Category Archives: Sunsets

Oh, Look! The Sun Still Sets!

It’s been a while. Between one thing and the other I haven’t been out much at any time of the day except to retrieve the mail and take out the trash, let alone going out at the correct time.

Nothing fancy – simple, straightforward, beautiful.

No Moon out there tonight – the first New Moon of the year means that it’s the beginning of the Lunar New Year! Happy Year of the Snake!

Venus is still out there like a diamond. When it gets a bit darker, Saturn’s visible a bit below it. When it’s fully dark, you’ll see Jupiter, almost as bright as Venus, straight overhead. And back toward the east rom there’s Mars, not quite as bright but very, very red.

Enjoy!

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NOT The Belt Of Venus

I’ve written several times (here, here, here, and probably more) about an astronomical phenomenon call “The Belt Of Venus.” It’s the Earth’s shadow seen opposite the Sun at either sunrise or sunset.

This looks a LOT like it, but the problem is that it’s in the south, not the east, and it’s way too dark and opaque.

A closer view also shows that it’s “lumpy.” The Earth’s shadow is nice and smooth and uniform.

Nope, this is the cloud of smoke from the Palisades Fire, stretching out over the ocean toward Japan, or at least toward Catalina and the Channel Islands.

The good news is that yesterday’s fire is out and it’s calm here, we’re in no danger. The bad news is that the Palisades Fire has flared up (and there are still a handful of other, smaller fires burning around the area) and is moving toward the east and the 405 Freeway, Encino, and Tarzana. It’s going to be a long, long night for a million-plus folks over in those areas, some of whom we know personally.

There’s no one in LA right now who isn’t affected or who doesn’t know someone who’s affected by all of these fires.

 

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The Kenneth Fire

After two days of unprescedented windstorms driving a half-dozen massive brush fires in Los Angeles, with something on the order of 300,000+ people evacuated from their homes, 10,000+ homes and businesses destroyed, at least five dead with a total expected to climb significantly, multiple injured and burned people, it was starting to calm just a bit this morning. The winds were calmer, firefighters might get a chance to make some progress on containment. We were safe, we were fine.

That changed.

A little after 14:30, just maybe two miles from us as the crow flies, where Victory Boulevard ends at the Ventura County line and there are a whole slew of trails into the open parklands there, a brushfire started. About the time I started hearing a ton of sirens I got the alert from the Watch Duty app. New fire. West Hills.

The winds weren’t howling, but they weren’t calm either. Probably 8-10 knots with gusts to maybe 15. Fortunately for us, by 15:26 the winds were blowing the embers, ashes, and smoke away from us, toward Calabasas and Agoura.

Los Angeles and Ventura County fire fighters hit this one hard with aircraft, both the fixed wing water bombers and helicopters. You can see several here. I was out meeting with our neighbors, making sure that we all had each others’ phone numbers and names in case we had to scatter.

About this same time the Palisades Fire, over the ridge and off to the left in this view, shifted to the west and started moving up Topanga Canyon. That’s the massive smoke plume on the left. “Our” fire, now named “The Kenneth Fire” for some reason, is on the right.

The initial evacuations were southwest of us, south of the baseball fields on Valley Circle, past El Camino High School, pretty much all the way to the freeway. Bell Canyon, due west of us, was put on an evacuation warning, and we got a heads up to be ready. We started packing a half-dozen bags with medications, important documents, a change of clothes, a couple of my laptops and iPads, and my cameras.

I turned the cars around in the driveway so they could be driven straight out if needed. The bags were our two-minute evacuation plan – if we had ten minutes, the computers and external hard drives would follow. I wasn’t feeling particularly threatened or nervous, but there was definitely a “better safe than sorry” feel to it all. Several of the neighbors decided that they were going to leave, and did so. I heard from some later in the evening, asking if we had ever had to evacuate. (The unspoken question was, “Is our house still there?”) Most of us have been through this before at least a couple of times, and given the location of the fire and the winds at our backs, we were ready to bug out if needed, but sheltering in place for the moment.

The massive air assault worked. By 16:30, just two hours after it started, it was almost over, at least where we were.

The winds picked up once and there was a little bit of a flareup at the north end of the fire zone, but again, it was immediately buzzing with helicopters and water-dropping aircraft. The fire kept spreading to the south through open land, eventually covering just over 1,000 acres. But when it got close to houses and apartments and the 101 Freeway in Calabasas and Agoura, the air assault resumed on the southern edge of the fire and its threat was finally over.

