Contrails and a sundog

Saturday morning just after 10 the eastern sky seemed to be full of contrails. There was also a faint parhelion, or sundog.

Shooting into the sun is not a great way to get much detail, but this worked fairly well. The sundog is a little to the left of the sun (about 22°, exactly where it should be). The small, bright blue dot further to the left and down a little is apparently an artifact of the lens of my iPhone.

I haven’t seen quite this many contrails at one time around here. We are close to some flight paths to the Atlanta airport, so airliners often fly overhead. Delta flies almost directly over our house on the Huntsville-Atlanta route; I once actually saw our old house from a Huntsville-Atlanta leg on my way out to California. Contrails usually dissipate before many more planes fly over, but not Saturday morning.

This sundog was a little higher in the sky than one usually sees. They are fairly common if you know when and where to look, usually seen in early morning or late afternoon, fairly close to the horizon. They are usually formed by plate-shaped ice crystals, which tend to orient themselves horizontally as they fall through the atmosphere. The sun’s rays have to pass through them edgewise to form the partial 22° halo, of which the sundog is a part. In order to see them at higher sun elevations, the crystals have to be column-shaped so that they have random orientations as they fall. If the ice crystals are randomly oriented at least some fraction will be at the right orientation to let sunlight pass through them so that a sundog will be visible. And so it was last Saturday.

I love looking out our windows.

Sam and the glove

I knew this was going to happen when I saw the glove lying on the ground.

This was on our morning walk on Tuesday, shortened because I had a dentist appointment. Sam isn’t quite as likely now as he used to be to pick up any stray object and carry it around, but there are certain items that he just can’t resist. They have to be a certain weight, not too light and not too heavy. They have to have a certain flexibility, not too flexible and not too stiff. A glove is perfect. It flaps around and makes a satisfying sound when he shakes it.

Dog owners may be familiar with this behavior. It’s not just play. This is how dogs kill their normally-sized prey, like squirrels and rabbits. They shake it vigorously and snap its spine or neck.

Sam kept at it for a while but eventually dropped the glove to dive in and bite Zeke’s hind leg. That’s also hunting behavior. Wild canines that hunt in packs grab large prey by the rear legs to cripple them so they can kill them. Nice.

But since no animals were harmed in the making of this movie, we can just laugh at it.