Brandon man to finally experience "bucket list" total eclipse

'I actually expect it will be an emotional experience,' David Swayze says.

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Caption: The moon passes between the sun and the earth during an annular solar eclipse as seen from Bandar Lampung, Indonesia Lampung province January 26, 2009. Photograph taken with solar filter on a lens. (Beawiharta/Reuters)

For the past 38 years, Brandon's David Swayze has dreamed of something he hopes he'll get to see Monday for less than two minutes — a total eclipse of the sun by the Earth's moon.
His dreams were dashed as a boy in February 1979 when he was forbidden to go outside and see for himself the last total eclipse visible to parts of the U.S. and Canada.
Instead, he says he was forced to watch it in black and white on a 12-inch television from the confines of a darkened classroom.
Today, however, the 47-year-old Swayze says he's not going to miss a thing, having driven nearly 13 hours to the southeast with his family to Lusk, Wyoming, where the total eclipse is expected at about 11:46 a.m. and will last, by his estimation, one minute and 54 seconds.
Lusk is located within the "path of totality," or the path at which the sun will be completely blocked out by the lunar shadow as it sweeps east to west over the continental U.S.

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Swayze told CBC on Sunday the family was initially planning to head to Nebraska to watch the event. A last-minute change of plans saw them divert to Wyoming, where they've found a great camping spot.
"I don't even have to get out of my pyjamas to watch," said Swayze, a lawyer and self-described "science geek."
Swayze said he's marked down Aug. 21, 2017 as a date to remember in his electronic calendar since he first used one at least 15 years ago.
"It's one of those bucket list things," he said. "I actually expect it will be an emotional experience."
He and his wife Jayne, 13-year-old son Ethan and daughter Isla, 2, have stocked up on proper protective gear to allow them to bear witness to the eclipse.
These items include the Mylar eclipse goggles and also a jerry-rigged bike helmet with a protective shade attached for the little girl — one she won't be able to simply shake off, Swayze laughed.