By 17:20, just after sunset, it was over for us. (You can even see Venus in the twilight, just off the head of the streetlight.) We had our own personal little airshow going over for another three hours or so as the water-dropping aircraft went from the fire near the 101 Freeway to the Chatsworth Reservoir where they reloaded their water tanks. In particular there was a Chinook (CH-47) helicopter that kept going right over us and really rattling the windows.

It was wonderful, the sound of not having everything you own burn to the ground.

 (From the Watch Duty app)

We’re the blue dot in the upper right, about 1.4 miles from where the fire started. But it all went to the south, away from us, or we would be in a hotel tonight with nothing to our name except for what we had fled with. There are literally tens of thousands of people in Los Angeles tonight who are not as lucky as we were.

In closing, a word about Watch Duty. It’s a non-profit, a 501(c)(3), run with less than two dozen volunteers, many of them former firefighters. Throughout this event, and through previous events in Northern California last year, and the horrible tragedy in Maui last year, they have become THE definitive go-to source for timely, current, and accurate information on fire locations, evacuation orders and warnings, and available resources to help those in need due to a fire. The basic app is free – if you’re anywhere at all that might have a brushfire (and let’s face it, that’s just about anywhere these days), you need the app. And if you get it and can spare a few dollars, the paid version with a bunch of extra features and layers is less than $30/year. Please support good people doing good work.

I have nothing but eternal gratitude for all of the firefighters and pilots and crews that are working so tirelessly to keep us safe. With winds on Tuesday night of 100+ miles an hours, and a mountainous landscape that’s in serious drought conditions, they’re fighting an impossible battle, but continuing to fight anyway. I feel for all of the tens of thousands of fellow Southern Californians who tonight either have lost everything, or just don’t know yet if they have a home to go back to or not.

For me, that’s enough adrenalin for one day. Good night.

 

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Bright Sunlight Reflections

It’s that time of year, the angles are lining up.

Sunset, looking due east, with the sun just over the horizon behind me and to the right, it’s reflecting brightly off of two objects, high and low.

Low, seen through the trees, about five miles away in Warner Center is one of those glass & steel office buildings, 6-8 stories tall. At this moment it made a fantastic mirror. The sunlight was nice and orange, having passed through a whole lot of smoke to get there.

High above the trees, the 3/4 moon, looking more white than orange, about 227,190 miles away.

In person, the office building was blindingly bright, the moon looked like you could just reach out and touch it, and the whole scene was lovely. Also, the winds had finally died down, although there are now five or six separate fires with over 100,000 people evacuated, something on the order of 2,000+ structures destroyed, at least five deaths, and close to 30,000 acres burned.

We’re still fine, thanks!

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Wind & Consequences

Let’s get this post written and uploaded while I can, because we are having one of the most extreme windstorms of the past several decades here in Los Angeles. And, of course, one of the first consequences is that the power and internet tend to go on and off and flicker and flutter and then just die. We’ve done the flickering and fluttering, so quickly now…

The other primary consequence, of course, is fire. We’re fine, probably a bit over ten miles from this blaze, and the winds are blowing the embers and ashes away from us. This is the Palisades Fire as of 12:19 this afternoon, an hour or two after it started.

By 15:35 it had really started to spread. We were getting pretty steady winds of 20-30 knots with gusts to 40 knots here on the hill. That’s tossing furniture and crap around the back yard and bringing down some light debris. Down in the canyons on the other side of that ridge they were getting winds and gusts that were twice that.

Around sunset, at 17:21, the smoke was blowing way up the coast past Malibu and out over the ocean. Over 30,000 people were evacuated (now, six hours later, it’s much higher, since they started evacuations in Santa Monica about 19:00), at least dozens (and maybe hundreds) of homes and buildings (including a high school) have been destroyed, the Getty Villa was threatened (there was fire on the grounds, but the buildings and all of the priceless artworks are safe), and there’s 0% containment.

The best part is that the really, really BAD winds are still coming tonight. There’s another big fire in the mountains above Altadena and Pasadena (the Eton Fire) which is forcing even more evacuations and loss of homes, and between the two sites there are expectations that they could see sustained winds tonight of 60-70 knots with gusts as high as 120 knots. That’s going to be just viscious.

