Sunday, June 9, 2013

Clouds are poetry.

No doubt you've read about the wrath of the skies passing over Oklahoma recently - mother nature can sometimes be a bitch, an awful angry one. But this is the exception and not the rule - clouds help regulate temperatures, and bring us most necessary rain. And they can also be downright poetic sometimes, two of my favorites are cirrus clouds and sundogs.

Some basic info:
http://www.livescience.com/29436-clouds.html

( livescience.com is a good site, give it a bookmark!)

Cirrus clouds:
http://www.livescience.com/29472-how-cirrus-clouds-form.html

"Give the upper atmosphere dust, and it will make cirrus clouds.
new research, detailed in the May 9 issue of the journal Science, finds that the clouds condense and freeze, or nucleate, on very specific mineral and metal particles high in the atmosphere. That makes cirrus clouds unique: Most other clouds form primarily by condensing onto organic particles said study author Dan Cziczo, an atmospheric chemist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology."








Sundogs
http://www.livescience.com/26402-sundogs.html

"Sundogs are formed from hexagonal ice crystals in high and cold cirrus clouds or, during very cold weather, by ice crystals drifting in the air at low levels. These crystals act as prisms, bending the light rays passing through them. As the crystals sink through the air they become vertically aligned, refracting the sunlight horizontally so that sundogs are observed."

Here's one instance i shot in Oregon a few years ago.

Here's one lonely *dawg* shot mid-afternoon in Marin County CA, showing the color of the beast.


Here's a few more instances of 'poetry' - how these form, i have no idea, i guess it's all about air and moisture rising and falling, and moving over the land, the irregularity of which compresses the atmosphere. OK, you can tell i fell asleep in science classes alot, hunh? The last few look sort of like lenticular clouds, but they are so far away, i can't see the ground beneath them which would confirm them to be lenticular.

(This one looks like an exclamation point, doesn't it?)






I do believe this last one is definitely lenticular, I am not sure about the one above that. They form around mountains, are shaped like a lense, or a lentil. Really, that's what my Mac Thesaurus says, a lentil, check it out next time you're in the grocery store.
It's summer here in California, and for me, being just a few miles from the coast, that seems to mean high pressure over the eastern Pacific Ocean, and clear blue skies from horizon to horizon, day in, day out, week after week... with one exception - FOG!... at the coast. It can be fascinating stuff, I've shot it for many years.
My forecast for some of the next few entries....? 
You guessed it:



Fog.
There's a famous bridge out there somewhere... i think.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Stormy sunset, Nevada 2008

I took a few great photos of storm clouds lit by sunset light in Nevada a few years ago:








Some winter storms were rolling thru, it had snowed in downtown Las Vegas the day before, i was driving back to Vegas from Valley of Fire SP as the sun was setting, and this was the view. Something like this happens really quickly. First I finished off a roll of B&W on my Pentax 6x7, w/ a yellow filter.
Then i shot some digital/color, then decided to try and get more B&W... by the time i reloaded the camera, it was too late, it was over.

But this one beats 'em all!
July 14, 2012
Searchlight, Nevada
A double rainbow appears after heavy monsoon storms over 
Nipton Road in Searchlight, Nevada.


Double Rainbow
©Gene Blevins / Reuters-Landov


Sometimes you need luck, like i experienced.. sometimes you have spend hours or days 'stalking' the shot, like this guy did:


©Nolan Nitschke/ Caters News)

The extraordinary one-of-a-kind sighting was captured by keen photographer Nolan Nitschke, 27, in Yosemite National Park in California. Nitschke knew a storm was approaching the area and that the incredible rocky peaks throughout the park act as lightning rods. After spending hours painstakingly trying for the perfect shot he finally hit the jackpot as the bright lightning crashed through the colourful rainbow lighting up the dark sky.

(Just click on the link, you won't be disappointed, all of this gallery is awesome):

http://news.yahoo.com/photos/rare-sighting-captured-at-yosemite-slideshow/

That's all for now, folks.
Keep your feet on the ground, but your head?... in the sky!