View allAll Photos Tagged Weather-Forecast
The weather forecast called for "cloudy" on Sunday so I headed to Venice. Who knows, it may be a month before it's cloudy again. Parking was terrible for the first time but the beach was almost completely empty. There were a few well placed clouds but otherwise was all haze. The sky went from blue to orange to pink until it was dark. Then I got a parking ticket.
Venice Beach
(Marina Del Rey side of Pier)
Venice, California
February 28th, 2016
SETTINGS:
Canon Rebel T4i
EF-S18-135mm IS STM
@59mm
ISO 100
f/7.1
1/13th second
CPL
Having seen the weather forecast which was for sunshine, I got up extra early (8:10am) and headed out to Westhay to catch the beardies... And failed. I did see eight in a group, but they vanished off into the middle of a vast reed bed never to be seen again. And once again I ended up in the car park at Catcott. Always tomorrow...
The weather forecast said it was going to be a clear morning. I hadn’t been out with the camera much, so I thought, “why not set the alarm for ‘damned early’?” When the alarm went off, I very nearly turned over and went back to sleep. Nearly… but I didn’t. And I was glad. It was one of those morning when I had everything to myself. Not even the dog-walkers were out. This mute swan was, though. And he came over to pose (and ruin my planned LE shot)
Equipment: Nikon D7000, Nikkor 10-24mm @16mm, ISO 100, F8, 1/40sec. Hitech 0.6 ND Grad filter
Post-production: ‘s’ adjustment curve applied to give an overall contrast boost; concave adjust curve to darken, and then masked out in the middle section to create a vignette; ND grad filter applied to darken the sky; and finally a color balance layer used to boost red and blue (in mid-tones)
According to the weather forecast the skies were supposed to clear this afternoon! :-)
Anyway, having got as far as the fen I tried to make the most of the conditions and get some slightly different shots with the fen covered in a blanket of freezing fog.
The Short Eared Owls would appear magically from the murk and then disappear again just as quickly.
Brian Spicer
Cloud cover
After checking out the weather forecasts last Friday and seeing the deteriorating weather situation I thought lets go for it, so I headed to the beach near to home wishing it had been a low tide as well. But as we all know nothing plays into your hand you just have to make the most of what you are presented with.
The cloud bank did it`s job in diffusing the sun for me and gave me those beautiful crepuscular rays. It was just after taking this image that I bumped into another photog and together we walked along the beach taking shots as we went, the sky was forever changing as we got a little nearer to Worthing pier, I was shooting some long exposures and my fellow photog was shooting with an R5 and Canon RF 100-500 hand held .so we were shooting completely different images.
With the tide being up and the old wooden groynes barring our way we came to a halt and made a stand all the while keeping an eye on the waves coming in as we shot between some higher woodwork, it amazed us too that some people came along and stood in front of our lenses just to be total pr--s.
So there will be more to come from that afternoon`s shoot some LE and some standard shots. It was nice to bump into a fellow tog and chew over photography only one thing he is not on Flickr but given how Flickr is behaving at the moment I found it hard to extol the virtues of joining Flickr.
The weather forecast was for clear skies today, so we thought we would try to see if we could spot some of the Snowy Owls which migrate from the Arctic to this area for the winter. Alas, no owls were seen, but I was able to capture some interesting scenes regardless...
I heard yesterday the weather forecast and it promised to be a beautiful morning.
I went to the Loodrechtse plassen (an artificial lake, which I tell later more about), but I saw this meadow. So no foggy lake, but a lot of beautiful pictures of this meadow. The birds were a gift from heaven :p.
© PJJA Timmermans [2011] all rights reserved.
Pjerry.photos@gmail.com
A weather forecast of fog followed by mist and eventual sun encouraged me to get the 8.35am stopping train to Oxford, alighting at Lower Heyford for the canal walk to Tackley. Rather a mixed bag of a morning, but absolutely lovely to have escaped my usual moan of arriving everywhere in early afternoon and having the sun directly above.
The walk didn't end particularly well as it included wading up to my knees to try and cross the flooded Cherwell water meadows to catch the bus or train back to Banbury from Tackley, but I thoroughly enjoyed my rather foolish little adventure.
My poor leather walking boots weigh a ton though and are drying out slowly!
