On Saturday afternoon we were returning home from our local feed store. Our hay stocks are running low, the hay merchant cannot get to us because of the icy lanes and we needed to buy haylage to supplement what little we have left. As we drove across the high ridge of land to the east of Hightown Common, we saw a strange and beautiful sunset in the icy sky.
The sun was sinking in the west, behind the long curves of the distant Purbeck hills. The pale blue-grey and apricot sky showed thin streaks of high, icy clouds. To the right of the sunset, a seeming gap in the clouds began to shine with bright rainbow colours. Just a little patch of rainbow cloud and definitely not a bow of colour.
Looking up this phenomenon when we arrived home, we discovered that we had seen a rare iridescent cloud. Google images show many different and beautiful examples from around the world. Wikipedia describes the iridescent cloud as a "diffraction phenomenon".
Small crystals of ice in the cloud are individually scattering the light shining through them from the setting sun.Wikepedia continues:
"If parts of the cloud have crystals of a similar size, the cumulative effect is seen as colours."
Photograph taken using the "sunset" setting on my camera.
November Visit to Herefordshire - Part 2: A Local Walk and St Leonard's
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On the Wednesday we went for a local walk at Hatfield. There is a lovely
lane by St Leonard's church that only leads to farms so there is very
little...
1 hour ago
2 comments:
Astonishing and beautiful! How I long to move back to somewhere with 'big skies'!
That is amazing. How wonderful that you were able to see it and be one of few who have.
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