PEI

'It's like you're in another dimension': Solar eclipse over P.E.I. leaves watchers in awe

P.E.I.'s temperature dropped. The street lights came on. And it suddenly got eerily dark during a sunny afternoon on Monday. The experience couldn’t have been much better for the thousands of people gathered across the Island to watch the much-anticipated solar eclipse.

Some came from as far away as Netherlands to view rare cosmic phenomenon

People looking up to sky during eclipse.
The solar eclipse reached its darkest moment, or totality, shortly after 4:30 p.m. AT on Monday, casting darkness over P.E.I. (Travis Kingdon/CBC)

P.E.I.'s temperature dropped. The street lights came on. And it suddenly got eerily dark during a sunny afternoon on Monday.

The experience, and weather, couldn't have been much better for the thousands of people gathered across the Island to watch the much-anticipated total solar eclipse — the last on P.E.I. for 55 years.

Families gathered on blankets in parks and backyards, commuters pulled over to the side of the road, and workers took a break to peek out the window or watch from doorsteps.

Crowds looked up in amazement, through special protective glasses, as the moon gradually blocked the sun. Around 4:37 p.m. AT, during the eclipse's darkest moment, or totality, viewers let out a loud cheer.

WATCH | See and hear the eclipse's moment of totality in western P.E.I.: 

See and hear the eclipse's moment of totality in western P.E.I.

9 months ago
Duration 3:30
A once-in-a-lifetime experience for some, the April 8 solar eclipse cast darkness over parts of P.E.I. CBC News captured the moment at Mill River Resort, where hundreds gathered to watch. As the sun re-emerged, we spoke to people afterward about their experience.

The cosmic spectacle was especially magnificent for the large crowd gathered at Mill River, on P.E.I.'s west coast, which was on the path of totality for the eclipse.

"It felt peaceful," said Karen Forrest. "It's like you're in another dimension or something, another reality.

"It's so amazing — like you're in a movie seeing a different galaxy — when it actually had the full eclipse aspect of it."

Adrian van Daalen came all the way from the Netherlands to see the eclipse, the fourth he's seen in his lifetime. He's already planning his next one in Iceland, in 2026.

"I'm 75 and I'm going to total eclipses as long as I can," he said. 

Van Daalen said he's drawn by how small the Earth feels within the universe during an eclipse.

Four people looking through eclipse glasses.
Four people look through eclipse glasses in Charlottetown's Victoria Park as the big moment approaches. (Stacey Janzer/CBC)

"You should be kind of grateful for the bigger things there are and it's so good to see," he told CBC News. "It's so unique."

It was eclipse number five for David Schult, who saw previous solar eclipses in Malaysia, Iran, Madagascar, and Nigeria while he was teaching overseas.

He's now home in Charlottetown, and the two-hour drive to Mill River was too good to pass up.

WATCH | 'People say it's religious': Eclipse chasers pick P.E.I. for this one:

‘People say it’s religious’: Eclipse chasers pick P.E.I. for this one

9 months ago
Duration 1:49
They’ve travelled around the world to view eclipses, and chose to watch this one on Prince Edward Island. CBC News speaks with Dave Schult of Charlottetown and Adrian Van Daalen from the Netherlands about why trot the globe to see the celestial events.

"I'm glad that the eclipse followed me," he said. "I'm glad to say that I didn't have to travel very far.

"I'm not particularly religious, so this is really my nature or natural experience for me ... to commune with the cosmos."

For many, it was a once-in-a lifetime experience. The next total solar eclipse that can be seen on P.E.I. won't occur until 2079.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shane Ross

Journalist

Shane Ross is a journalist with CBC News on Prince Edward Island. Previously, he worked as a newspaper reporter and editor in Halifax, Ottawa and Charlottetown. You can reach him at shane.ross@cbc.ca.

With files from Steve Bruce and Stacey Janzer