hodgepodge

Month

May 2011

48 posts

May 31, 2011

“Andrew, put your blunt wraps in my fish.”

-Amelia

May 31, 2011
May 28, 20117,436 notes
Play
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May 19, 2011877 notes
I have the following books for sale:

 Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel

excellent quality

Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy (Fourth Edition) by Rene Descartes

good quality

A Traveler’s Guide to Mars by William K. Hartmann

excellent quality

The One-Straw Revolution by Masanobu Fukuoka

excellent quality

The Wilderness World of John Muir edited by Edwin Way Teale

excellent quality

Stolen Harvest: The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply by Vandana Shiva

excellent quality

Sensation & Perception (Second Edition) by Wolfe, Kluender, Levi

acceptable quality

Let me know if you want to buy any of these books for a low price!


May 17, 2011
May 16, 20111,073 notes
7 Rare Rainbow Formations → thegrownupkid.tumblr.com

glasslipper:

idreamonfloatingonairrr:

roxiichan:

athighvoltage:

image

Circular rainbows: Most of the rainbows we see are actually arcs of perfect circles (with, accordingly, radii of exactly 42 degrees).

image

Secondary rainbows: Primary rainbows are often accompanied by secondary rainbows that are usually thinner and dimmer than the main rainbow. They display the spectrum in reverse order from that of a primary rainbow. 

image

Red rainbows: Red rainbows are usually seen at sunrise or sunset when the thickness of the earth’s atmosphere filters out blue light leaving more red or orange light for water droplets to reflect and refract. 

image

Sundog: Sundogs are not rainbows per se, but share many of their visible attributes. Sundogs are created when sunlight shines through ice crystals high in the atmosphere.

image

Fogbow: Fogbows are much rarer than rainbows because certain narrow parameters must align to create them. For one, the light source must be behind the observer and low to the ground. Also, any fog to the rear of the observer must be very thin so that sunlight can shine through to the thicker fog in front.

image

Fire rainbows: Fire rainbows are not true rainbows. The phenomenon (called a “circumhorizontal arc”) can only be viewed under certain precise conditions: the cirrus clouds that act as prisms must be at least 20,000 feet high and the sun must strike them when it is at an elevation of 58 to 68 degrees.

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Moonbow: Moonbows are much more difficult to witness due to the requirement of a passing rainstorm and, ideally, a bright full moon unblocked by clouds.

DOUBLE RAINBOW

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May 15, 2011
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