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#1
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Joe wrote:
Dangerious? or a blessing? I've read the theory that the electrical discharge reduces the chance of being struck by lightning.... don't know if that's true. Have you ever seen your mast and spreaders glowing with a bright green luminious plasma? Green plasma? No I have seen yellowish and blueish glow originating from the top of the mast a couple of times, can't remember seeing it from spreaders. It's a spooky looking effect. We had a fast front move thru last week and the corposant was standing on my upper spreaders. Did it make you get religion? DSK |
#2
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![]() DSK wrote: Joe wrote: Dangerious? or a blessing? I've read the theory that the electrical discharge reduces the chance of being struck by lightning.... don't know if that's true. I've read that it is a precurser to lighting jumping up Have you ever seen your mast and spreaders glowing with a bright green luminious plasma? Green plasma? No I have seen yellowish and blueish glow originating from the top of the mast a couple of times, can't remember seeing it from spreaders. I've seen blue and green and orange. Once in the Indian Ocean everyone on the bridge saw what I think was ball lighting, It was the classic limish green oval ball that hovered in frot of the ship maybe 3 miles out, then shot up into the sky at breakneck speed It's a spooky looking effect. On the workboats we used to grab fluorescent tubes and hold them up outside the wheelhouse and watch then light up when keying the sideband radio We had a fast front move thru last week and the corposant was standing on my upper spreaders. Yeah Corposant means body of the saint. Did it make you get religion? Yelp, that and great sunset and sunrises. Joe DSK |
#3
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![]() "Joe" wrote in message oups.com... DSK wrote: Joe wrote: Dangerious? or a blessing? I've read the theory that the electrical discharge reduces the chance of being struck by lightning.... don't know if that's true. I've read that it is a precurser to lighting jumping up I'd tend to agree. Brief story: my wife, brother, sis-in-law and I were standing on the top of Mt. Evans in Colorado some years back. Beautiful day, but ominous clouds were rolling in. Soon it was overcast and we began to hear thunder from about 50 miles away. As we watched the cell approach we began to notice that the rocks around us were emanating a sound similar to frying bacon. Gradually the volume increased until it sounded more like an electrical crackle. Also noted was that our hair was beginning to stand away from our heads. Ignorant as we were up to that point, we finally got the message and beat a very hasty retreat to lower ground. About 15 seconds later a deafening bolt of lightning struck the area in which we had been standing. Back at the restaurant/tourist trap at the end of the access road, we told one of the people who worked there about our experience. She told us that during storms at night (she and others lived in the dorm up there at 14,000+ ft.) the workers could see the rocks glowing a subtle blue in the minutes before a lightning strike. A scientist working at the high-altitude research adjacent to the restaurant told her it was St. Elmo's Fire. The following seems to lend some credence to that. http://www.islandnet.com/~see/weathe...nts/stelmo.htm Max |
#4
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Maxprop wrote:
"Joe" wrote in message oups.com... DSK wrote: Joe wrote: Dangerious? or a blessing? I've read the theory that the electrical discharge reduces the chance of being struck by lightning.... don't know if that's true. I've read that it is a precurser to lighting jumping up I'd tend to agree. Brief story: my wife, brother, sis-in-law and I were standing on the top of Mt. Evans in Colorado some years back. Beautiful day, but ominous clouds were rolling in. Soon it was overcast and we began to hear thunder from about 50 miles away. As we watched the cell approach we began to notice that the rocks around us were emanating a sound similar to frying bacon. Gradually the volume increased until it sounded more like an electrical crackle. Also noted was that our hair was beginning to stand away from our heads. Ignorant as we were up to that point, we finally got the message and beat a very hasty retreat to lower ground. About 15 seconds later a deafening bolt of lightning struck the area in which we had been standing. Back at the restaurant/tourist trap at the end of the access road, we told one of the people who worked there about our experience. She told us that during storms at night (she and others lived in the dorm up there at 14,000+ ft.) the workers could see the rocks glowing a subtle blue in the minutes before a lightning strike. A scientist working at the high-altitude research adjacent to the restaurant told her it was St. Elmo's Fire. The following seems to lend some credence to that. http://www.islandnet.com/~see/weathe...nts/stelmo.htm Max I had a similar experience on top of Pike's Peak. But after the bolt of lightening there was one guy dead. There is a place up on Pike's called the Devils Playground where you can watch the electrical activity jump from rock to rock. Are you a Fourteener bagger? My wife and I have climbed about 15 of them. Most had significant electrical activity and we always try to be on our way down well before noon. Gaz |
