View allAll Photos Tagged stratusclouds
The evening sun approaching sunset shrouded in stratus and light cirrus clouds above the Uihlein Waterfowl Production Area, Winnebago County, Wisconsin.
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The evening sun approaching sunset shrouded in stratus and light cirrus clouds above a farm on the edge of the Uihlein Waterfowl Production Area, Winnebago County, Wisconsin.
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A Hitachi made loco of SRT at Hua Lamphong Railway Station, Bangko, with the skyline of City in the background.
A panorama combining six wide angle shots of a late autumn fair-weather sky looking southwest in San Diego, California, USA
This B&W rendition of this is a personal favorite. Really wish you could see a print of this sometime... A secret world lives just beneath the shiny surface of life; rich with detail, repeating its message, holding forth an inner reality that illuminates the dark and brings truth to light.
#175 on Explore - Apr 13, 2009
Stratus clouds over the Pacific Ocean lend structure to the sunset.as night lights start to appear at Palm Beach. "Big" Burleigh is silhouetted through the gap in the hinterland gardens and forests.
Haze and smoke over the Queensland – New South Wales border combine to colour the reflection of the setting sun. Foreground houses look north over the Currumbin Valley.
"Morning Has Broken on our Serene Bay: was photographed on a winter's morning. As dawn broke beams of sunlight shone a shafts through the disturbed cloud, illuminating Tin Can Bay.
The gentle land breeze overnight had drifted a layer of stratus towards the warm sea. On arriving above the ocean shore the air gently rising from the warm sea disturbed and dissipated the arriving stratus cloud. And the sun shone gloriously through the breaks in the cloud.
Curious layers and colours above northern New South Wales. Mt Somerville (with radar dome) and Mt Tomewin shape the horizon while golden light picks out the residential windows on the hillside of Currumbin Valley. The logic of the colours defies me.
A deep inversion of cool air, marked by the layer of stratus clouds, streams up against the Front Range of the southern Rocky Mountains. Pawnee and Paiute Peaks, as well as Mount Audubon (l to r) rise up above the clouds into the sunlight, as seen from 12,400 feet (3780 m) on Niwot Ridge.
btw, yes I know the song title is send in the clowns…
Happy 4th of July- up with the Yanks, down with the Brits ;) #5
Kanyakumari is a coastal town on India's southern tip, jutting into the Laccadive Sea (or Lakshadweep Sea) in the Indian Ocean. The colorful sea-shores have cliffs, rocks, sand and boulders. This shot being taken at dusk. The last warm sun rays of the bright orange-yellow sun, fall on the waves making them look like covered in a sheet of gold. On the protruding land, silhouette of line of coconut trees can be seen. The sky, and the stratus clouds in it, are also covered in the various colors of the light of the setting sun. The whole atmosphere was serene and so soothing!
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I chose this format because I wanted to exclude surrounding buildings and focus on the interaction between the top of the tower and the clouds. Stratus clouds are essentially the same thing as fog, except the cloud base lies a few hundred meters above ground level.
Canon 6d
16-35 2.8L II at 35
f/8, ISO 100
1/320
Low stratus cloud formations over south Bondi Beach coast combined with 15mm fisheye and Spicify processing using Topaz 3 filter. I took these images within 20 mins of each other.
The sunset cast a beautiful red-orange hue across the marsh and through a stand of cabbage palms (Sabal palmetto, Arecaceae) at Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge near DeLeon Springs, Volusia County, Florida. A variety of wetland plants adorn the foreground.
For some reason, getting stuck in a dawn holding pattern went down pretty well with me this morning...
The beginning of this mornings sunrise over Lower Manhattan. They dont get much better than this! And right behind 1 World Trade Center? Bonus.. Got lucky with every aspect of this photo..
Part 1 - 6:25am Feb 22nd 2013
Another fine view to end this flying day as we descend towards a seemingly-unbroken sheet of stratus blanketing most of Bavaria...
Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
A re-work of an older photo & post
Weather conditions in Virginia's Shenandoah National Park back in April of 2011 gave rise to a unique weather phenomenon called a cloud inversion (I like to refer to them as fog oceans). It's as if all the clouds sunk from the sky and filled the valley floor. Smaller mountains are not visible as they are buried below the massive fog. The Massanutten Mountain Range is partially submerged in the background.
An inversion resembles an ocean made up of dense fog. The inversion clouds are created when cold air is trapped near the surface as warm air moves in above. The humidity in the colder air causes the fog. The inversion lasts until air temperatures are warm enough to allow the fog to dissipate.
THANKS FOR VIEWING!
5:27am - moment of sunrise at Long Reef Beach, Sydney. Nothing out of the ordinary. The beach was calm but I couldn't take my mind off the possum that I made a road kill on the way to the beach.
I was following Oat's example, i.e. ignoring the rule of thirds. I never did anyway.
Spot the beams of the sun shining upwards from the clouds.
Warming filter was applied to the whole pic in CS to enhance the sunrise colours. Sepia filter was applied to the bottom half to 'suppress' the ugly blue in the sea.
Aperture F/13 (forgot to reset from last week, careless me).
ISO100 | f/13 | 1/15sec | 17mm | eval.metering | cloudy WB | raw | ND4 grad filter | tripod
April 6, 2019 - The high winds knocked down my Tripod during my Wildflowers Superbloom Photo Shoot in Lancaster, CA! Thank God my Nikon D810 DSLR camera was not on my tripod at this time!
Sometimes clouds and smog will show off the Makati skyline. And this afternoon is just one of those times. From a few miles away, the city looked promising, hiding everything : poor waste disposal, heavy traffic, corrupt public officials, swindlers, robbers -- you name it. Well at least, at this point in time and from this distance the city looked promising.
Metro Manila
Philippines
Wishing all my Flickr friends a happy and blessed week!
I hope that you had a happy weekend!
Thank you so much for your visits and for your kind words. They are very much appreciated!
Looking back towards the beach and golf course from Snook Point rocks at Seahouses in Northumberland.
The cloudy sky is an indication of one of the weather on one of the better days of our summer holiday.
It's been a while since I really wanted to take photos. November wasn't an active month, nor really October for that matter. I'll have owned my Canon 7D for one year this Sunday, and looking back, I know I've come a long way from where I was, but I still feel I didn't achieve enough within that time period. I'm my worst critic, and that has put me off photography instead of using it as a tool to push myself.
Luckily 2014 is right around the corner, and will hopefully be a much more productive year, as well as an evolving one for my work. One of my goals is to not critic myself to the extent I normally do, and instead just get out there and shoot, shoot, shoot.
Yesterday I forced myself to get out and photograph the fog. It was amazing to see it in the woods, and I it reminded me why I like taking photos in the first place. I'll be posting more of the fog-related photos from yesterday on Flickr as well as Tumblr.
And on a semi-related note, I really just want to move to the Pacific Northwest of the United States. The landscape is beyond gorgeous and diverse. Hopefully I'll be able to sometime in the future, even if it's just for a few years.
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The Osprey is the only raptor eating a diet consisting exclusively of fish. They dive in the water feet first and generally catch fish within the first 3 feet of water. This makes them dependent on surface dwelling fish or those fish in shallow waters.
I came across this Osprey at Lover's Key State Park while walking along the beach in the late evening. It had recently caught a fish had just started eating its meal when I came upon it. It was very tolerant of my presence and allowed a close approach.