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Chasing the shadows

There are only two ways to describe a man who plans a summer vacation 13 years in advance.

Updated on: Jul 18, 2009 11:12 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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There are only two ways to describe a man who plans a summer vacation 13 years in advance.

HT Image
HT Image

Very simplistically, you could say he is calculating. Or simply mad. But then 44 year-old Ajay Talwar, president of the Eclipse Chasers Athenaeum (ECA) is not planning a summer vacation.

The walls of his room at the SPACE office in Janakpuri is papered with charts of places in the world which will witness eclipses — solar, lunar, partial, total — and Talwar and his tribe of eclipse chasers will place themselves there. At the exact time, the exact place.

On July 11, 2010, when the sun disappears, he will be seen in Hikuern Atoll, Tahiti “at the rim of a dormant volcano which juts out of the Pacific Ocean”. In 2020, try spotting him in Rajasthan. This year, on July 22, it will be Taregna in Bihar.

In Taregna, the SPACE members (ECA is one of its wings) will supervise Nitish Kumar, the chief minister of Bihar’s ‘eclipse show’ as well.

“Twenty-seven of us are going to catch part of the eclipse in China,” said Devgun, a veteran of five eclipses and whose first eclipse was managed “by running away from home to Orissa”.

Sunita Mukherjee, the media consultant of the association will also earn her stripes, so to speak, this time by watching it from Patna.

Who are these people? Science nerds? Star Wars junkies? Sons of Galileo?

“Good,” says Mukherjee approvingly. “2009 is the International Year of Astronomy and the 400th anniversary of the first recorded astronomical observations with the telescope used by the Italian physicist.”

The observation of course side-tracks us from turning the instrument to watch the tribe. Very, very closely.

“We want to popularise science and break the myths,” says Bahmba the boss. Eclipses do have quite a few myths.

27-year-old Dipti Sharma, who edits the group’s newsletter, reveals that her mother (not an eclipse chaser) once told her sister-in-law “not to put on lights during a lunar eclipse”.

“An eclipse watcher can be a physicist. He can be a photographer, a student of chemistry, a student of biology….
Nature is a wonderful lab. It is available to all free of cost, we should learn to use it. For all of us it basically started with a question,” added Bahmba. And a pair of good goggles.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paramita Ghosh

Paramita Ghosh has been working as a journalist for over 20 years and writes socio-political and culture features. She works in the Weekend section as a senior assistant editor and has reported from Vienna, Jaffna and Singapore.

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Stay updated with all top Cities including, Bengaluru, Delhi, Mumbai and more across India. Stay informed on the latest happenings in World News along with Delhi Election 2025 and Delhi Election Result 2025 Live, New Delhi Election Result Live, Kalkaji Election Result Live at Hindustan Times.
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