The weather forecast said early morning mist followed by sunny spells. That sounded interesting, so I dragged myself out of bed at silly o'clock to get to a nearby hill before sunrise because after all, that's the best light isn't it? I even got there before the dog-walkers arrived. As I climbed up the winding track the world began to disappear until, at the top, there was a complete whiteout. I tried taking pictures at different exposures for a while but it seemed like there was very little to see - just fog! I hung around for a couple of hours imagining how nice the rocks would look once the sun had appeared to delicately light them from the side, but even my camera started to object to the damp conditions and the screen refused to work. I gave up, telling myself I must be watching too many Youtube videos where the photographer always comes away with at least one or two good shots. This picture was taken from the next hill on the other side of the road once the clouds began to part. Well, I can always imagine I'm in the Scottish Highlands.
Another glorious Wednesday afternoon on my way home from Work; I really do feel privileged to take this route to and from work most days of the week. Very similar to the week 34 shot which was chosen to be in Explore; in my opinion this is a much better shot, better light and colour. Must admit to a bit of cowardice, the weather forecast for Saturday is not good; rain and even the possibility of sleet. Suppose that's what they call April Showers!
Here in Brisbane the news is full of storm/rain weather forecast. As a country often in drought, it's big news when a wet Spring is forecast. We had approx 50mm overnight.
So a quick grab of these flowers from the garden, still with water drops on them, are todays photo of the day.
Of course we never complain about rain.....except when we have floods with cyclones, which happens most years in Queensland.
I saw the weather forecast was saying clear skies till 11pm so rushed out in to the dark with indecent haste to this old ruin of a church in a graveyard in rural Nottinghamshire.
I don't know much about this chapel and I will probably edit this note later.
This is 150 x 20 second exposures at ISO 320 and f1.8 with a Sony 14mm G Master lens.
I had one shot at trying to find a clear day devoid of fire smoke in the Denali Park area. After looking at the weather forecast and the wind direction I decided July 2 was the day. I made the 4 hour trip from my house in Anchorage to Denali Park with the hopes I would arrive before the Star departed the depot. I had some specific goals in mind this shot being one of the them. The Star departs the Park about 20 minutes late account of Red Flag, hot conditions, warnings in the interior. Train speed would be limited to 40. This would be helpful as summer is road construction season in Alaska and I would have a number of delays to contend with. While I was able to check a few shots off my wish list I missed several others account of the afore mentioned road construction. I suppose another trip will be in order.
The weather forecast was last week quite clear so I book marked the Friday to go out. I excpected a cold morning and was hoping for some frost in nature.
When I Unexpectedly woke up early I noticed a nice bit of snow has fallen in our region. So reschuled the plan I made and drove to the 'higher grounds' of the Veluwezoom. The journey towards this area didn't fully go as planned, a major traffic infarct due to lorries that crashed in the snow on the high way made me take a detour which cost me not 18 minutes drive but an 1 hour 38 minutes drive.
Nevertheless when you enjoy nature than taking this shot of course I forgot all the trouble.
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The weather forecasters had predicted up to 7 inches in southeastern Massachusetts from Monday through Tuesday. Sounds like they might have scaled that back, thankfully!
…. Btw, I was waiting for a line of traffic to tsje a left hand turn!
update around 4:30 am: the schools called for a 2 hour delay last night.
the town plows were down our street around 2 am
All week the weather forecast for Stonehenge on saturday night was clear skies and a waning moon, making the perfect conditions for some astrophotography.
I was hawking over the weather forecasts and checking out cloud coverage, humidity levels and numerous weather apps only a couple of hours before setting off, so imagine our disappointment to find wall to wall cloud and heavy haze that didn't lift for the full 8 hours we were there.
This was perhaps one of the very first times since I have been going out with the camera I was really cheesed off! I simply cannot understand how the forecasts were so wrong and were even reporting as clear skies! whilst we were stood in the thick of it.
Still I had good company, Mark kept my spirits high and was hopeful of a better sunrise. Conversation helped pass the time and patrolling of the security guards with their flashlights did present a serendipitous image... maybe it wasn't a wasted effort after all.
