We just got our glasses in the mail today! You put them on and see a cyclops staring back at you. At least she has one lovely blueeye. When you look at the sun it is smaller than I thought!
I found this on Yahoo answers
The circumstances in St George and Kanarraville are almost identical as they both fall in the annular eclipse area. Despite that, Kanarraville is closer to the central path of the eclipse, so the eclipse there takes a slightly longer time. Coming to the facts, the eclipse in Kanarraville starts 25 seconds before St. George. Further, the annular eclipse starts 45 seconds earlier, and ends 25 seconds earlier. Hence, the annular eclipse in Kanarraville lasts 20 seconds longer (at 4 minutes and 33 seconds) than in St. George (at 4 minutes and 13 seconds). There's a slight difference in degree of obscuration (at 0.1%), but this is hardly noticeable as the time differences above. Being at a slightly higher latitude, and a significantly higher altitude (almost 900m higher), sunset at Kanarraville is also slightly delayed from that at St. George, and this is important as the eclipse observation ends in both places with sunset. The only thing that may favor one place over the other regardless of everything said above is the weather at the day of the eclipse. Kanarraville is more likely to have a rainy day with some cloud cover than St. George, so keep watching.
The eclipse will start at around 6:22pm. The annular eclipse will be seen starting 7:31pm and will last for about four to five minutes. You might stop seeing the eclipse before sunset as the sunset gets closer to the horizon.