Category: Attention All Cloudspotters

You can’t look around when you’re looking up, so we’ve had a look around for you.
If you have cloud news that you think we should include here, please email it to us at: hello@cloudappreciationsociety.org.

A member meet-up in Australia

Tania Ritchie is Member Number 23,514 and one of the fantastic team of moderators for our CloudSpotter iPhone app. She is planning an informal get-together of CAS members based in the Sydney and Newcastle area of Australia. If you are nearby, why not come along to meet other members and be nerdy about the sky?

Date: Sunday 13 November, at 12 noon
Location: either in Newcastle (King Edward Park) or Sydney (Botanic Gardens), depending on interest
Food: Bring your own picnic

If you are interested in meeting up, let Tania know on the post that she has put up on our Cloud Forum: Register your interest in a NSW gathering

Katharine Towers, CAS Poet in Residence

We are pleased to announce that the poet Katharine Towers will be the Cloud Appreciation Society poet in residence for 2016. As part of her new role, Katharine will be writing a short poem each month inspired the Cloud of the Month. We can’t wait to read what she produces, which we will share with you here.

Katharine Towers is Member 31567 of the Cloud Appreciation Society. Her first poetry collection ‘The Floating Man’ was published in 2010 and won the Seamus Heaney Centre Poetry Prize. Her second collection ‘The Remedies’ is published by Picador in August. Landscape and nature feature prominently in her work; she lives in the Peak District with her husband and two daughters and spends a lot of time walking or running in the hills, stopping to peer at wildflowers or look up at the clouds. She says she doesn’t yet know as much about clouds as she’d like. Her new role, drifting through the atmosphere of the Cloud Appreciation Society, will certainly solve that.

Here is a poem that Katherine wrote about the asperitas cloud, which is the new classification that has come out of the Cloud Appreciation Society:

 

undulatus asperitas

Once we saw a great cloud, made of ice
like any other cloud but wind-sheared
and drooping in the heavy air.
It lolled against the hill but no storm fell.

Barometers dropped like stones and it was
purple-dark, even in the early afternoon.
The ruckled sky had us standing pointing
in the fields like scarecrows, and mostly afraid.

Girls fainted under the weight of ions
and some of us made thankful prayers
for the wonder of that rolling sea above.

They say that waves from underneath
are kind and do not mean us harm –
even seem to love us; and it’s bliss to drown.

© Katharine Towers, from The Remedies, published by Picador.

The Naming Of Clouds – Kings College London

This summer Kings College London will be hosting a series of connected performances exploring clouds and Utopian daydreams entitled The Naming Of Clouds. Clouds workers will be mysteriously creating and undoing patterns on the riverside terrace during the day for visitors to interact with. The next performances are on 6th August and 3rd September when spectators will be able to enter a Utopian daydream among the clouds.

The Naming Of Cloud is part of Kings College’s Paths To Utopia, a collection of new art works resulting from collaborations between artists, performers, architects, technologists and King’s College London academics to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Thomas More’s inspirational book Utopia. It was co-written and co-devised by Penny Newell and Philip Stainier.

To book tickets and for more information, please visit the the Kings College Website

The Naming Of Clouds - Paths To Utopia - Kings College London, Somerset House

The Naming Of Clouds – Paths To Utopia – Kings College London, Somerset House

Venn Diagram of the Big Ten

Margaret Webster recently joined the Society after reading an article in the New York Times. She then created this Venn diagram to help her learn the big ten clouds and we love it!

She says she is seeking “to persuade all who’ll listen of the wonder and beauty of clouds,” although the patience of some of her family members may be growing a little thin! As a retired psychotherapist, she told us she completely agrees with our statement that appreciating clouds is cheaper than a psychiatrist!

Cloudspotting for Beginners talk in Somerset, UK

In this entertaining and enlightening talk, Society founder Gavin Pretor-Pinney gives a tour of the sky, showing how to distinguish the many different cloud formations, from the common Cumulus to the rare and fleeting Kelvin-Helmholtz cloud. Gavin argues that clouds are the most evocative and poetic aspect of nature – and that cloudspotting might just be the perfect antidote to the pressures of modern life.

Date: Friday 8 July 2016
Time: 7.30pm–9.30pm
Venue: The Parish Rooms, Market Square Somerton, Somerset TA11 7NB, UK
Ticket Price: £10.69 – £11.74

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Announcing a Once-in-a-Lifetime CAS Holiday

We are very excited to launch the first Cloud Appreciation Society holiday, which will be taking place at the end of February 2017. The Society will be travelling to the beautiful wilderness of Canada’s Norther Territories to what we consider to be the best destination in the world for watching Nature’s ultimate sky spectacle: the Northern Lights.