I had been watching the weather forecast since the first of April and I was prepared for disappointment on the eighth. I did manage to get a fair representation of the event although not as good as some of my relatives that traveled to central Ohio for that day. on a side note, just today I decided to check the date and time stamp for the camera I used to take pictures of the eclipse. The minutes were twenty-seven minutes behind and the daylight savings switch was off. All the time stamps for the photos I snapped were one hour and twenty-seven minutes slow. I really failed eclipse nerddom that day.
The summer of 2018 is already writing history in the Netherlands.
We are heading for a historically dry summer. According to the latest weather forecasts, the precipitation shortage in the Netherlands is at the same level as in late July with 1976.
All lawns are already yellow and the trees are losing their leaves. Here in the area of the river Curved Rhine (Dutch: Kromme Rijn, farmers can still spray their crops, but not for long when the drought persists.
Almost every day there are natural fires where the fire brigade is deployed on a large scale to prevent expansion.
The next week it will still be dry with temperatures above 30 degrees Celsius.
☛ Please see here more from; Odijk, the Netherlands.
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Despite the weather forecast predicting a fairly dry cloudy day, this was not the case in the Tararua Ranges where the rain fell solidly all day and made for challenging photography conditions.
This shot taken at the Mangahao number one reservoir / dam. It's quite a trek in here, especially in a 2WD vehicle but definitely a spot to revisit in nicer conditions!
(c) Dominic Scott 2020
With lots of showery weather forecast, I thought it a good time to fold out the roof on the E-type Jaguar roadster. I don't mind a little wind in the hair (what's left of it) but I like to keep dry.
But then, someone told me if I drive fast enough with the roof down, the rain doesn't get in! I wonder if it is true?
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A forced perspective shot of my 1/18th scale AUTOart diecast model Series 1 E-type Jaguar roadster with the optional roof in place, parked in my driveway with the real backdrop of my village street.
The weather forecasts said one thing, but the satellite photos indicated another. We decided to chance it anyway. Looks like mother nature won this round...
Despite the mundane daytime appearance, this was captured about an hour after sunset.
(3 minute exposure)
The weather forecast is for 100 degrees plus all weekend...I'm through with summer and am wishing for colder days. This image is from a few years back while snowshoeing on Mt. Hood along the White River.
For full disclosure, this image is a composite of two different shots, one of the mountain and one of the river. Shots like the final product are possible along this beautiful trail, however on this day the weather did not cooperate with me. I took the creek composition first but the mountain was socked in with fog. Not long after starting up the trail I had a few glorious minutes of clear mountain views but no chance to get back to the original spot in time. The final image, however, stays very true to the real landscape of this area.
Photo taken at Mt. Hood's White River West Sno Park (Oregon, USA).
Weather forecaster sharing one of my pictures on the Good4Utah newscast in 2014.
Good4Utah 08-02-2014d crop
Weather forecast: Local rain is expected over two of the trees in the lake between 2:00 and 4:00 PM! Agency is warning: The cloud is already on a position! Please, do not stay between the two trees! :-)
It was 5 degrees above in Comox today but - 3 overnight can't complain as it is -45 in some areas in Canada.
" The Black River, nestled in the rocky country northeast of Lake Couchiching.
A local history of the townships surrounding the Black is called The Land Between, an accurate summary of its economic geography. Certainly the land and the rivers to the south have fallen under the wheel of "progress" - the mills and cottages of the Kawarthas, the long history of canals on the Trent and the Severn. To the north, Cottage country has boomed over the lakes of Muskoka and Haliburton, lining the waterways with shacks and palaces. But the land between -the valley of the Black - has so far escaped most such developments."
Thanks for visiting, stay tuned to see if blows over.
Weather forecast promising, but woke up to no sign of fog this morning, so quickly got back into bed. A few hours later checked again. Lots of fog on top of the South Downs!
Threw some clothes on and grabbed my bike. Pedaled as quickly as I could, still half asleep. Twenty minutes later I was in some amazing conditions on the hills.
Headed to an area of trees I know well and waited for the fog to ease. Took a few a photos. The fog disappeared in the blink of an eye. Reality returned. Looking forward to the alarm clock being less harsh, as summer fades.
