View allAll Photos Tagged Wildfire
Always love being in his arms!
"Wildfire" - Seafret
www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHhkd2B87Q8
You think you know all about it then it seems you are wrong
She hit it out of the park before it'd even begun
I needed sunshine in the darkness burning out
Well now I know that I'm the fuel and she's the spark
We are bound to each other's hearts, cold, torn, and pulled apart This love is like wildfire
And to my word now I'll be true, I can't stop this breaking loose
This love, is like wildfire
Like wildfire
This feelings arranged deep down inside
Try describing a love you can't design
More and more, every inch of me is holding on
This is it all the flames are burning strong
We are bound to each other's hearts, cold, torn and pulled apart This love is like wildfire
And to my word now I'll be true
I can't stop this breaking loose
This love is like wildfire
Like wildfire
Like wildfire
You think you know all about it then it seems you are wrong
She hit it out of the park before it'd even begun
Ohh
We are bound to each other's hearts
Cold, torn and pulled apart
This love, is like wildfire
And to my word now I'll be true I can't stop this breaking loose
this love is like wildfire
Like wildfire
Like wildfire
Like wildfire
Wildfires devastated thousands of acres in the Smoky Mountains in Gatlinburg Tn. 1500 homes were lost,14 people lost their lives. This was one of the most tragic events in the past 100 years. Dolly Parton grew up in these mountains and has set up a foundation to benefit all that lost everything. Please go to Dollywood.org to donate funds and help our fellow Americans gain back their lives.
The wildfires out West have brought smoke down the Great Plains all the way to Oklahoma. This morning's sunrise was really subdued. Our beautiful world, pass it on.
This oddball sunset is from September of 2017. The intense colors and haze were due to the fallout from two big wildfires in the Cascades, the Jolly Mountain Fire near Cle Elum and the Norse Peak Fire near Chinook Pass, reaching us out here in Seattle.
I noticed a strange looking moon this evening during my walk. Wildfire smoke in bay area is probably the worst this year so far. Hope AQ becomes better before the weekend
Wildfires around the city of Palermo in Sicily, Italy, captured by the Landsat-8 mission on 25 July 2023.
Data from the mission's SWIR bands, which penetrate the smoke of the fire, has been overlaid on the optical image to provide a clearer view of the fire front and affected area at the time of the acquisition.
Credits: USGS/ESA
This is another view of the Secata Wildfire area. The weekend before I took this picture, I drove down the road next to the bridge by the firetrucks. We missed the wildfire by two days. I remember thinking how prime this area was to fire because of the dry grass. 1,500 acres burned in less than a week because of these conditions. It will be nice to see the rain come back.
It's been a smoky summer this year. Since 2004 we have had extended periods of very thick wildfire smoke 5 times, and though Alaska is known for summer wildfires, in the previous half century this has only occurred once.
Acreage burned has surpassed 2,196,000 acres.
"Just because you are soft doesn't mean you are not a force. Honey and Wildfire are both the color gold." ~ Victoria Erickson (Author - Edge Of Wonder)
The night of July 23rd, 2021 produced a full moon with an erie golden orange glow thanks to the horrific wildfires burning in the western USA. Here the moon had just risen above the treetops in the southeastern sky. Other than a little sharpening and a fairly significant crop to pull it a little closer, this is a totally unedited image of the moon that night.
Another view of last years fire. Fortunately no one was hurt and mother nature is recovering just fine.
[Vibamp] - Yra Skirt
[Vibamp] - Crimin Bag
Mainstore
🚕: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/BlackOrchid/130/135/28
4m
About 3,243 acres have burned and the wildfire on the slopes of Mount Diablo is 60 percent contained after the fire was first reported around 1:10 p.m. Sunday near Morgan Territory Road, southeast of Clayton.
Eye burning, throat clogging smoke from more than 400 miles north in Canada. The image does not covey how thick it is.
The smoky haze has invaded the blue sky in Alberta since early this week . The smoke came from wildfires to the southwest in British Columbia, with the air quality health index on this morning 10, considered high risk.
From this picture, you can tell the smoke particles were large enough as the shorter wavelength blue light was scattered and the longer wavelength red light was let through. The smoke coughed up an eerie orange sun.
Western US states have been battling close to 100 wildfires, blanketing the majority of the west coast in smoke. Captured on 10 September, this Copernicus Sentinel-3 image shows the extent of the smoke plume which, in some areas, has caused the sky to turn orange.
In this image, multiple fires can be seen in the states of California, Washington and Oregon – the areas hit hardest by the blazes – producing the thick plume of smoke which can be seen travelling westwards. Based on additional data from the Copernicus Sentinel-3 mission, as of yesterday, the smoke was visible travelling 2000 km west of the active fires.
The cities of Portland, Eureka, Eugene, San Francisco and Sacramento are all blanked in smoke. In the top of the image, the cities of Vancouver and Seattle are visible.
Sentinel-3 is a two-satellite mission to supply the coverage and data delivery needed for Europe’s Copernicus environmental monitoring programme. Each satellite’s instrument package includes an optical sensor to monitor changes in the colour of Earth’s surfaces. It can be used, for example, to monitor ocean biology and water quality.
Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2020), processed by ESA, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
"All the poems have wolves in them,
All but One.
The most beautiful one of all.
She dances in a ring of fire
And throws off the challenge with a shrug."
- Jim Morrison
One year ago today a fast moving wildfire coming from the south caused the evacuation and closure of the park. Looking towards the townsite from the Maligne gorge viewpoint.
West-facing sunset during the ongoing wildfires. As of this shot, the Lilac Fire is on its third day, burning 4,100 acres and only 20% contained. The Southern California skyline is filled with smoke.
Royal Norwegian Air Force Lockheed P-3C-LO Orion (16)3299 'Ulabrand' seen on display at Bodø, Norway during the 2019 'Open Day' and Airshow
Norway has recently acquired several Boeing P-8 Poseidon sub-hunters to replace these ageing turbo-props - themselves a development of Lockheed's 1950's Electra Airliner
The military side of Bodø has since closed with their based F-16s retired after the acquisition of F-35s now deployed elsewhere
276A8022
“She will blaze through you like a gypsy wildfire. Igniting your soul and dancing in its flames. And when she is gone, the smell of her smoke will be the only thing left to soothe you.”
― Nicole Lyons
After the WIldfire; Somewhere, CA. 1990
Vintage Type-C print. Contemporary Pigmented Ink on Paper. 16x16 inches.
Another one of those images that fell through the cracks; shot at the same time as the Eastside images, but way out of the neighborhood. Not even sure where this is at exactly. The first (and only) wildfire devastation picture. Part of the Westside Project now.
Still a one and done for Wildfire and post-wildfire images. No desire to revisit that grief. My heart goes out to all those who lost their homes or loved ones this time around in 2025.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=gl4Y4FWWkn0
Anyone remember this song? I couldn't listen to it when I was young without bawling. Still a beautiful song and hasn't lost its magic.
Wildfire. Millions of trees are reduced to an ashen black and white disaster every year. Guadalajara. Spain
While visiting this area of Vancouver Island, I thought that this corner could make an interesting photograph at sunset. I planned the shot, wait until the sun was at a low angle below the trees, watch out for cars and don't get run over in the middle of the road. Staying nearby, I went there almost every evening, only to be disappointed with wildfire smoke. As the day progressed on the last day of our visit, some scattered clouds started to appear and so did the smoke and wind. I decided to take the picture and accept what I got.