Friday, February 19, 2021

Winter Sky Moods #SkywatchFriday

Winter has turned deadly.  From my heated living room in the Southern Tier of New York State, I watch what is happening in Texas and vicinity.  A co-worker's daughter in Austin was, as of Thursday, on day five of no electricity, no heat, and now, no water.  A cousin in a suburb of Ft. Worth fared better, and was able to give shelter to someone else.  At the worst of times, the best in people can come out.

Meanwhile, I am watching the sky.  Today, it's white with snow once again (we got several inches overnight) but the sky showed its various moods earlier this month.

How about a variety of February winter photos?

A white sky with hills in the distance.

A farm field.   Doesn't the sky seem to go on forever?

Along the Susquehanna River, near the last photo.


 A puddle reflection.

A contrail cutting across feathery clouds.

Our way of life is so fragile, just a massive power failure away from disaster, as Nature is reminding us right now.  I hope all of my readers are staying safe (and warm, if it's winter where they live.)

Joining Yogi and other sky watching bloggers for #SkywatchFriday.

12 comments:

  1. ...my winter sky this morning is overcast.

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  2. Don't know if my comment registered. I'll try again. (You can remove the duplicate in post edit!) ;)
    With natural disasters and a pandemic raging on and commotion everywhere, it's so nice to just look up and find the quiet peace of the sky!

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  3. My son's friend in Texas was forced out of his home and fortunately was able to stay with a friend of his until he got heat back. We got as low as -22, a record, but did not lose heat. I guess that makes us lucky.

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  4. Beautiful sky shots, as always.

    Texas...what can I say?

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  5. Esas tenebrosas nubes son indicios de agua.

    Feliz fin de semana.

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  6. Your comment about our way of life being so fragile (just a disaster away) is spot on, and scary if you take the time to think about it. Your skies are beautiful!

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  7. Very wintery skies. I hear about Texas with horror. That's one reason why I'm not joking about our weather right now.

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  8. Pretty skies. Northerners usually have a plan B for power outages but the south does not usually need a backup heat source. Stay warm!

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  9. I have a friend in Texas and she suffered greatly for a few days with no heat or water. She had to warm up in her car. Thankfully, all is well today. We were so worried about her!

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  10. Happy skies! We’ve had a mixture of blue and gray overcast days here in our part of western Oregon and believe me I am grateful for that... one glance at the news from elsewhere is all it takes to realize that a midwinter rainy gray day is a huge blessing .

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