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I was thinking about Odyssey's comment in the Total Eclipse thread to "Keep in mind there are so many smaller miracles equally mesmerizing which we miss on a daily basis." True enough. I wondered with Kathleen what events in our lives truly stand out as mesmerizing, great or small. One of the most spectacular was when we left Vancouver to spend five winter months in a one-room cabin 300 km (200 miles) from the nearest road, 100 km (60 miles) north of the arctic circle. The following is from my diary on February 4.
I stepped outside to check the temperature, which read -43 degrees C (-45 F). Yowee! Above me spread a white mantle of Northern Lights, arching in wispy layers toward the northern horizon. Kathleen joined me on the south-facing knoll beneath the flagpole. The aurora borealis soared above our upturned heads. Rising like great columns of smoke from infinite campfires blazing below the southern horizon, the lights twirled, furled, folded and then fanned outward, until the eternal solar winds eventually hurled them beyond the northern limits of our vision. We stood transfixed for five minutes, until the penetrating cold drove us back to the warmth of our cabin.
Sorry I don't have any pictures, but I hope my words convey the scene. I'd enjoy hearing about other people's most mesmerizing/interesting experiences in nature and our universe.
I stepped outside to check the temperature, which read -43 degrees C (-45 F). Yowee! Above me spread a white mantle of Northern Lights, arching in wispy layers toward the northern horizon. Kathleen joined me on the south-facing knoll beneath the flagpole. The aurora borealis soared above our upturned heads. Rising like great columns of smoke from infinite campfires blazing below the southern horizon, the lights twirled, furled, folded and then fanned outward, until the eternal solar winds eventually hurled them beyond the northern limits of our vision. We stood transfixed for five minutes, until the penetrating cold drove us back to the warmth of our cabin.
Sorry I don't have any pictures, but I hope my words convey the scene. I'd enjoy hearing about other people's most mesmerizing/interesting experiences in nature and our universe.
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