Stargazers to answer questions about April 8 eclipse at March 7 meeting

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The San Juan Stargazers will hold their next monthly meeting on Thursday, March 7, to answer questions about the April 8 eclipse and see a video and discuss “Exploring Mars, from Space and the Ground.”

 The Stargazers will meet on Thursday, March 7, at the Community United Methodist Church at 434 Lewis St. You can use the parking lot and enter at the side door right off the parking area. You enter through the kitchen and go to the large meeting room. (We leave the front doors locked.) 

We have new members at almost every meeting, so this might be a good night to join us.

There will be a social hour starting at 6 p.m. with coffee/tea and treats. You can bring something to share if you would like. 

We have copies of the Sky & Telescope issue called “Showtime for North America’s Grand Eclipse” with much good information.

We have two different topics for the educational part of the meeting, the first one being the important eclipse this year on April 8. It will cross North America, passing over Mexico, the U.S. and Canada. In the U.S. it will be visible from Texas to Maine. The next total solar eclipse that will be visible over North America will not happen until 2045.

The eclipse will be visible in Pagosa as an approximate 64 percent partial eclipse, which should still be exciting, and will require special glasses for you to safely view. 

Club members who are remaining in Pagosa will gather for the eclipse with community members who want to join them in Centennial Park at the Geothermal Greenhouse Partnership amphitheater on the Riverwalk. 

Look for our members to answer your questions and document anything special that happens in Pagosa. Please feel welcome to join in this rare event of the moon passing between the sun and the earth. 

Of course, you can view it anywhere by yourself using special solar glasses, but we will be there to share this unusual astronomical event with our community.

There will not be a regular monthly meeting in April, except to gather to watch the eclipse.

If anyone, from the community or any club members, has questions about the eclipse, be at our meeting at 7 p.m. and we will take time to find your answers. Since this is an important eclipse, we feel our club has the responsibility for making sure that everyone in our community has the correct information to decide where they want to be and how they want to see it. We are here to help you.

The second topic for the night will be “Mars, Exploring from Space and the Ground” from a Great Courses lesson.

We will have a summary to read and discuss written by Ann Marie Kemp and then have a video presentation by our favorite female astronomer, Dr. Sabine Stanley. It should be fascinating. She always does a great job. Last month we all were in shock over the unbelievable information we learned about Mercury that we hadn’t heard before.

We are starting to gear up for a summer of great astronomy activity. We will have members-only star parties, eight to 10 night sky programs at Chimney Rock National Monument and some public events, plus regular meetings. 

If you want to learn how to use your telescope or one of our club telescopes, it is time to get started at the beginning of the season. 

If you would like to join the San Juan Stargazers, you will also receive Reflector Magazine, which is the publication of the National Astronomical League of which you automatically become a member. To join both groups and get an excellent astronomy magazine, annual membership is only $25 per family. You can join the club at any of our events or you can join using PayPal on our website, sanjuanstargazers.org. Check out our continuously changing website with new information and fabulous photos.