eftychia: Photo of clouds shaped like an eye and arched eyebrow (sky-eye)
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I'd better follow up on the somewhat alarming entry I posted from my cell phone earlier: yes, the sky really was green at least to the west and south (it shaded to dark dark blue to the east, as you'd expect for evening twilight), but it wasn't the, ah, fecal-green of an approaching Texas dust storm or the kind of green I've seen associated with tornadoes (with the caveat that I've had extremely limited exposure to tornadoes, but with the reinforcing evidence of local news radio not saying anything alarming during the weather forecast). Rather, it was the freakiest damned sunset I've seen (having captured that title from the heavily pollution-enhanced purple one I watched in Texas a long time ago).

The sky in the direction of the just-set sun was varying shades of blue-green, greenish-blue, and greyish-green, with the narrowest band of rose limning the horizon itself as I started composing that message. (I wrote that on I-95 during pauses in the slow rush-hour traffic (not as bad as a non-holiday weekday at that hour, not even as bad as Saturday's backup, but definitely a lot slower than the times of day I'm usually on the highway, and there was a stretch where things weren't moving much), so it took me several minutes to thumb in instead of the few seconds it would have taken if most of my attention had not been on the much more important task; by the time I sent it the wisp of rose and the aquamarine had gone and there was a lot more of the greyish-green. Given the circumstances, I'm sure those of you willing to excuse my posting it at all will excuse the extremely abbreviated nature of the description I posted at the time.) I checked other directions to make sure my brain hadn't suddenly decided to remap all my colours, and the sky to the east (and by the time I sent that message, even overhead and to the north) was the expected dark, dark blue that it gets as the sunset fades, before it becomes too dark to have colour to it any more.

So ... for all those times when I was a child, when my mother teased me for looking out the window to check when asked what colour the sky was ... and all the times I've heard (or (*cough*) used) the line, "What colour is the sky on your planet?" ... this evening, in Baltimore and between Baltimore and Washington, the sky was green.

A rather pretty, but damned startling collection of greens.

There are 4 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] skreidle.livejournal.com at 07:06am on 2007-02-20
This is when I complain that you don't have a camera phone--though given the resolution and quality of such cameras, it probably wouldn't have come through anyhow.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 08:34am on 2007-02-27
Whoops. I do have a camera-phone (though I'm not sure how much it costs to send a picture via MMS). This icon was taken with it, in fact (from the passenger seat of a truck heading home from Pennsic a couple of years ago). But I got so caught up in examining the sky to make sure I wasn't imagining it, that I forgot all about recording it. Maybe if I hadn't been driving, I would have remembered to take a picture (or maybe I'm just making excuses at this point because I'm annoyed at myself for not thinking of it at the time).
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 01:13pm on 2007-02-20
Thank you. This is beautiful.

I very clearly remember realizing, during one of the online conversations in which someone used the phrase "What color is the sky on your planet?" to a third party, that the answer is "all of them". It's a really wondrous thing.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 08:36am on 2007-02-27
:-) !

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