View allAll Photos Tagged storm
I've had a scenario in my head for a while -- trying to get the right sunset clouds behind the Dallas skyline. This is getting closer. Usually storm clouds leaving to the east get my attention.
A monster wave slams against the sea wall on North Promenade in Blackpool at the height of Storm Ciara.
Lightning Storm, Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The lightning strikes are in Grand Teton National Park although the photo was taken from the Bridger Teton National Forest.
• Grand Teton/Yellowstone Photo Tours
The evening sun has finally broken through the storm clouds over the Sangre de Cristo Mountains as the Colorado Pacific Rio Grande Walsenburg job exits the Walsenburg Yard Limits and begins their westbound trek back to Alamosa.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
I know it's not very good compared to some but had to have a go during the spectacular storm which hit London last night.. Absolute monsoon rain so took this through a very wet double glazed window in my study.
We are being pounded by our first tropical storm of the hurricane season, which runs from June to November. This year we have been forecasted 11 hurricanes two of which can be category 3 (winds of 111–129 mph, 178–208 km/h).
I have been living in the tropics for a long time and have been in a few hurricanes so I take them very seriously and do get prepared ( we always pack a suitcase with all important things, scout for inland hotels where we can go for shelter, etc.) and I am kind of used to it. But what one never gets used to is the sound of the howling wind, so loud, so eerie..yukk!
In this area:-
The tree was one of 50 lost in Storm Arwen.
It was a Sequoia Sempervirens [ coastal redwood ] that was planted in 1887.
It stood over 50 metres
Tall.
The fallen Sequoia lost during Storm Arwen is being planked into 10 - 15 cm thick timber.
Once the trunk has
been removed Bodnant Garden will be able to carry out essential River Bank repair work.
I was out last night as the storm came rolling in. Low hanging clouds made it challenging to come away with anything and I only took 5 photos, but I managed to come across an old barn I hadn't seen before which lent itself well to black and white.
Some amazing light and structure on this small storm near Arriba in Colorado.
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Wonderful skies around here today and lots of rain. Fortunately I was lucky enough not to get wet!
© 2015 Nicola Riley
I was on "A" Mountain just across the I-10 from downtown Tucson when this late monsoon storm rolled in. I enjoy lots of weather when out shooting but this got a bit fierce and eventually chased everyone away!
Storm season. I uploaded this photo to celebrate it's appearance in Outdoor Photography January 2018 edition. This photo is used as the half page photo intro to the Locations guide section, where one of my other photos (already posted) and article can be found in the viewpoint section on the Roker lighthouse. I've also posted it as I can't wait for this seasons stormy seas. So get your long lenses and high burst shutter at the ready. Also warm clothing wholly hat and gloves.
Even a storm can look pretty against a harsh and barren Wyoming countryside. The powerlines weave and criss-cross the landscape and take the storms in stride.
Black Mountain Kentucky. I didn't have a wide angle lens, so I turned the camera on its side. Shot seven pictures in portrait mode and stitched them together in Photoshop. I reduced the image size to 2048 width, other wise the image was going to be 120MB.
Early evening April 14th, a shelf storm with arcus cloud passed through this area.
To the east I was treated to the wonderful sight of a double rainbow, behind me to the west, incredible mammatus formation.
An exhilarating hour, weather wise.
Link to the mammatus formation happening at the same time behind me to the west: www.flickr.com/photos/112623317@N03/41531735901/in/photol...
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On the way home from Berry, we were ahead of the storm for awhile, but it caught us in the end. We were looking for a spot to stop to take some photos. We ended up on Jamberoo Rd then Swamp Rd near Jamberoo. I particularly liked this part of the cloud.
I took this photo from the parking lot of a local supermarket at 5 pm yesterday afternoon. A series of fierce, damaging thunderstorms struck our region soon after.