Community Corner
Northern Lights May Be Seen Across Region Saturday, Sunday Nights
A large solar outburst Thursday could lead to quite a spectacle over Kirkland and Western Washington.

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This weekend could bring clear enough skies to allow a nighttime peek at the northern lights from Kirkland, thanks to a big solar flare on Thursday, with the best chances on Saturday night and maybe Sunday night.
A large solar outburst Thursday means an appearance of the northern lights, or Aurora Borealis, is likely over Western Washington over the next few days wherever skies are clear. The X1.4 class flare erupted from the sun's Active Region 1520, which rotated into view last week. The flare created a coronal mass ejection, which is traveling in Earth's direction at more than 850 miles per second.
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Saturday's Kirkland forecast calls for partly cloudy skies this weekend, so seeing the northern lights is possible.
Joe Kunches, a scientist at NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center in Boulder, Colo., told Kirkland Patch that the solar mass ejection will pass by the region at about 6 a.m. Saturday. So if skies are clear enough, the best chance to see the lights would be Saturday night, with less of a chance Sunday night.
Find out what's happening in Kirklandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Chances diminish as the region rotates away," he said. "We're looking for it (the solar ejection) to go by the Earth Saturday at 9 a.m. Eastern time, so 6 a.m. your time."
City lights make it harder to see the stars and nighttime phenomena in the sky. The best viewing would be in the hills and mountains outside of town -- like the Tiger Mountain trailhead outside Issaquah or the Rattlesnake Ledges Trail near North Bend.
If the clouds part, look in the sky to the north. If you're actually able to capture a photo, please share it on our Pics and Clips file here or our Facebook page (and while you're there, please 'like' us!).
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