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Kevin Van Aelst

Rebekah Westphal, member number 41051, told us about “Common Clouds” by Kevin Van Aelst. We love this interpretation of cloud identification in coffee and thank Kevin for contributing his piece. You can learn more about him on his website here.

Alfred Stieglitz: Songs and the Sky

“Songs and the Sky” is an exhibition of art and music currently showing at Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York until 18th June 2016.

The exhibition title derives from Alfred Stieglitz’s historic series, Songs of the Sky, the artist’s original title for the Equivalents (1925-1937). Similar to notes in a musical score, these images of cloud patterns form an abstract, universal visual language equivalent to the artist’s inner state, emotion, and ideas. This exhibition is a rare opportunity to view such a large collection of Equivalents.

Please visit the Bruce Silverstein Gallery for more information

New York Times Magazine Feature

The New York Times Magazine recently published an informative – and at times, moving – feature by Jon Mooallem about the Cloud Appreciation Society. Read the online version to discover how the Society came about and to learn of our efforts to have a new type of cloud accepted by the World Meteorological Organisation. Bear in mind, however, that the story ends in tears…

Clouds…Temporarily Visible – An Exhibition

The University of Minnesota’s Weisman Art Museum is currently running an exhibition all about clouds. It’s called “Clouds…Temporarily Visible.” This image is from an installation that’s part of that exhibit. The cloud is composed of lightbulbs varying in size and opacity. Visitors can stroll under the cloud and pull the strings to change the luminosity of the cloud.

The exhibition runs until Sunday, 22nd May, and you can see more about it on the Weisman Art Museum website.

Our New Website Design

We have given the Cloud Appreciation Society website a new layout and design, and are now in testing phase. There will be quite a few bugs, which we will be sorting out over the coming days. We would love to hear in the comments below if you’ve come across anything that seems broken. It will probably take you a little while to get used to where things are now, but we hope the development will be an improvement on the previous design. We hope also that it paves the way for the site to work better on mobile devices.

There is plenty more to do on the Photo Gallery. You can currently filter for cloud types by clicking the menu icon in the top right to reveal the cloud-type filter terms, but the gallery search functionality is still not in place.

Do let us know what you think of the new, cleaner look!

Treading On Thin Air

Dr Elizabeth Austin of Weather Extreme Ltd’s new book Treading On Thin Air is part memoir and reveals how the weather and climate are intimately tied to our daily lives. In her book, Dr. Austin will demystify climate change, revealing what is really happening with our climate and why, whether it is El Niño, tornadoes, floods or hurricanes. Weather and society are at its most fascinating at extremes, and as Dr. Austin is one of a handful of forensic meteorologists around the globe, she has been called upon to investigate plane crashes, murders, wildfires, avalanches, even bombing cases. Drawing upon her rich experiences, Austin’s Treading on Thin Air promises to be an enlightening and informative journey through the wild word of weather.

“Weather is an inescapable part of our daily lives, from the nuances of air travel to the breadth of human history. Our past, present, and future is intimately rooted is weather and climate”.

For more information and to pre-order Dr Austin’s book, please visit the Treading On Thin Air website.

The Mostly Weather podcast

The Mostly Weather podcast: A pig with six legs and other clouds

The Met Office’s Mostly Weather podcast recently released an episode on clouds entitled “A pig with six legs and other clouds”. Starting from the basics – what is a cloud? How do they form? – the team then move on to learn about the difference between cloud and rain droplets, as well whether or not fog should be considered as a cloud.

Listen to the podcast and read more about it on their website.

Private Eye on the State of the ‘Namer of Clouds’ Home

We were pleased to learn that Private Eye, the British satirical magazine, recently published a story to publicise the sorry deterioration of the historic home of Luke Howard. In 1802, this 19th Century pharmacist and lifelong lover of the sky devised the naming system for clouds that we still use today. His legacy for the world of meteorology and far beyond cannot be underestimated.

Nacreous clouds over Britain

Cloudspotters across the UK and Ireland have witnessed fantastic displays of rare ‘nacreous’ clouds over the first few days of February. The formations are also known as ‘mother of pearl clouds’ due to their beautiful bands of colour, which appear as the cloud’s ice crystals diffract the sunlight, separating it into its different wavelengths.