The weather forecast was for heavy rain and winds today. So glad they got it wrong. Taken at noon today in the Glen
Totally ignored the weather forecast this morning and hoped it would be incorrect. Unfortunately the drizzle and calm winds were forecast correctly!
Not much going on for Sunrise but Liverpool looked "twinkly" in the drizzle! 17c at 7am this morning and with the cover from the trees it really did feel like an Indian summer
Yesterday the weather forecast was good, but I had to work again. Luckily the sky turned pink early I could rush to a place nearby for a quick photo moment before work. I was so happy I could enjoy this moment. Short but powerful. 😊
After seeing the weather forecast for the days ahead was not very good I thought a trip out around sunset might be good, It had been lovely and cloudy all day and with the promise of rain the following evening I thought the light might be nice and contrasty.
I have been here many times before but not to this particular field, when I saw how the light was playing on the grasses and wild flowers I had my composition. Yes the sun is blown but without that brightness there would be no foreground light, so I set a narrow f22 to get the sunstar and took three images of varying brightness so that later I would have a choice of which one to use, I don`t use filters anymore preferring to blend if needed however this is a single image with the canon showing it`s dynamic range that is so workable.
The dark line you can see across the foreground vegetation is a shadow of a fence.
What I like about this spot is the view across the valley where there are many fields of differing shapes and textures, as the sun sank behind a cloud bank I walked back up the hill shooting more compositions as the sky turned into a lovely golden hour, more to come .
The Bostal road on the way to Steyning in Sussex.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. Just a standard summer day in Glasgow - enjoy!
The weather forecast predicted storm last wednesdsy. Photographing at the beach is the best thing to do than! 😅 I enjoyed the spectacular circumstances! It was hard work but so much fun!! 😃
We saw the weather forecast the day before predicting that a thunderstorm would be rolling into this area, so we took our chances and drove the four hours east from Seattle hoping to catch an awesome sunrise at Palouse Falls. We were rewarded with these amazing pink storm clouds that started rolling in as the sun rose from the horizon. About an hour later it started raining heavily with thunder and lightning.
Palouse Falls was one of the first place I visited when I started to seriously photograph landscapes about 5 years ago, and perhaps it is fitting that I come full circle and return here for another attempt at creating a worthy image. I hope you enjoy the image as much as I enjoyed being there watching that sunrise unfold and photographing and editing this scene.
Apparently our local weather forecasters were too busy watching the Super Bowl last night and didn't pay too much attention to the weather. They had told us there was an upcoming chance of snow - albeit a light dusting to occur tonight. But all of Little Rock awoke this morning to find, instead, a few inches of snow sitting on the ground.
I woke up this morning and eagerly called the inclement weather number for my office, anticipating a recording saying that the office was closed and that I could sleep in for a few more hours. But my heart sank as the robot voice sadly informed me that the office was open, and that it was "business as usual." We could stay home if we wished, but it would require burning a vacation day. I'm trying to save up my PTO time, so I grudgingly got ready and went to clear off the snow from the car.
The traffic wasn't bad this morning, since every one else was safely at home. I got to work on time at 8am, only sliding once on the way. Most of my fellow co-workers never came in, and the office was eerily empty. It was quiet, except for the constant weather updates coming from distant cubicles. Everyone who made it into the office was waiting for the chance to leave as quickly as they could. At noon, after a few more inches of snow fell, they finally told us we could go home.
But after safely making it back home, I grabbed the camera and headed out to a few places for some pictures. One of those places was the Big Dam Bridge, in North Little Rock, Arkansas.
With excellent weather forecast the following morning it was decided to head out for a daylight shot of GBRF's 66743 which was to lead 6G97 09:00 Crediton - Westbury Down T.C. between Exeter Riverside Yard and Westbury. 66719 which was on the other end of the train worked between Crediton and Exeter.
66743 is seen passing Ellerhayes with the empty CWR.
25/04/21
After seeing the weather forecast (94 F, 34 C) I decided to run away from the city and visit Columbia Gorge looking for the freshness of the woods and the waterfalls.
We hiked with my daughter in the Wahkeena Falls trail.
Beautiful place but very crowed at this time of the year, so taking photos was a difficult task with so much people out there.
Anyways the day was beautiful, the spray in my face taking this photo was so refreshing and the picnic with my daughter after hiking was priceless.