
Vapour Trails Enjoy!*******************************************************************************These images are intended as a source of …
Today’s #Picture to Inspire Your Imagination: 30/July/21
Beautiful sunset vapour trails courtesy of Stuart.

Vapour Trails Enjoy!*******************************************************************************These images are intended as a source of …
Today’s #Picture to Inspire Your Imagination: 30/July/21
Beautiful sunset vapour trails courtesy of Stuart.

Red Sky at Night Enjoy!#View my professional pictures here, where you can buy them as digital files, framed prints, canvas wraps, or Giclee art …
Today’s #Photograph 17/Jun/21
A beautiful red evening sky photo from Stuart. Beautiful!

You’ll find more of my professional pictures here, where you can purchase them as digital files, framed prints, canvas wraps, or Giclee art prints. …
Today’s #Photograph 13/May/21
A breathtakingly beautiful blue sky from Stuart. 🙂

Storm Clouds over a French Roof You’ll find more of my professional pictures here, where you can purchase them as digital files, framed prints, …
Today’s #Photograph 8/May/21
An interesting contrast between sun and cloud, courtesy of Stuart. 🙂

This should give you an idea of how much snow is on my roof. I took this on Tuesday (March 16).

It’s beginning to melt and I’m starting to think we had better knock some of it down. I wouldn’t want any of that falling on my head!
Today, the icicles were starting to develop …

… and we had +7°C! It was such a nice break after literally, months of -30 and -40 … and sometimes, I really just didn’t want want to know. It was better that way.
The snow was soft and beginning to be slushy; snowballs were waiting to be made, snow sculptures were waiting to be found.
Yay! Bring on the melt!
Happy weekend. 🙂
This fabulous photo …

… was captured by Santiago Borja and published by National Geographic.
It is a gigantic cumulonimbus cloud (the kind that pilots are ever vigilant to avoid, especially during summer) over the Pacific Ocean; the photo was taken from about 37,000 ft.
The photographer captured this shot during one of the lightening flashes emanating from the cloud.
As a pilot, I have taken what I consider to be rather interesting pictures from aloft, but I have nothing even approaching this.
The original article can be seen here: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/proof/2017/04/your-shot-unbelievable-landscapes/

People all over our wonderful world can’t get out and enjoy nature just now. Here, I’m trying to brighten the days for them by posting pictures of …
Today’s Pictures: 6 July 20
A beautiful forest and a beautiful sky. Thanks, Stuart. 🙂

Trying to brighten the day for those people isolated indoors during the Covid-19 pandemic. Another day when grey skies greeted the morning and the …
Today’s Pictures: 14 June 20
Stuart took this unusual but striking sky photo on a visit to Italy, and has also included another of his lovely local forest. Thank you, Stuart. 🙂
On my recent return to Canada, I took some photos of the sunrise as we chased it into the west.

As we flew above the cirrocumulus clouds, it really hit me that this experience – flying into the west above a layer of lake-like rippled cloud, or most any flying at all – would soon be coming to a screeching halt.

I wondered about how much of this virus situation we have done to ourselves. There is a densely packed underside to humanity, and we all know of it.
Part of that underside is our insatiability.
There never seems to be enough money, food, clothes, cars, trips, technology … toilet paper, to satisfy us. We usually seem to need more, more, more of whatever it is, and sometimes, because of this, we are releasing things that we do not understand or respect, even tiny little things, like viruses. Are we simply just ignoring this? Flying above it?
Is this Earth’s way of slowing us down? Of forcing a break? Is Earth finally getting a much-deserved rest?
What do you think?