solar eclipse from plane

Here's what the solar eclipse looked like from a plane above the clouds

While Monday's total solar eclipse was a bust for some in the GTA thanks to gloomy clouds, those who happened to be flying above them in a plane got a VIP seat for the major celestial event. 

Some of the lucky eclipse-goers took to X on Monday afternoon to share the photos they snapped while on a flight.

Although some didn't get a direct view of the sun during the eclipse, they did manage to capture photos of the darkening sky and the accompanying early "sunset." 

For some that weren't in the direct view of the sun, the once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon went largely unnoticed. 

Others got to soak in the beautiful and vibrant colours that painted the sky. 

Despite the cloudy conditions that persisted throughout most of Monday, sky-gazers on the ground actually seemed to get a better look at the major event, based on all of the photos uploaded to social media.

According to NASA, the next solar eclipse will take place on Aug. 12, 2026, and will be visible from Greenland, Iceland, Spain, Russia, and some parts of Portugal. Toronto won't see another total solar eclipse until 2144. 

Lead photo by

Arseniy Shemyakin Photo/Shutterstock


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Surprise TTC subway closure sends Toronto into rush hour chaos

Highly-resistant 'super lice' are taking over Canada and here's what you need to know

New Toronto neighbourhood will have a street where cars are banned

Toronto ranks among the wealthiest cities in the world

There are two species of ultra-rare cactus actually native to Ontario

TTC will shut down an over 7km stretch of subway track this weekend

The empty space that replaced Toronto's waterfront skating rink is now open

Record-breaking Ontario-U.S. border bridge closing in on biggest milestone yet