Category Archives: Sunsets

Spectacular Sunset Launch

There was a SpaceX Falcon9 launch (with Starlink satellites) at 20:36, with sunset having occurred at 20:09. It was clear and I expected a spectacular sight – I was not disappointed.

Click on them – enjoy the full-sized files!

The rocket rose just to the right of the mountain, seen through those trees and headed toward orbit. The white exhaust plume is from the first stage, which cut off (MECO = Main Engine Cut Off) just behind that far left tree. You can see the rocket coasting and the second stage firing just above and to the left of that point.

The second stage, along with the Starlink payload, is headed to space and well above most of the atmosphere at this point, so the exhaust expands out in a cone behind it. The bright dot just behind and below it is the first stage, falling back toward the drone barge waiting for it off of Baja.

Behind it, the plume was being pushed around by high altitude winds and still brightly lit by the Sun, even though it was well after sunset here on the ground. A launch like this always leads to a ton of calls to 9-1-1.

Finally, as even the eastern-most parts of the plume fell into darkness, the western-most parts were still lit up but were starting to turn orange with the sunset.

I think I got a pretty decent view of the launch on video. It’s long, about 15 minutes, since I let it run, hoping to hear the sonic boom about 12-13 minutes after launch. (Spoiler: I didn’t hear the sonic boom, but the front yard sprinklers did turn on and I had to run for it to stay dry. You can stop watching the video after about the 8:45 mark, unless you want to see me scramble.)

Falcon9 shows up over the hill at about 3:43. MECO and stage separation happens at 4:29. At 5:35, in the plume behind the second stage, you can see three dots. That’s the 1st stage, and the two fairing halves, all falling back to be recovered and re-used on a future flight.

Another thing to look for is the reentry burn of the first stage. It can be seen starting up just to the left of the street light pole from 8:11 to 8:34, the first time I’ve ever seen it from here, over a hundred miles away. In this burn, the first stage slows down as it starts to hit the top of the atmosphere, reducing the heat and structural stress on reentry as transitions from falling to flying down onto the drone ship. Spectacular!

I’ve seen videos taken from the High Desert, Hesperia, Victorville, and Apple Valley, where folks there can still see these launches, even another hundred miles to the east. It will be interesting to watch for from that new viewpoint when we find the Forever Home.

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Filed under Photography, Space, Sunsets, Video

Proof Of Life – June 11th

I don’t want to break my current streak of 300+ days of posting every day, but there are a couple of things going on that are just a bit all-consuming going on, and my new and exciting dental adventures on top of it!

That leaves very little time to think great thoughts, take great pictures, and cogitate on the wonders of the universe. So, you may get a lot of these “quickie” Proof Of Life posts for a couple of weeks.

I finally got into the dentist today and, as expected, there are two primary options – Bad and Worse.

Bad = tooth extraction and replacement with a fake on a post. Sounds painful, but it’s a one day thing, probably.

Worse = crown lengthening, which I had done last summer when I had three root canals, turned out to be worse than a colonoscopy, very unpleasant and painful. And even if we do that, the odds are good that we’ll need to do the extraction and replacement anyway within a year or two.

Sometimes “bad” is “better.” Fun and games next Friday.

This is why June is “Hell Month” this year.

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Filed under Health, Sunsets

Proof Of Life – June 10th

The Sun went down:

and the full “strawberry” Moon came up (the final full moon of spring):

I’m still here…

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Sunsets

Beautiousness

Between work deadlines, forever home house hunting, preparing to move sooner rather than later, and *LIFE*, I’m overwhelmed enough so that I don’t know the day of the week without checking my watch, the day of the month is iffy at best, and even which month we’re in can be a crap shoot. Given that, it’s no surprise that I’ve lost track completely of what the current phase of the moon is. I sorta remember a full moon a while back, but was it a week ago? Two weeks ago? Closer to three? Who knows!?

Apparently it was about two and a half weeks ago. While doing a lap of the back yard just after sunset, I spotted this:

My first thought was to think “cool!” and move on. I wasn’t going to take a picture or spend another second on it, I’m swamped. (Remember?)

But then I came to my senses. I took the picture specifically to share tonight as a reminder to stop, look around, pay attention to the beauty and wonders that are lurking everywhere. (Can beauty lurk?)

