Nightfall87: Actually, it will take more than a six hours.
In Europe it will be visible only early in the morning. For early birds who want to see it with their own eyes, and don't have another century to spare. :)
Phc7006: I don't have a century to spare, yet a thick cloud cover and heavy rain means there is nothing to see here.
TBH, unless you have an extremely long lens or a telescope with the appropriate filter, you're not going to see anything. Venus is pretty tiny, I tried looking with just the welder's mask for a spell and i couldn't see anything.
It's a tad anticlimactic of an event as it's not anywhere near as flashy as the much more common solar eclipse or even lunar eclipse.