with our naked eyes. It was cool!

I tried to take a picture with my phone but I can't see the convergence in the image I got.

When we got home someone from my bookclub, whom I had also sent to a "better" viewing spot, sent me a great pic of it that she took from her front yard about 3 miles from my house in the valley on the "wrong" side of the coastal mountains.

All in all it was a cool experience to see it over the expanse of the ocean with coyotes howling in the brush beyond us. Totally memorable! I will file it away in my once-in-a-lifetime file along with the Tall Ships from the Bicentennial. ...which memory, BTW, is still as fresh as ever 44 years later. (Were you there in Battery Park, sourland?)
 
We drove to the coast. It's about a 20 minute drive for us with mountains on either side until you come down to the shore. Anyway, we got a great view of it. ...altho for a long time we were looking at it without realizing that was it. We were looking more SW and lower in the sky until someone nearby pointed it out.

He also pointed out that if we looked closely we could see the red shadow of Jupiter behind Saturn and we could see it with our naked eyes. It was cool!

I tried to take a picture with my phone but I can't see the convergence in the image I got.

When we got home someone from my bookclub, whom I had also sent to a "better" viewing spot, sent me a great pic of it that she took from her front yard about 3 miles from my house in the valley on the "wrong" side of the coastal mountains.

All in all it was a cool experience to see it over the expanse of the ocean with coyotes howling in the brush beyond us. Totally memorable! I will file it away in my once-in-a-lifetime file along with the Tall Ships from the Bicentennial. ...which memory, BTW, is still as fresh as ever 44 years later. (Were you there in Battery Park, sourland?)
The Tall Ships were in Baltimore Harbor, that year, too. We spent so much time there that my cousin ended up dating one of the sailors on the Italian ship. It was way cool!
 
We drove to the coast. It's about a 20 minute drive for us with mountains on either side until you come down to the shore. Anyway, we got a great view of it. ...altho for a long time we were looking at it without realizing that was it. We were looking more SW and lower in the sky until someone nearby pointed it out.

He also pointed out that if we looked closely we could see the red shadow of Jupiter behind Saturn and we could see it with our naked eyes. It was cool!

I tried to take a picture with my phone but I can't see the convergence in the image I got.

When we got home someone from my bookclub, whom I had also sent to a "better" viewing spot, sent me a great pic of it that she took from her front yard about 3 miles from my house in the valley on the "wrong" side of the coastal mountains.

All in all it was a cool experience to see it over the expanse of the ocean with coyotes howling in the brush beyond us. Totally memorable! I will file it away in my once-in-a-lifetime file along with the Tall Ships from the Bicentennial. ...which memory, BTW, is still as fresh as ever 44 years later. (Were you there in Battery Park, sourland?)
Wow, that’s awesome!!! Glad you had such a great experience!! I still haven’t been able to see it 😭
 
The Tall Ships were in Baltimore Harbor, that year, too. We spent so much time there that my cousin ended up dating one of the sailors on the Italian ship. It was way cool!

Oh how wonderful! It was such an experience I'm glad to think that as many people as possible got to see all the ships with their crew in traditional uniforms up in the rigging. Is the memory still super fresh for you too?

I can describe it but no one could ever re-create it.

We took the last train out of the city back up to the Mid-Hudson area where I lived. All along the route small towns were having their own celebrations with fireworks and bonfires and street parties that went on well past midnight -- much of it reflected in the dark water of the river as we chugged past.

Another time. Another world. Right, MROO?
 
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