Courtesy of Earthy Sky News

Fire cloud over California, from space
A pyrocumulus cloud – sometimes called a fire cloud – forms when intense heat from wildfires causes air to rise. Californians have been seeing these towering clouds this July and August.

Perseids are peaking this weekend
The composite image above – from John Ashley at Glacier National Park in Montana, in 2016 – perfectly captures the feeling of standing outside as dawn is approaching, after a peak night of Perseid meteor-watching. As viewed from anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere, the Perseids’ radiant point is highest at dawn, and so the meteors rain down from overhead.

See it! Crepuscular rays
Those beams of light shooting out from the horizon or down from the clouds are called crepuscular rays, or sunrays. Beautiful, mysterious and very noticeable. Photo by Nicholas Holshouser.

James Younger frequently camps at Vancouver Island and catches many wonderful sky sights from its shores. He captured these crepuscular rays – or moon rays – in August 2017.









