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October 1, 2019 at 3:14 pm in reply to: Saturn at night – muted clouds – astounding NASA image #371608
Hans StockerParticipantIt is like abstract art! Fantastic. Thanks for sharing Laurence.
Hans StockerParticipantNice to know about the work of art by Spencer Finch on Paddington station Hygge. Must be wonderful to see it. Thanks for sharing.
Hans StockerParticipantMichael, yesterday I saw a new APOD on atoptics with examples in Europe (Germany) of volcanic skies:
It contains also a great explanation and I learned that also in Europe the pheneomenon of purple skies was visible. I took some pictures of the twilight in France on three different days. A good reason to check them.
September 13th 2019 (105 mm)

September 18th 2019 (60 mm)

September 20th 2019 (41 mm)

All three unprocessed pictures. The second and third picture seem to show some purples from volcanic aerosols. Any opinion?
Hans StockerParticipantJust as it was.

Strange planes
Hans StockerParticipantNice haiku Keelin and lyrics. I´d say you end with a poetic observation. And I see a lot of great pictures from you and Michael the last weeks. It is a joy to check them all!

Cloudplay
Hans StockerParticipant
Hairy
Hans StockerParticipantI like your video George. Love the waves of fog coming and going. Thanks for sharing.
By the way: did you see the noctilucent clouds you hoped for in Finland?
Hans StockerParticipantHaha, the goose is being measured! Someone must know the answer by now Keelin.
Have you ever seen an unfriendly cloud? Well I just met one.

Don’t You Dare To Picture Me!
Hans StockerParticipantWow, that is quite a series of B&W’s you two posted last weeks (with flair).

Not Sunny
Hans StockerParticipantNice purples Michael. I found a good explanation about the color purple: Purple sky by volcano dust.
I don’t have any volcanoes nearby so no purples over here. I had a lot of sunsets with clear blue skies and the colors were spectacular but no purples. I hope to upload one soon but my problem with recognizing my camera by the laptop is back again. I have to solve that issue first. Grrrr.
Hans StockerParticipantGreat Fido Keelin. You can see he was quite excited about his fight with the feathers.
And many thanks Michael for good advise and background info. After all I found some time today to roll back the last update successfully and the Eos Utility worked fine again. So I have the picture I wanted to post here and it fits in perfectly. It is not Fido but our own puppy named Flo. We will be off for three weeks but …

Flo Joins Us
Hans StockerParticipantYou are right Keelin. My aha moment about “Woodstock at 50” caused more than a sky-wide grin on my face. No reveal necessary. It is hilarious.
And so is Fido Frees The Feathers. Ingenious title it is. I never thought of feathers wanting to be freed but a dog is needed to make me realize that cushions are mere prisons for feathers. I can see it happen in front of me having a puppy of about 9 months now. Love it!
By the way: have you seen the sitting dog on the painting by Fred Kenyon ( now published on the home page)? Would he have realized this painted cloud looks like a dog?
I am so sorry having two candidates on my camera ready for this thread, but not being able to upload them to my laptop after a recent Windows update. The Canon Eos Utility which I use to upload pictures from the camera is not recognized anymore by Windows. Stupid update! I can’t find a quick clue for solving this. I have to sort this out three weeks later when I am back from some vacation without internet facilities except for my phone.
Hans StockerParticipantThanks Michael and #423 is a beauty with reds from volcano dust. It must be a coincidence the APOD on atoptics is about volcano dust. Here is the link: Volcanic Twilights.

A Sunset Over The North Sea (IJmuiden)
Hans StockerParticipantthanks for the wonderful celebration Keelin. And today your 22 degrees halo with circumscribed halo and / or upper tangent arc is Cloud-A-Day accompanied with a nice explanation. Congrats!

A big smile from the sky (and me) for you.
August 30, 2019 at 10:48 pm in reply to: Upside down smiling rainbows – several pics here from BBC's Weather Watchers #364964
Hans StockerParticipantThis post makes me really smile Laurence. Many thanks for sharing. Especially the third picture in the link undertitled “Gaps in the cloud make for an unusual circumzenithal arc in Brent Cross, London” by Sarabell is a beauty! Love this one most but also the other ones.
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