View allAll Photos Tagged Cold
did a looong walk today..good for loosing the food from yesterday ;D , kids where not complaning..the first 8km..haha then ...tiredness and painfull legs..and..a red nose from the cold ;-)
A meterologist at Concordia launches a weather balloon at dusk.
Meteorology is just one of the research areas conducted at the Antarctic base. The unique location 3200 m on a plateau at the end of the world offers researchers from many disciplines a chance to conduct science they like nowhere else on Earth.
ESA sponsors a research medical doctor each year to study the effects of living in isolation. The extreme cold, isolation, sensory deprivation and remoteness make living in Concordia similar to living on another planet.
For more read the Concordia blog at : blogs.esa.int/concordia/
Credits: ESA/IPEV/PNRA - A. Salam
A homeless woman, and a jogger,
at the Campos Plaza corner,
...'on a cold winter's morn.'
on 12 St. & Ave. C
East Village , NYC
My pictures taken with my silver are finally developed. This is my favorite, because i like the atmosphere and everything was so calm in this field.
There’s no shortage of snow in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula this year. Some areas have more than 230 inches of snow. If that was all stacked up in one place it would be nearly 20 feet!
Photo: Snowfall near Copper Harbor, Michigan by Courtney Celley/USFWS.
At my photography class we've got a theme "Sveglia" or "Wake up." typically my waking up involves my F***ing shower which runs cold for about 10 minutes, I thought this might be a suitable subject.
Cold. Gloomy. Drive to work was awful because snow. Daylight savings ending means I don't ever get to see the sun.
Cold Bud Light and Budweiser Beer at the 134th Preakness Stakes, Baltimore, MD.
Copyright © ShoreShot Photography 2009
It's 73 degrees outside, and friggin FREEZING in my office.
It's so warm out, the only thing warmish i brought to work is this hoodie.
hmmm. i almost look like i'm wearing a wizard hat...
almost....
Spam Musubi treats shown on the sides of this re-usable zipper-equipped cold-pack bag my daughter brought me from Maui. The cartoon-style instructions for preparing local foods are part of the current advertising campaign for Foodland (a Hawai'i-based grocer).
Getting Rowan warm wasnt easy. She didnt want to put on her warm comfy cozy flufffffffly cute clothes.
It was really cold, about 10 degrees, and the sun was just starting to rise. There was diamond dust floating in the air and a couple of sundogs appeared along the river. Here is one of our new pelican friends with a sundog.
"Sundogs are made commonly of plate-shaped hexagonal ice crystals in high and cold cirrus clouds or, during very cold weather, by ice crystals called diamond dust drifting in the air at low levels. These crystals act as prisms, bending the light rays passing through them with a minimum deflection of 22°. If the crystals are randomly oriented, a complete ring around the sun is seen — a halo. But often, as the crystals sink through the air they become vertically aligned, so sunlight is refracted horizontally — in this case, sundogs are seen."
Sundog info from Wikipedia
While exploring on Lower Wacker today I came across one of the more surreal/creepy scenes I've ever come across. Yeah, that's a person under there.
Dave and Cynthia's wedding in Quebec City at the Ice Hotel (reception in a less freezing resort)
Out on the ice at Manoir St-Castin.
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Bend, Ore. -- A group of 45 federal snow surveyors gathered in Bend Jan. 10 - 15, 2016 to train on measuring mountain snowpack and cold-weather survival. USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) hosts the Westwide Snow Survey training every year to support snow surveyors across 13 Western states.
“Often times our snow survey crews must traverse difficult mountain terrains to manually measure the snowpack in remote areas,” said Tony Tolsdorf, one of the organizers for this year’s training. “The Westwide Snow Survey training is absolutely essential to sustain our snow survey program. We ensure our people are prepared in the event of an emergency and keep them up-to-speed on the methods for measuring.”
Training topics included outdoor survival, mountain medicine, avalanche preparedness, a history of snow survey, shelter construction, methods of measurement, and more. Guest instructors included Brian Horner of Learn to Return Training based in Anchorage, Alaska and Nancy Pfeiffer of the Alaska Avalanche School also based in Anchorage.
Since its inception in 1935, USDA’s Snow Survey and Water Supply Forecasting Program has grown into a network of 1,185 manually-measured snow courses and 858 automated snow telemetry stations across 13 Western states, including Alaska. The program provides streamflow forecasts at 673 stream gages in the West. Data from the automated snow sites are available near real-time through an extensive web delivery system.
NRCS photos.