#5
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I seem to have had an attractive relationship with lightning and it
scares me (living in FL). I've seen ball lightning twice, once so close (20' or so) that it hit the pine tree next to me showering me with flaming debris. Once during a thunderstorm when I turned on a faucet, no water came out when I turned it on but suddenly a bluish glow emerged and wandered around in the washbasin till it touched the tap, expolded melting the tap handle. Sitting on the front porch, lightning hits the road 50' in front of me leaving a dry spot 20' up and down the road. My neighbors well has been hit so many times that I told him he has blanket permission to connect to mine to get water when it happens. His well is below ground level. During a thunderstorm while camping, I got out of the car and waited under a picnic shelter. Just on a hunch, I got up on top of the picnic table under the shelter and suddenly a bolt jumps out of the nearby conduit directly to the DRY concrete floor in front of me. People do not understand why I will not go sailing in thunderstorm season. |
#6
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![]() "Gary" wrote in message news:Bppqf.167172$Gd6.89956@pd7tw3no... Maxprop wrote: "Joe" wrote in message oups.com... DSK wrote: Joe wrote: Dangerious? or a blessing? I've read the theory that the electrical discharge reduces the chance of being struck by lightning.... don't know if that's true. I've read that it is a precurser to lighting jumping up I'd tend to agree. Brief story: my wife, brother, sis-in-law and I were standing on the top of Mt. Evans in Colorado some years back. Beautiful day, but ominous clouds were rolling in. Soon it was overcast and we began to hear thunder from about 50 miles away. As we watched the cell approach we began to notice that the rocks around us were emanating a sound similar to frying bacon. Gradually the volume increased until it sounded more like an electrical crackle. Also noted was that our hair was beginning to stand away from our heads. Ignorant as we were up to that point, we finally got the message and beat a very hasty retreat to lower ground. About 15 seconds later a deafening bolt of lightning struck the area in which we had been standing. Back at the restaurant/tourist trap at the end of the access road, we told one of the people who worked there about our experience. She told us that during storms at night (she and others lived in the dorm up there at 14,000+ ft.) the workers could see the rocks glowing a subtle blue in the minutes before a lightning strike. A scientist working at the high-altitude research adjacent to the restaurant told her it was St. Elmo's Fire. The following seems to lend some credence to that. http://www.islandnet.com/~see/weathe...nts/stelmo.htm Max I had a similar experience on top of Pike's Peak. But after the bolt of lightening there was one guy dead. There is a place up on Pike's called the Devils Playground where you can watch the electrical activity jump from rock to rock. Are you a Fourteener bagger? My wife and I have climbed about 15 of them. Most had significant electrical activity and we always try to be on our way down well before noon. We did 32 Fourteeners before moving out of Colorado, including Elbert, Massive, and Harvard. Our intent was to do them all, but we ran out of time. Oddly enough we only experienced electrical activity on Evans and Uncompahgre. On Umcompahgre we saw a teen get struck and killed. He was fascinated by his long hair standing straight out from his head. We yelled at him to get the *%&$*& off the peak, but he just ignored us. We did Gray's and Torrey's in the snow, same day as most folks do. I was a pro ski patrolman at Breckenridge at the time, and part of our training was mountaineering, which included climbing and skiing crud in untouched snowfields. We climbed three Fourteeners to their peaks during our training. When were you there? Or do you still live in CO? Max |
#7
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Maxprop wrote:
