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Michael Lerch
ParticipantAs it so happens Hans, I have photographic evidence of Elvis leaving the building. The Snarl is gone. Turn it upside down and you can see the King Snarl ascending into the Asperitus … But we give them names so that they may live on into whenever. Thanks for the endorsement Hans. So that leaves me with a Lip without a name now that the Snarl has been taken out. This whole Asperitus thing is relatively new and wide open for exploration. Vernacular appellations should be for the claiming as if being the first white man at the North Pole. So my 2nd nomination for Vernacular Cloud Names List..is the self serving, but legit ..The Lerch Lip…as defined by the observer, a wall of ridge cloud highlighted to appear brighter than the background in an Asperitus event… There is an opposite,. a dark undulation in front of a brighter background. There can be both complimenting each other.
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This reply was modified 3 months, 3 weeks ago by
Michael.
Michael Lerch
ParticipantThe below Asperitas I cannot make sense of rite side up. The upside down view I can at least comprehend. So the first shot is upside down and the second shot is rite side up. Have fun!
Arizona Asperitas#116
Michael Lerch
ParticipantThanks for bringing up the idea Isabelle and Hans your knowledge on the matter is worthy here. What am I talking about? Vernacular names for clouds..a list started by CAS.. Below is my first nomination to the List of Vernacular Cloud Names..yes, The Elvis Lip Cloud..or The King’s Snarl.. Looking at the all shook up upside down shows its just a ridge line of cloud being pulled up to be devoured by hungry winds…Asperitas Worthy of the King..
Michael Lerch
ParticipantArizona Asperitas#115
Michael Lerch
Participantand then on the other hand..the small black speck on the left there is a jet airliner crossing the west valley from north to south (right to left) ..I left it in to give imagination to the conversation on board that plane at that time..” Ladies and gentlemen a quick look outside if you’re near a window is all we get before buckling up to land, so take a peek at Mother Nature’s Asperitas clouds, a rare one at sundown at that. Any questions just look at’em upside down!”
Arizona Asperitas#114
Michael Lerch
ParticipantVery Nice Work there Keelin!. You saved the best one for last, imho. The tension is so cool.. We don’t see such well behaved cloud in the Valley. Below is what we get when we do get weather.
Arizona Color#177
Michael Lerch
ParticipantHans, Yeaa!, When I look at your shot rite side up, it took me 2 or 3 passes before my mind finally saw the Asperitas, but just one look at it upside down I see the Asperitas. Looks like you had winds that had their hands full moving around that thick of a canopy. The walls appear to be already losing their cohesiveness and fractus is developing everywhere the battle ensues between cloud and wind. I venture the clouds survived battered and weary as the wind chased the sun over the horizon.
Another question is, is always looking at Asperitas upside down always required.. no..but you have to got thru the action of looking at it upside down to know rite side up is preferred.. a bit of a paradox I suppose. The upside down look is educational, it informs and answers questions. It gives a tangibility to the clouds, valleys ridges, rolls easily identified, a sculpture made of cloud . The rite side view is challenged and not always the winner of the preferred. Below is such a case. The rite side up, view maintains a poetry that the upside down view explains away into indifference. The Asperitas Arc does everything for the rite side up view and does little for the upside down view.
Arizona Asperitas#113
and..
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This reply was modified 3 months, 3 weeks ago by
Michael.
Michael Lerch
Participant..Btw , I never did spill the beans on most of the shots #89 and up. with the exceptions of 90, 101, and 108, the rest were taken on the same day. For a 2 hour and 45 minute period in the late afternoon I took a little over 200 photos ,95% were shots of Asperitas, all from the backyard. So yea, electric and telephone/TV cables may have been erased and replaced by a function in Lightroom…and maybe not , just a judicious use of crop saves a lot of time not having to do remove and replace. As a photographer I learn how much I can get away with relying on lens and cmos to bail me out. I respect the clouds too much to allow a crummy power line to a street lamp photobomb the shot.. The weather that afternoon was all southwest to north east so the shots are taken mostly looking west all the way to looking northeast, but almost all to northerly directions..because thats the least cluttered view and..the first hills out of the Valley await the weather there. The late afternoon 2+hrs of Asperitas also provided lighting issues that I chose just to go ahead and record. It got strange. I didn’t see what I captured with my, where’s the britest spot, get focus on it and quick shooting approach when interesting things are going off in various directions. When I ran out of light it seemed the Asperitas show also ended, blew itself out of the state. I easily lost track of time with evidence of taking an average of near 1 pic every minute and thirty seconds. So ,what I thought were the coolest ,you’ve seen, and Im still reviewing shots I may have overlooked in a hurry. Just today another list of shots I want to review in literoom again. But the rest are for the New Year and to that I hope Every One Has A Happy New Year!
Arizona Asperitas #112
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This reply was modified 3 months, 4 weeks ago by
Michael.
Michael Lerch
ParticipantSpeaking of Mad art work Hans, the sense of relief I get from finally figuring out the shot below, when I turn it upside down, is worth the mouse click.
Arizona Asperitas#111
Michael Lerch
ParticipantUpside down they look like choppy seas, Ruth.
Below a blast of Asperitas winds shred clouds already performing a mild Asperitas ballet. Stratiformis lollygagging around Arizona need to be reminded we have a weather statute in this state. Any weather crossing the borders into this state has to be out of the state within 8 hrs…We live in a desert and thats how we, well the politicians, decided to preserve our land and climate; All weather entering has 8 hrs to get out. That not a difficult task. Ive seen weather enter and exit this state..from west to east in under 3 hrs.. Yippie Kye AAA!.. and if they look like they ain’t gonna make it out of here in time, an Asperitas wind is sent to prod the slow stratus into getting a move on. Like a pod of killer whales descending on a squid birthday party…for their grandma.
Arizona Asperitas#109
..and here is what is created by the same howling winds.. a smile as subtle as Mona Lisa’s
Arizona Asperitus #110
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This reply was modified 4 months ago by
Michael.
Michael Lerch
ParticipantArizona Asperitas #108
Michael Lerch
ParticipantCloud loses its cohesion and becomes Aspirated, going up!
Arizona Asperitas #107
Michael Lerch
ParticipantThe last of the cloud surrenders to the winds of Asperitas…especially if you look at the photo upside down.
Arizona Asperitas #106
Michael Lerch
ParticipantAny and all questions regarding this photo can be answered by consulting the oracle Madam Asperata. Gaining access to all her answers. is as easy as looking at this and all other Asperitas shots upside down…or just save it to storage somewhere and flip it on your own..Just know,all the unknown.. is rendered understood.
Arizona Asperitas #105
Michael Lerch
ParticipantArizona Asperitas#104
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This reply was modified 3 months, 3 weeks ago by
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