Showing posts with label sunrise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunrise. Show all posts

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Farewell to the Sunrise

Every day is a different day

Our month of sunrises is concluding today.  These are yesterday's spectacle.  The intensity of the coral pinks and reds on the water was an experience. I had thought that sunsets would be more intense than sunrises, and find science is right.  They are equally wonderful.  The beautiful skies concluded with great cloud cover that brought in winds and rain.  
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Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Pretty Florida Architecture

As I finished taking pictures of the sunrise, I heard a yell from the beach and the two very hardy and hearty young surfers had just jumped into the water.  The waves today are great long, rolling waves. They must be perfect for surfing even though the temperatures are cold this early in the morning.  A walk along the beach yesterday revealed where the dead tree had been moved to. l wonder where it is today.
 
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Saturday, February 6, 2016

Garden Ornaments Florida-Style

What do Florida gardens have for ornaments?  
 
Across the the coastal highway is an older neighbourhood.  It looks like houses might have been built starting in the late forties and early fifties.  The new builds are going up, and they tend to be large.  Stylistically they fit into the seaside resort architecture theme.  

These first two pictures show the old style.  I haven't seen a boat planter before or a permanent lemonade stand in a neighbourhood.  Maybe on the Toronto Islands, where there are no cars.  It is possible to imagine yourself in a 1920's or 1930's community with a slower life style.

And with us being on the coast overlooking the ocean, there are endless pictures of the ocean to be taken.  These last pictures are the storm 2 days ago and yesterday's sunrise.  I didn't go out on the porch with the camera as it was so cold and windy yesterday morning.    And there's big surf and wind today too.


I am up before the sunrise, so perhaps I will get to see the 5 planet lineup this week.  The clouds will want to blow away and bring some calmer days - the sound of the surf remains thunderous.
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Thursday, February 4, 2016

Florida's Sunrise

This was yesterday's sunrise as it bounced off the sky looking north along the beach and then looking towards the sun as it rose in the sky.  The pinky coral colour was very pronounced. The progression of the day in pictures went:  Before Sun, Sun's Up, Surf's Up, Sails Up...

I was told by a boater yesterday that this is unusual to have such windy weather and such waves.  He wasn't able to launch his boat because of the winds.  There were a few hardy athletes out on the water.

I wondered about those trademark names like Kleenex and Windex as I was walking through the grocery store.  Here's my answer:


An eponym is someone or something whose name is or is thought to be the source of something's name (such as a city, country, era, or product); alternately it can be used to refer to the name of something that is based on or derived from someone or something else's name. Albert Einstein is the eponym of the element einsteinium; conversely, einsteinium is an eponym of Albert Einstein.

Active Trademarks Often Used Generically
  • Alka Seltzer
  • AstroTurf
  • Band Aid
  • Beer Nuts
  • Benzedrine
  • Boogie Board
  • Breathalyzer
  • Brillo Pad
  • BVDs
  • Chapstick (Chap Stick)
  • Cheerios
  • Claymation
  • Coke (Coca Cola)
  • Cola (Coca Cola)
  • Cool-Aid (Kool-Aid)
  • Cuisinart
  • Demerol
  • Ditto Machine
  • Dixie Cups
  • Dumpster
  • Erector Set
  • Fiberglass (Fiberglas)
  • Fig Newtons
  • Freon
  • Frisbee
  • Green Stamp
  • Hacky Sack
  • Hi-lighter (Hi-Liter)
  • Hoover
  • Hula-Hoop
  • Jacuzzi
  • Jeep
  • Jello (Jell-O)
  • Jockey Shorts
  • Kitty Litter
  • Kleenex
  • Laundromat
  • Levi's
  • Life Savers
  • Mace
  • Magic Marker
  • Microchip
  • Novocain
  • Oreo
  • Palm Pilot
  • Parcheesi (replacing the generic word "Pachisi")
  • Ping Pong (replacing the generic term "Table Tennis")
  • Play-Doh
  • Plexiglas
  • Polaroid
  • Pop Tart
  • Popsicle
  • Post-It Note
  • Q-Tip
  • Rollerblade
  • Roller Derby
  • Scotch Tape
  • Scrabble
  • Sellotape
  • Sheetrock
  • Skivvies
  • Styrofoam
  • Super Glue
  • Teflon
  • Teleprompter (TelePrompTer)
  • Teletype
  • Teva
  • Thermos
  • TV Dinner
  • Tylenol
  • UNIX
  • Valium
  • Vaseline
  • Velcro
  • Walkman
  • Welcome Wagon
  • White Out (Wite-Out)
  • Wiffle Ball
  • Windbreaker
  • X-Acto Knife
  • Xerox
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Thursday, September 10, 2015

Sunset Sunrise

As the sun sets on summer our question of the day is:  Do Sunrises look different from sunsets?  Today we'll see fireworks as the sun sets on summer.  What about tomorrow?

Natalie Wolchover writes:
"You've woken up out of a coma. You yank the IV from your arm and stumble out of the hospital. The sun is perched on the horizon. Can you tell whether it's rising or setting?
Contemplating this scenario while gazing sunward at dusk or dawn, we might feel as if we could sense the difference between the two times of day. But in real life, it's impossible to completely divorce our perceptions of the scene from our awareness of the hour. So, is there any objective way to distinguish an upward-trending sun from a downward one?
According to atmospheric physicists David Lynch and William Livingston, the answer is "yes, and no."

The first is in our heads. "At sunset, our eyes are daylight adapted and may even be a bit weary from the day's toil," Lynch and Livingston write. "As the light fades, we cannot adapt as fast as the sky darkens. Some hues may be lost or perceived in a manner peculiar to sunset. At sunrise, however, the night's darkness has left us with very acute night vision and every faint, minor change in the sky's color is evident." In short, you may perceive more colors at dawn than at dusk. [Red-Green & Blue-Yellow: The Stunning Colors You Can't See]"

To read on see: http://www.livescience.com/34065-sunrise-sunset.html