Life’s short. Listen to Ferris Bueller. “Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”

Take time to smell the roses. Or say hello to the crescent moon hanging up there in the sunset clouds.

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Sunsets

A Horsie I Think

Still looking at clouds. I’m usually not that good about seeing shapes in them (for example, some of my finest work is pretty basic, at best) but this one just leapt out at me this evening.

It’s running from left to right, and its head is turned to look at me. See it? Tail, hooves, ears, butt?

Wait, aren’t horse butts called “withers?” Eeeehhhh! 🚨🚨🚨Wrong! 🚨🚨🚨 The shoulders, or highest point on the back, are the withers. So what is the back end called? Just horse butts?

If we’re going to buy a horse property for our Forever Home (we’re NOT!) I’m going to have to learn the lingo.

(It’s apparently “hindquarters,” and the high point of the hindquarters is called the “croup.”)

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography, Sunsets, Weather

Caterpillar Cloud

I came out the front door just around sunset and started the exit rituals. I said hello to the mourning dove hiding in its nest above the door. I said howdy to the medium sized lizard  who was catching the last solar rays on the west-facing front porch. I dropped and gave it a couple of push ups for competition and recognition – it did more, but mine were bigger, so we called it a draw and it scurried off into the bushes.

Then I noticed the isolated and gorgeous catepillar-shaped cloud hanging up there in the sunset sky.

Timing is everything. While it wasn’t going to get pink or orange or truly SPECTACULAR, it was brilliantly white and fluffy and feathery in a darkening sky. It was well above average, and these days that’s worth paying attention to!

If only I had wings to go do barrel rolls around it, through it, touching it, feeling the cold moisture on my face.

But I don’t. *sigh*

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Filed under Paul, Photography, Sunsets, Weather

Easter Eve Gradient

I hear that tomorrow is Easter. Okay.

Not a holiday for me, I’m afraid. I just need to keep track so I know to keep away from crowds going to brunch and flooding the stores looking for lillies and chocolate bunnies.

But sunset tonight was lovely, even without a cloud in the sky. That spectacular gradient as white fades to pink fades to orange fades to blue fades to indigo fades to black, with 100,000 separate shades squeezed in between.

Enjoy your chocolate bunnies. In fact, you can hae mine. I got chewed out by my doctor this week about my A1C numbers that are moving in the wrong direction.

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Filed under Photography, Sunsets

Chasing The Last Photons Of The Day

Flowers will move to track the Sun through the day. (See “heliotropism.”)

Tonight I went out to the front yard about an hour after sunset, still a bit of light in the western sky.

Down by the mailbox, it was strinking how the flowers were all lined up, all pointing west. It was spooky, like, 1960’s British, low-budget, horror movie sort of spooky.

There were still a few solar photons creeping over the horizon, and by god, they were going to photosynthesize them OR KNOW THE REASON WHY!

I was very careful to not let my shadow fall on them. Never underestimate the potential power of eldritch horror lurking in the innocent flowers at the beginning of a 1960’s British, low-budget, horror movie!

Professor Quatermass taught us that.

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Filed under Flowers, Photography, Sunsets

Long Day – Pumping Gas

As stated, a very long, exhausing day.

The good news – thanks to outstanding work by the team, a huge freakin’ problem has been solved. It’s been tough sleeping for the past few nights with that one hanging over my head.

The bad news – we spent this afternoon and evening at a funeral for a beloved family member. She had been sick for a while, so it wasn’t a surprise, but it was still emotional and traumatic.

Even in the middle of all of the running around, I needed to stop for gas. The clouds were sublime and wispy and ausgetzeichnet!

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Filed under Family, Photography, Sunsets, Weather

Contrail Leftovers

Sunset tonight, a dozen or so clouds glowing pink, criss-crossing the coastal jetway.

But every one of the “clouds” is unnaturally long, thin, in a couple of parallel sets, like an exploded tic-tac-toe grid. And over on the far left, still compact and bright white, is the next line being laid down.

Another 737 laying down a contrail between SFO/OAK/SEA/CGO/TPE/YVR to LAX/BUR/SAN/SNA/PHX. Soon to be a long, straight, puffy, expanding, pink line across the western horizon.

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Filed under Flying, Photography, Sunsets