I’m getting better at getting shots of these guys. You can finally see where they got the name “fried egg jellyfish”.
Be careful on this “Cyber Monday” to only buy things you’ll actually use.
If you are all “so cute!” at kitten pictures, but not at these baby jellyfish, you might be speciesist.
(Then again, some animals *are* easier to cuddle than others.)
Finally got around to visiting the grand canyon.
Dam it.
Another of those suburbs with a haunted forest.
I swear, they’re getting to be as bad as fountains.
At night, if you see a sharp point of light, that means that light is going straight from that light to your eye (or camera). If it’s a bit spread out and ill defined, that means that the light is bouncing off the ground. When you’re doing this from a plane and see something like this, you know that it’s a place that cares both about economics (putting light only where it’s needed), but also about light pollution.
When you have to keep being reminded that harvest time is hard.
When you *really* don’t want your river going anywhere unexpectedly.
meep meep
Rivers don’t always do what the maps say they do.
Humans make farmland by basically shaving off all the trees.
Sunset photos from the air look more interesting when you look away from the sun.
Usually, water looks dark in the infrared spectrum.
Usually.
Getting treats for little ones this week?
Protect orangutans by using the 2017 Halloween Candy Guide: http://www.cmzoo.org/docs/2017-HalloweenCandyGuide.pdf
I was always told that hard rock was all about nonconformity.
This is an industrial plant taken at dusk in infrared.
I think they should look like this all the time.
While we weren’t looking, someone went and embossed Colorado.
It’s interesting that, due to the tree growth, the healthiest parts of farmed land look like scars.
Sometimes the infrared-in-colour effect does things I can’t really explain.
The camels seem confused as well.
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