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August 4 year s ago
#11 was obviously photoshopped - so not real.
       
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Juda 4 year s ago
August, Real enough with a super long lens
       
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Robert 4 year s ago
[#13] It's so cool that you can see the mountain range from 143 miles away and not just the very peaks of the mountains! It is as if the earth flattened itself out due to the racoon (an anagram of the corona) virus and now we can see mountain ranges from an incredible distance, like over 200 miles in Alaska USA!
       
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Maud 4 year s ago
#3 Are common when storms moves through the island chain of mu hometown in southeast Alaska. We called them sucker holes because it's said people would think the weather was braking and go out fishing on their boats just to be suckered when the storm picked up after getting to the fishing grounds.
       
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Bias 4 year s ago
I grew up as a child in Willow, Alaska. The 50's and 60's were so wonderful but I lost it all in Asia. Drafted in 65 and made 4 tours with Spec Forces. Got out in 71 and left America. I don't miss it. I love my life never knowing what's next, only miss Alaska.
       
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Iridescent clouds

If we see that the sky shines as if there were giant soap bubbles floating in it, it is not that we are having a hallucination, but that we are witnessing iridescent clouds. This otherworldly effect only occurs when very uniform water droplets diffract the sunset light.

 

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