altivo: The Clydesdale Librarian (Default)
[personal profile] altivo
The photo was lost. It was amazing.

We had an afternoon of "alarums and excursions" with the weather. Tornado warnings to the left of us, severe thunderstorms to the right of us, and you could see it on the radar, like the parallel rails of a railroad track running NNE up into Wisconsin. Again, we only got some bursts of heavy rain alternating with bright sunlight that lit the clouds up to the east and made the ones to the west look amazingly dark and ominous. A tornado warning was actually issued for Harvard around 2:45 pm, but by the time we learned of it the danger had already passed. The tornado was identified on radar and tracked up into Wisconsin before a ground spotter actually reported it. As far as I know at this point, it never actually touched down.

There were heavy winds just the same, and trees and tree branches down in some areas. Electricity went out at my home for about four hours, though it just flickered repeatedly at the library.

But the photo op missed... Because we had no electric power, we drove into Woodstock to have dinner at a restaurant. When we came out of the restaurant, there was a beautiful cloud formation, something that I gather is called a cumulus castellanus but which my father would have termed a "squall line". It ran from horizon to horizon, NE to SSW, and consisted of a continuous line of puffy white cumulus clouds. Perfectly flat on the bottom, it was high enough that you could see under it to the blue sky on the other side. The tops were boiling slowly, trying to pop up into real thunderstorms but not quite making it. These alternate peaks and valleys looked like the crenellated wall of a castle to someone, hence the Latin name for the cloud formation. There may well have been some heavy rain falling from the dark bottom of that line of clouds, but the sun on the tops was beautiful and especially so against the clear blue sky that followed the earlier storm activity.

Driving home we had several wide open views of the whole thing, and it was quite distractingly beautiful. Once we got home I looked for a vantage point from which to photograph it, but we have no clear views in that direction due to tall trees. I resisted the urge to get back in a car and drive east to where I could shoot over an open field (about three miles or so.)

Date: 2008-06-07 02:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ducktapeddonkey.livejournal.com
I love watching a squall line come in.

Not quite a thousand words. But it's a very pretty picture. :)

Date: 2008-06-07 10:31 am (UTC)
ext_39907: The Clydesdale Librarian (Default)
From: [identity profile] altivo.livejournal.com
The trick is getting a wide enough view so that you can see the whole event. I imagine that's why the concept is usually associated with oceans or the Great Lakes.

It wasn't pretty earlier, when the storms were really active and the warnings were going off every ten or fifteen minutes. But when it had simmered down due to the cooling air at sunset, it was spectacular, and enough reduced in size so that you could see the actual structure of the whole.

Date: 2008-06-07 03:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] saythename.livejournal.com
Keep a cheap digicam in your glovebox
for just this sort of occasion. Charged up
and ready to go.

I understand you sentiment though...wild
weather is glorious, unless you have to
go out in it when you get home. @.@

I mean, shutting windows is enough.

@.@

Date: 2008-06-07 10:27 am (UTC)
ext_39907: The Clydesdale Librarian (Default)
From: [identity profile] altivo.livejournal.com
I don't think even digital cameras are suited to the temperature rigors of a parked vehicle's interior. ;p I've been sort of watching for a bargain deal on something I could keep handy, though. The one we have is an older Olympus that I bought as a gift for Gary years ago to replace the 35 mm. film camera he was using. Nowadays when everyone immediately asks silly questions like how many megapixels and such, it seems really dated, but it does the job. It's the same size as a regular 35 mm though and too bulky to carry in a pocket.

The hole in the sky

Date: 2008-06-09 03:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gabrielhorse.livejournal.com
That reminds me of a day about 3 months ago during the rainy season when there was a near perfect spiral hole in a cloud formation just North of my house. It reminded me of an aquarium full of cloudy water spiralling like watering going down a tub drain. I've never seen one before, and did have the thought I would have liked to take a photo of it.

Re: The hole in the sky

Date: 2008-06-09 03:48 pm (UTC)
ext_39907: The Clydesdale Librarian (Default)
From: [identity profile] altivo.livejournal.com
Clouds can be really interesting at times, though at the moment I'm getting tired (very tired) of dreary overcast and yet more rain.

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