Welcome to Southern California. And when they tell you to evacuate, GET OUT!

Me? I’m going to go put a half dozen flashlights in strategic spots around the house, just in case. Stay safe out there!

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The Sunset From The Back Yard

So much talk about how the constant parade of sunsets and planetary bodies look in the west from the front yard.

All of those trees make lovely silhouettes!

And while there’s a reason to look from the front yard (a LOT of the planets, moons, comets, rocket launches are LOW to the horizon and hidden from the back yard by the house), it’s still a lovely view.

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Castle Peak

Speaking of views from the front yard, off in the distance of most current views toward the west (sunset views, and never this close up) you’ll see Castle Peak, which rises up to (I’m guessing) about 1,500 feet or so.

I know that there are trails to the top, and somewhere on the side is a cave with old Native American petroglyphs. I’ve heard of groups that get together with experienced hikers and climb to the top every now and then, but I’ve never done it. Once a year or so we’ll see lights up there after dark, and occasionally we’ll see LA County Fire Department helicopters hovering about, performing a rescue for someone who fell or got hurt climbing around.

One feature I always notice is that tree growing right in the center of that notch between two huge bolders right at the peak.

I would sort of like to climb it before we move out to the Forever Home, but we are probably running out of time and opportunities on that one.

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A Welcome Sight

The holidays are over, it’s a work day, we’re back in the office, it was a day full of “challenges” (no felonies – I’m a winner!) and when I came out after a looooooong day…

So are the 90% of folks who ignore this sight the odd losers, or is it the 10% who are standing there in the parking lot staring for ten minutes?

Mathematically I know what the answer is, but this is a philisophical question, not a numbers question.

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Happy New Year 2025

So many aspects of time are purely human constructs. While they might be things that rule our existence every day, seconds, minutes, hours, and weeks are about as arbitrary as they get. Seconds are sort of synched to the normal resting human heart rate, but that’s approximate at best. Everything else on that list is ours because some prehistoric king or priest made it up or heard the Voice of God (I want some of what they were smoking…).

But not all time measurements. That’s one of the odd things about how we measure time. So many of the units are 100% pulled out of thin air and whole cloth – but several key ones are based on astronomical constants that have changed by only a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a percent over millenia.

Tonight’s western sky after sunset reminds me of that. It might be a new year to us (100% random and arbitrary) but the crescent moon visible for the first time this month after new moon reminds me that the month is based on the cycle of the moon. And the year, while the start and end point of it might be only loosly tied to real events (the new year starts at or very close to the winter solstice in many societies – they knew when the days started getting longer again and the light and warmth of spring and summer were on their way back, they had to know to not starve to death), the length of it was tied to the Earth’s orbit around the Sun.

Although not tied to our current calendar (I wouldn’t be surprised if some ancient calendars had tie ins to the movements of the brighter planets like Venus and Jupiter), Venus was well known as both the Evening Star and the Morning Star. It was a big deal when some ancients figured out that they were one and the same!

So as our 2025 starts (for better or for worse, and given today’s news…) take a moment in the evening over the next couple of days to stick your head outside around sunset and look for the Moon to be a little closer to Venus every night and then pass it and move on in three or four days. Watch the Moon get more illuminated every day. Watch for Jupiter, extremely bright almost overhead at sunset. If you have binoculars, look for the Galilean moons of Jupiter, spinning around the giant planet like a miniature solar system. Look for Saturn between Venus and Jupiter. Look for red Mars, nearing its brightest for the year in the east shortly after sunset, think about the two robots we have roaming around the sands and rocks there and sending back pictures and data every day, and the other dead robots that came before and litter the surface, just waiting for Mark Whatney to come and repair them and put them back to work. (IYKYN!)

I hope that will let everyone have a bit of perspective. As the meme goes, “You’re just a ghost, driving a meat-covered skeleton on the surface of an insignificant rock, hurtling through space.” There may be a lot of bad shit going down in 2025, but the Earth, Moon, planets, Sun, and Universe won’t care at all. In 365.25 days, we’ll be right back here again.

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Final 2024 Sunset

Goodbye 2024. I fear that you will not be remembered fondly.

There wasn’t much special or colorful about the final sunset.

I hope that in 365 days we’re all still in a functioning country and economy. And I hope that long before then we’ll have a different view, one from our Forever Home.

C’mon, 2025. Surprise me.

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