I had a similar experience on top of Pike's Peak. But after the bolt of lightening there was one guy dead. There is a place up on Pike's called the Devils Playground where you can watch the electrical activity jump from rock to rock. Are you a Fourteener bagger? My wife and I have climbed about 15 of them. Most had significant electrical activity and we always try to be on our way down well before noon. We did 32 Fourteeners before moving out of Colorado, including Elbert, Massive, and Harvard. Our intent was to do them all, but we ran out of time. Oddly enough we only experienced electrical activity on Evans and Uncompahgre. On Umcompahgre we saw a teen get struck and killed. He was fascinated by his long hair standing straight out from his head. We yelled at him to get the *%&$*& off the peak, but he just ignored us. We did Gray's and Torrey's in the snow, same day as most folks do. I was a pro ski patrolman at Breckenridge at the time, and part of our training was mountaineering, which included climbing and skiing crud in untouched snowfields. We climbed three Fourteeners to their peaks during our training. When were you there? Or do you still live in CO? Max I was posted to Colorado Springs (Peterson AFB and Cheyenne Mnt) from 1999 to 2002. We took up Fourteeners for summer fun and skied in the winter. We had Buddy Passes for Breck, Arapahoe and Keystone each year we were there. We climbed many of the same mountains, Elbert, Evans (three together near Evans I think), Gray's and Torrey's, Princeton, Pike's (many times), Lindsay and others I can't remember. I live in Victoria Canada now. Gaz |
#8
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![]() "Gary" wrote in message news:8krqf.49519$2k.18970@pd7tw1no... Maxprop wrote: I had a similar experience on top of Pike's Peak. But after the bolt of lightening there was one guy dead. There is a place up on Pike's called the Devils Playground where you can watch the electrical activity jump from rock to rock. Are you a Fourteener bagger? My wife and I have climbed about 15 of them. Most had significant electrical activity and we always try to be on our way down well before noon. We did 32 Fourteeners before moving out of Colorado, including Elbert, Massive, and Harvard. Our intent was to do them all, but we ran out of time. Oddly enough we only experienced electrical activity on Evans and Uncompahgre. On Umcompahgre we saw a teen get struck and killed. He was fascinated by his long hair standing straight out from his head. We yelled at him to get the *%&$*& off the peak, but he just ignored us. We did Gray's and Torrey's in the snow, same day as most folks do. I was a pro ski patrolman at Breckenridge at the time, and part of our training was mountaineering, which included climbing and skiing crud in untouched snowfields. We climbed three Fourteeners to their peaks during our training. When were you there? Or do you still live in CO? Max I was posted to Colorado Springs (Peterson AFB and Cheyenne Mnt) from 1999 to 2002. We took up Fourteeners for summer fun and skied in the winter. We had Buddy Passes for Breck, Arapahoe and Keystone each year we were there. We climbed many of the same mountains, Elbert, Evans (three together near Evans I think), Gray's and Torrey's, Princeton, Pike's (many times), Lindsay and others I can't remember. I live in Victoria Canada now. BC is a beautiful place, but I sure miss the Colorado Rockies. We go back every other year to either ski or do some summer climbing. The mountain real estate is exploding so rapidly as to boggle the mind. It's very disturbing to those of us who spent the relatively undeveloped mid-70s there. Another quick Mt. Evans story: In a four hour segment on Evans we experienced temperatures ranging from a high of 78 to a low of 28. We were climbing in shorts, without shirts, and less than two hours later had experienced torrential rain, winds in excess of 50kts. and eventually snow. Ya gotta love the mountains. Max |
#9
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![]() "Maxprop" wrote in message We did 32 Fourteeners before moving out of Colorado, including Elbert, Massive, and Harvard. Our intent was to do them all, but we ran out of time. Oddly enough we only experienced electrical activity on Evans and Uncompahgre. On Umcompahgre we saw a teen get struck and killed. He was fascinated by his long hair standing straight out from his head. We yelled at him to get the *%&$*& off the peak, but he just ignored us. We did Gray's and Torrey's in the snow, same day as most folks do. I was a pro ski patrolman at Breckenridge at the time, and part of our training was mountaineering, which included climbing and skiing crud in untouched snowfields. We climbed three Fourteeners to their peaks during our training. Have you skied Quandary? Amen! |
#10
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Bob Crantz wrote:
"Maxprop" wrote in message We did 32 Fourteeners before moving out of Colorado, including Elbert, Massive, and Harvard. Our intent was to do them all, but we ran out of time. Oddly enough we only experienced electrical activity on Evans and Uncompahgre. On Umcompahgre we saw a teen get struck and killed. He was fascinated by his long hair standing straight out from his head. We yelled at him to get the *%&$*& off the peak, but he just ignored us. We did Gray's and Torrey's in the snow, same day as most folks do. I was a pro ski patrolman at Breckenridge at the time, and part of our training was mountaineering, which included climbing and skiing crud in untouched snowfields. We climbed three Fourteeners to their peaks during our training. Have you skied Quandary? Amen! I climbed Quandary. That's the one right beside Breck, right. I didn't ski it though. Summer climb. Gaz |
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