
...Just before 1100 local time (0200 GMT) on 22 July 2009 the skies will darken for a total eclipse of the sun. The eclipse will follow a path along a narrow corridor through northern India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan and China. It should be visible from big cities like Varanasi, Chengdu, Chongqing and Shanghai. The best place to watch it, however, will be a small Japanese islet called Akusekijima, where it is predicted to last six minutes and 25 seconds. There will not be a longer eclipse until 13 June 2132...But the islanders are nervous. Akusekijima has a population of about 70. Its total area is just 7.5 sq km...So far at least 150,000 people have expressed an interest in visiting the islands to watch the eclipse. The islanders fear they will be over-run...In order to try to avoid a disaster caused by crowds of over zealous eclipse watchers, the villagers have handed over control of the event to a Japanese travel agency which plans to hold a lottery for tickets for the right to attend. They hope to start the process formally later this month. The numbers are still being finalised but the package is expected to cost between $3,600 and $2,700...more...
Akusekijima is just one of the Tokara islands and Kinki Nippon Tourist has an English guide to seeing the eclipse from them here. The islands also have an English site here. Blogger Road to the Deep East recently had a post about a summer festival in Akusekijima involving a "penis-shaped stick" which he thought looked more like a "native magical ritual in South Sea island" than an image of Japan.