By Alexandra Heep Author. Humorist. Occasional cat translator. Currently publishing children’s books and writing like it’s 1989—only with fewer mix tapes.
About Alexandra Heep
Alexandra Heep is a longtime writer, chronic over-thinker, and recovering content mill survivor. Her work has appeared in literary journals, anthologies, and online platforms where words are still respected. She writes children’s books, health reflections, and the occasional blog post laced with humor and hard-won honesty.
After years of illness, detours, and navigating the noise of modern wellness, she returned to writing with the firm belief that stories—like people—don’t have to be perfect to matter.
She publishes under multiple pen names and drinks more goat milk than you’d expect.
Thursday, April 5, 2018
A to Z Blogging Challenge 2018: E is for Eclipse
(My theme for April's A to Z blogging challenge is postcards. If you want, read my intro post).
This card you see above was sent to me from a lady in Salem, Oregon. I found her in a postcard group on Goodreads. She said she was sending out commemorative cards from the total solar eclipse event she attended in person on August 21, 2017. She was in a spot where the sun was 100 percent covered by the moon. The card shows the different stages of a total solar eclipse.
This particular eclipse was visible where I live too, but we were not in the path of totality. We saw about 85 percent coverage (meaning the moon covered the sun by that much). If you want to know what all that means, check out this NASA site that's devoted to the 2017 solar eclipse.
Oh, and the stuff that looks like Schmutz on the image is courtesy of the U.S.P.S. machines that like to put their marks on cards. I'm not fond of those machines, but that's a whole other topic.
Incidentally, I received another card from an eclipse watcher on March 28, 2018 through Postcrossing (the postcard exchange site). The lady who sent it lives in Wisconsin, but she traveled to Nebraska to see the total eclipse. (Why she didn't go to Carbondale, Illinois, I don't know. It would have been a shorter trip, I think.) Anyway, this is what she wrote:
"I traveled 750 miles to Nebraska last summer to see the eclipse. It was magnificent!."
She designed the card herself from a picture she took (see below). The description on the back reads: Diamond Ring, Total solar eclipse. Grand Island, Nebraska USA.
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2 comments:
I saw the partial eclipse from Boston and it was spectacular.
Great card she sent to remember the year of the eclipse!
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