On Fri, 3 Aug 2012 20:35:31 +0930, "Dave Kearton"
wrote:
"Bob (not my real pseudonym)" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 2 Aug 2012 21:11:47 +0930, "Dave Kearton"
wrote:
Either the foreground or the background would qualify as a pretty
picture,
doing both is like chocolate and vanilla in the same bucket of
strawberries.
Fine. Mention ice cream after the Trader Joe's across the street
closes for the day.
Unless I've mis-Googled, this is Mt St Helens from Ed Carlson ?
OK, I'll take a partial on that.....it's Chehalis-Centralia. Looks like
a
very nice corner of the planet too.
Here is St Helens from about five miles away, during the 2005
dome-building eruption.
And another from July 1980 during one of its secondary burps after
"The Big One" of May 18, 1980. This one was taken from 100 miles
away, and not an inch too far.
That must have been a life-changing event. I should pay more attention
to volcanoes.
I was at the Fairchild AFB open house on May 18, 300 miles directly
downwind of the volcano. One of our party was a police officer in a
town about 100 miles closer to the volcano; we tried to get him home.
Cost my friend a new engine for his car and some of us stranded a
couple days in a road side rest area and small town school gymnasium.
Finally got home four days later in my car, complete with my own
personal lahar...
That, and memories that will last forever.
The shot that looks like nighttime was taken as we drove into the ash
cloud during early afternoon. A short time later there was no
daylight at all; I've worked in commercial darkrooms that had more
ambient light. The sound of muffled thunder as static lightning arced
through the ash clouds above as the most amazing soft snow of
ex-volcano fell around us.
Even you folks in Oz aren't completely immune...
http://thewatchers.adorraeli.com/201...-due-to-erupt/