Category Archives: Nature

Weekly Photo Challenge: The Golden Hour, Take Two

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is The Golden Hour.

One golden hour was here. But I can’t resist posting another one, which was so perfectly golden—

DSC_0305DSC_0308DSC_0343DSC_0325 2DSC_0328

(Belize, 2010. More photos are here. And yet a third “Golden Hour” post is here.)

Travel Theme: Simplicity

By Vladimir Brezina

Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Simplicity.

A block of wood is very simple—

IMGP3315 cropped smallIMGP3316 cropped small 2

Weekly Photo Challenge: The Golden Hour

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is The Golden Hour.

DSC_0265 cropped smallWhen I saw this week’s theme, I thought, how timely! For today (and tomorrow) is the second round of this year’s Manhattanhenge, the culmination of a very special golden hour in Manhattan. (Here are the photos from the first round of Manhattanhenge in May, and from 2011.) And I was going to urge all New Yorkers reading this post to go and see it. And even-out-of towners—you’ve still got a few hours to get on that plane so as to be in Manhattan by 8: 23 PM EDT ;-)

Unfortunately, a solid overcast, with occasional showers and thunderstorms, is forecast for both today and tomorrow. Indeed, as I write this, the rain is already beginning.

It will be a wash.

So, instead, here is another golden hour that I remember fondly.

IMGP5809 cropped smallIMGP5822 cropped smallIMGP5838 cropped smallIMGP5839 cropped smallIMGP5854 cropped smallIMGP5863 cropped smallIMGP5867 cropped small

It was last summer, during our kayak circumnavigation of Long Island. We were camped at the easternmost point of Long Island, at Montauk, in a grove of trees that faced the rising sun. The light that flooded our camp that morning was truly golden. And equally golden was the extra hour of sleep that we allowed ourselves that morning after our exertions of the day before

Two more golden hours are here and here.

Weekly Photo Challenge: Companionable, Take Two

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is Companionable. One interpretation was here; here’s another one.

In the bird world, as in the human—

Companionable
DSC_0043 cropped small

Companionable
DSC_0240 cropped small

CompanionableDSC_0534 cropped small

Companionable
DSC_0146%2520cropped%2520small

NOT companionableDSC_0499 cropped small 2

Supermoon

By Vladimir Brezina

Last night we had a minor bit of fun awaiting the “super” Supermoon.

We looked up the time of moonrise—8:40 PM, just after sunset. And we looked up the direction in which the Moon should appear at moonrise—115 degrees true. This number was very pleasing, since it happens to be more or less the direction in which our apartment looks out over the East River.

But our view of the horizon is by no means complete. There are quite a few tall buildings around ours that block the view. Would the moon rise behind one of these, or in a gap between them? I suppose we could have gotten out the compass… But we preferred to wait and be surprised.

And there is was! It appeared in one of the gaps.

Astronomical predictions are wonderful, but you also need luck…

DSC_0003 cropped smallDSC_0032 cropped smallDSC_0049 cropped small

Travel Theme: Ripples

By Vladimir Brezina

Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Ripples.

IMGP6005 cropped smallIMGP4763 cropped small 2IMGP3571 cropped small

Summertime!

By Vladimir Brezina

The Summer Solstice has just occurred, so— Happy Summer!

Summertime,
And the livin’ is easy…

(Of course, Happy Winter! to those in the Southern Hemisphere :-) )

Weekly Photo Challenge: Curves

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is Curves.

DSC_0330 cropped small 2DSC_0745 cropped smallDSC_0051 3

Weekly Photo Challenge: Fleeting

By Vladimir Brezina

This week’s Photo Challenge is Fleeting.

Fleeting, fleeing, flying…

DSC_0499 cropped small 2

Manhattanhenge 2013

By Vladimir Brezina

Manhattanhenge is the phenomenon for which, future archeologists might well conclude, the rectangular street grid of Manhattan was built.  As Neil deGrasse Tyson, the astronomer who has spread the word about Manhattanhenge, writes:

What will future civilizations think of Manhattan Island when they dig it up and find a carefully laid out network of streets and avenues? Surely the grid would be presumed to have astronomical significance, just as we have found for the pre-historic circle of large vertical rocks known as Stonehenge, in the Salisbury Plain of England. For Stonehenge, the special day is the summer solstice, when the Sun rises in perfect alignment with several of the stones, signaling the change of season.

For Manhattan, a place where evening matters more than morning, that special day comes twice a year. For 2013 they fall on May 28th, and July 13th, when the setting Sun aligns precisely with the Manhattan street grid, creating a radiant glow of light across Manhattan’s brick and steel canyons, simultaneously illuminating both the north and south sides of every cross street of the borough’s grid. A rare and beautiful sight. These two days happen to correspond with Memorial Day and Baseball’s All Star break. Future anthropologists might conclude that, via the Sun, the people who called themselves Americans worshiped War and Baseball.

So Manhattanhenge proper—when half of the sun’s disk would have appeared on the horizon at the end of the cross streets at sunset—was actually yesterday, May 28th. But it was cloudy. And anyway, from Midtown Manhattan it’s not really possible to keep the sun in sight as it sinks all the way down to the horizon. New Jersey is in the way.

But today, May 29th, the full disk of the sun was to appear at the end of the cross streets at sunset. Even better!

Two years ago I observed Manhattanhenge from 34th Street. Today, for a change, I went to 42nd Street.

DSC_0226 cropped small

The venue: 42nd Street

DSC_0228 cropped small

Photographers gather

DSC_0221 cropped small

That’s where it will happen

DSC_0240 cropped small

Here it comes!

DSC_0243 cropped small

It’s going to be good!

DSC_0247 cropped small

Excitement mounts ;-)

DSC_0265 cropped small

The magic moment

DSC_0265 cropped small 2

Crowds worship the setting Sun on 42nd Street