I never imagined I would get to see the Aurora Borealis at all…let alone in Utah! However, Quebec City does seem like a somewhat more likely place to see them, so when we came here it did cross my mind that they might be visible at some point. But who has time to keep abreast of such things? There are aurora trackers you can check, but…you have to check them! I never think of it!
Luckily there are those in my circle who DO think of it. Sam is one of them. Seb is another. My brother Karl is another. So in October I was made aware that there had been a large coronal mass ejection which might cause aurora. Sam kept an eye on the predictions throughout the next day or two, though, and when it looked like it was going to be disappointing, we forgot about it.
BUT LUCKILY! Daisy and I were standing out on the balcony looking out at the city before bed, as we often do. And Daisy said, "I see light in the sky like we did that time we saw the aurora."
I said, "Oh, hmm…could be!" (politely, because I didn't want to dash her dear little hopes, but I did not see anything.)
We took a picture. And yes…it did look like it could be the lights! Or possibly clouds. But the forecast was good for it so Sam ran and got the car and we drove north!
Unfortunately, north was precisely the direction the clouds were going—the actual clouds, not the sort-of-cloudy-looking aurora. And we drove up into the mountains right into them. We were texting and talking on the phone with Sebastian (who was on his own aurora hunt and ended up seeing them on a red-eye flight to Chicago or somewhere) and feeling so worried that it wouldn't clear up! "Well, we did see them already in Utah, which is more than we ever thought we'd get to see," we kept saying, trying to console ourselves.
It was pretty interesting even with the clouds and intermittent rain, though. You could definitely see the green glow diffused through the clouds! Even with your naked eye you could. It looked like there was a city somewhere back behind the clouds lighting them up, though of course, there wasn't—but that's how my mind kept wanting to interpret it, since of course it makes no sense to have the sky itself just glowing!
The clouds were moving fast, especially when we got up into the mountains past Jacques Cartier National Park. The glow of the aurora would get brighter and dimmer as the clouds thinned and thickened. We got some rain. But the clouds never actually moved fully away! It was frustrating because we could tell the aurora was really bright and strong…if we could have just blown away those clouds! We drove along the pitch-dark highway (it was after midnight by this time), Daisy and I leaning and peering through our windows and saying, "there! I see light! I can see shimmering! I can see stripes in the sky!"…and then we'd find a spot to pull over and look and it would be cloudy again.