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I love the contrast between the hot red sky and the cool blue of the water |
Last week we had a day of summer, the last day of June, when the temperature reached 30C. It was a day of sparkling clarity and I set off for the beach around 21.45 in the hope of seeing the conjunction of Jupiter and Venus, this was a night when the two planets were close together in the western sky and should have been visible just after sunset. When I arrived at the beach the whole north western sky was orange with the afterglow of sunset, the air temperature was still showing 28C, the air was still and the tide was sweeping in across the level sands. To the South a full moon was rising, its silvery glow reflected off the sea between the beach and the docks at the southern end of the beach.
I walked along the rapidly advancing water's edge, taking photographs as they appear, the glowing sky to the north does not seem to fade, it is a long lingering twilight.
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These two people just walked past me in the late evening light, I turned the camera from the sea to capture their silhouettes against the glowing twilight. |
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Even later the sky still glowed with light, the bright orange spot on the horizon is a flare from a gas drilling rig out at sea. |
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Moonlight reflects off the incoming tide. |
The sky was cloudless apart from a thin streak of high cloud which seemed to be positioned between me and the planets I was seeking but eventually my patience was rewarded and I captured the image below of Jupiter and Venus close together the western sky as the tide lapped around my tripod.
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Around 23.15 the clouds part to reveal Jupiter and Venus in the western sky over Crosby beach. |
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