View allAll Photos Tagged contrails
Netherlands, Rotterdam, Delftse Poort, Abe Bonnema, Contrails.
The Delfste Poort is the HQ of the Nationale Nederlanden insurance company. More info about this building is: here.
This is a repost of : this one with corrected perspective and without the dust from the sensor (yes really, the whole lens-sensor assembly of the F30 was (much) later replaced at no cost (warranty) ).
Best viewed: LARGE
In the front yard, on the way out to get the mail.
Vultures have been hanging around since Superstorm Sandy broke off the top of a big pine tree (left one of the center three) at my neighbors, giving the birds a perfect place to roost. There are three or four now waiting for this guy to land.
We live right under the flight path for most east bound flights heading to the New York airports so when the weather is right there are lots of contrails.
Project 2020/366 - Day 034: Contrails
I was on the phone on the front porch this afternoon when I said to my conversation partner, "Hey hold on a second, I need to snap this photo!" I had noticed jets passing overhead all afternoon and Norfolk seems to be underneath a particularly active air traffic control sector. In this view, jets are passing both north and south, including some in what appeared to be close proximity. As I was shooting this, some departing traffic from KORF passed at low altitude on its way somewhere.
[A714D9]
Really happy the way this shot turned out. The sky was good not only with lovely colour but with the contrails from passing aircrft too all reflected in the high tide river Adur .
Usually, I'd be cursing the contrails for ruining the shot - but in this case, they actually make the shot!
Clouds went blurry. Was looking out my window to see if the clouds were good for pics. Looked like a bunch of Cirrocumulus clouds, so didn't figure to get a pic. I looked it a bit later and they must have been hit by some up high winds, because they all became blurry, like in the pic. If you look real close you can see a contrail in the middle in the space between the clouds. Didn't see it when taking the pic.
A bridge in Blibao of epic proportions proudly towering up into the sky, contrasting against the tiny contrails of a plane passing by overhead.
Camera: Leicaflex SL2 (Leica ID 10022), made in 1975
Lens: Leica Summicron-R-II 50mm (11216), made in 1978
Kodak Ektar 100 colour negative film
Developed and scanned by www.meinfilmlab.de
Ryanair B737-800 EI-DWL
Altitude: 9754 m
Routing: CAG-FKB
Set of shots taken on 25th July in Milan showing the onset of iridescence in a contrail identified as aerodynamic. Possibly, regular and aerodynamic contrails co-exist.
High up there is a Boeing 767-338 ER BDSF (N364CM) freighter aircraft as operated by ABX Air on flight GB956 to Cincinnati USA.
The aircraft is at an altitude of just 30,000 feet (a lowish cruising height), it's travelling at 493 miles per hour (ground speed) and is some 24 minutes out of Brussels Airport in Belgium.
N364CM was back on the ground at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport some 8 hours and 18 minutes later.
The aircraft is flying west not far from of the well known Clacton VOR (Very high frequency Omni directional Radio) aviation navigation beacon which is just a few minutes flying time from here.
I spotted this contrail while out in my back yard at my home in the County of Essex (UK) and the aircraft itself is around 15 miles away (in a straight line) ;-)
All my contrails www.flickr.com/photos/stuart166axe/tags/contrail
My Aviation album flic.kr/s/aHsjuyqPMt
Contrails maybe manmade but somtimes I find they add another dimension to a skyscape.
Sunset in Cornwall, St Ives .