Friday, June 19, 2015

Bloomsday Spectacular






                                God writes the Gospel not in the Bible alone, but also on trees, and in the flowers and clouds and stars.

                                                                                                              -- Martin Luther




Last Tuesday, June 16, was Bloomsday, the 101st anniversary of Leopold Bloom's odyssey through Dublin chronicled in James Joyce's Ulysses.  And here in Corrales, the Universe celebrated with a bloom of cumulonimbus clouds at sunset.

It all started as it usually does:  in the afternoon, the land warms up and moist air begins to rise, generating a large cumulonimbus formation . . . in this case, not one, but two adjacent to each other.  Here's how they appeared looking east from our back yard.  One cloud stack is in the foreground in the center, the other in the background on the right.

7:28p MDT

For scale purposes, the top of the mountain in the background is about 5,000 feet above the average terrain, which is already 6,000 feet above sea level.

Instead of growing primarily vertically, these stacks began to blossom as if the center were being pushed down and the clouds on the circumference were being pushed up and outward:
 

8:03p MDT


Sunset this evening was at 8:22p.  As the sun neared the horizon, the color began to emerge . . .

8:19p


And then, for a few minutes after sunset, the clouds were still catching direct sunlight, and the color simply exploded:



8:30p



8:33p


8:35p




Fifteen minutes after official sunset, the underside of the clouds began to fall into shadow while the upper levels still blazed:


8:37p

8:39p

Twenty minutes after official sunset, the color was almost completely gone:

8:42p

But even after the color disappeared, the clouds continued to evolve:


8:54p


In addition to the large-scale grandeur, there was also great beauty in the details:


8:24p




8:34p




8:36p


8:36p


8:36p


8:42p


8:44p


8:44p


8:50p


9:03p




9:10p


9:15p


A beautiful ending to Bloomsday in Corrales!


If you would like to see these images in a larger format, visit my photography website, Todos Juntos Photography, by clicking here.


Enjoy!

1 comment:

  1. I just posted something, but it wants me to do something else below so it erased it. I am too tired to write it all again. Basically: these are splendid. Joyce would like that Bloom had such blossoms on that day. What glorious paintings of light. Have you thought of music? They must have music to unfold to. They do not need it, but I can hear it.

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