‘Once-in-lifetime chance’ – Solar eclipse offers wonderment for those looking up

Douglas Laperle took this photo of the eclipse on his iPhone by putting the eclipse protective glasses over the lens.

Douglas Laperle took this photo of the eclipse on his iPhone by putting the eclipse protective glasses over the lens. COURTESY

The moon covers most of the sun as it approaches the total solar eclipse, as seen from the summit of Saddleback Mountain near Rangeley, Maine, on Monday.

The moon covers most of the sun as it approaches the total solar eclipse, as seen from the summit of Saddleback Mountain near Rangeley, Maine, on Monday. Robert F. Bukaty / AP

Axel Laperle (right), 6, looks up at the eclipse in the middle of a soccer field on the campus of NHTI in Concord with his cousin, Logan Lavoie and his grandparents, Lynn and Douglas Laperle as the light dimmed and it reached the maximum coverage on Monday.

Axel Laperle (right), 6, looks up at the eclipse in the middle of a soccer field on the campus of NHTI in Concord with his cousin, Logan Lavoie and his grandparents, Lynn and Douglas Laperle as the light dimmed and it reached the maximum coverage on Monday. GEOFF FORESTER / Monitor staff

Axel Laperle, 6, looks up at the eclipse in the middle of a soccer field on the campus of NHTI in Concord with his cousin, Logan Lavoie and his grandparents, Lynn and Douglas Laperle as the light dimmed and it reached the maximum coverage on Monday, April 8, 2024.

Axel Laperle, 6, looks up at the eclipse in the middle of a soccer field on the campus of NHTI in Concord with his cousin, Logan Lavoie and his grandparents, Lynn and Douglas Laperle as the light dimmed and it reached the maximum coverage on Monday, April 8, 2024. GEOFF FORESTER—Monitor staff

Axel Laperle (right), 6, looks up at the eclipse in the middle of a soccer field on the campus of NHTI in Concord with his cousin, Logan Lavoie and his grandparents, Lynn and Douglas Laperle as the light dimmed and it reached the maximum coverage on Monday, April 8, 2024.

Axel Laperle (right), 6, looks up at the eclipse in the middle of a soccer field on the campus of NHTI in Concord with his cousin, Logan Lavoie and his grandparents, Lynn and Douglas Laperle as the light dimmed and it reached the maximum coverage on Monday, April 8, 2024. GEOFF FORESTER—Monitor staff

Lynn and Douglas Laperle drove all the way to Manchester, Connecticut to pick up their grandson, Axel, so that he could experience the nearly full eclipse at the NHTI campus on Monday afternoon, April 8, 2024.

Lynn and Douglas Laperle drove all the way to Manchester, Connecticut to pick up their grandson, Axel, so that he could experience the nearly full eclipse at the NHTI campus on Monday afternoon, April 8, 2024. GEOFF FORESTER—Monitor staff

By RAY DUCKLER and GEOFF FORESTER

Monitor staff

Published: 04-08-2024 2:33 PM

Modified: 04-08-2024 5:13 PM


Ellen Barbetta had to hustle from work to get her kids from school so they could find a good open spot to watch Monday’s eclipse. 

“I told them that I would pick them up and bring them,” Barbetta said. “I was coming from a job in Portsmouth and had to fly down here.”

“Very cool, this is a once-in-a-lifetime chance,” said 12-year-old Daniel McGuire, a student at Rundlett Middle School who watched with his sisters Anya, 14, and Khali, 9, as the moon slowly blocked out the sun. 

They wore special glasses to protect their eyes as they observed the celestial event. By 3:30 only a crescent of the sun was left in the sky as the light became flat and gloomy.   

“It kind of reminds me of Pac Man or like something took a bite out of the sun,” Khali said.

Monday’s weather turned out perfect for viewing the eclipse. With blue skies and temperatures in the 60s, thousands of visitors flocked to New Hampshire on Monday, which caused significant traffic delays, mostly on highways. 

Lynn and Douglas Laperle brought along their two grandsons, Logan Lavoie, 7, and Axel Laperle, 6, to a soccer field near the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center to view this once-in-a-lifetime event, even driving down to Connecticut Monday morning to pick up Axel.

“It’s just a good experience with the grandchildren,” Douglas said. “We love to spend time with them, so this gives us an opportunity to do that. … We can make this into something that they’ll remember because they’re old enough to remember it.”

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For Axel, who loves science, the eclipse was even more special.

“He loves science, anything to do with math and science,” Lynn said.

The cousins wore special gear to the eclipse – Logan sported an eclipse-themed T-shirt he made at school while Axel wore a hat.