Re: Enlightening Journeys
Hi Colin,
What I like, that no-one has really mentioned, is the red, blue, yellow lines - I guess the blue is the sky reflected off the central barriers? It looks too straight to be another vehicle straddling the centre of the carriageway.
PS, That's not the wrong side of the road at all ;)
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mike Buckley
They drive on the same side of the road as we do, Terri. The difference is that everything seems reversed because they're on the other side of the equator. :D
To be honest, it's not something I really think about - but - what DID get my attention (after many decades of being on this earth) was the direction the sun tracks across the sky; I'm used to seeing it track further and further to the left as it drops lower and lower in the sky, and yet I believe it tracks to the right in the northern hemisphere?
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Dave Humphries
Hi Colin,
What I like, that no-one has really mentioned, is the red, blue, yellow lines - I guess the blue is the sky reflected off the central barriers? It looks too straight to be another vehicle straddling the centre of the carriageway.
PS, That's not the wrong side of the road at all ;)
Hi Dave,
They're actually white lines ... just road markings. The blue probably comes from the white balance not being "technically correct" (I actually didn't even adjust it -- camera was just set on AWB, which would have carried through to ACR). The colours in that area are pushed pretty hard - so probably a case of small WB "error" multiplied by big saturation increase.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
What a grand view....love the colors....well done.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Yes, it tracks to the right. You can see that displayed in Google Earth using the capability that displays where the sun is during the day.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Colin Southern
To be honest, it's not something I really think about - but - what DID get my attention (after many decades of being on this earth) was the direction the sun tracks across the sky; I'm used to seeing it track further and further to the left as it drops lower and lower in the sky, and yet I believe it tracks to the right in the northern hemisphere?
Y'know, that's one of those things that had never occurred to me. But now that you mention it ............!
It must indeed strike the first time viewer (from whichever hemisphere) as quite unusual.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Nat
What a grand view....love the colors....well done.
Thanks Nat :)
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mike Buckley
Yes, it tracks to the right. You can see that displayed in Google Earth using the capability that displays where the sun is during the day.
Gosh - next you'll be telling me that east is to the left and west is to the right when facing north!
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Donald
Y'know, that's one of those things that had never occurred to me. But now that you mention it ............!
It must indeed strike the first time viewer (from whichever hemisphere) as quite unusual.
Yeah -- and either way probably completely freaks out anyone who lives on the equator!
Re: Enlightening Journeys
So, the red and yellowish lines are the trails from the headlights and taillights? Really neat image.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Donald
It must indeed strike the first time viewer (from whichever hemisphere) as quite unusual.
Perhaps it's a testament to my immense capacity to be unbelievably unobservant that I never noticed when traveling on the other side of the equator that the track of the sun changes.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Colin Southern
Gosh - next you'll be telling me that east is to the left and west is to the right when facing north!
I'll only tell you that at the Panama Canal, the Pacific Ocean is to the east and the Atlantic Ocean is to the west.
Re: Enlightening Journeys
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mike Buckley
Perhaps it's a testament to my immense capacity to be unbelievably unobservant that I never noticed when traveling on the other side of the equator that the track of the sun changes.
Perhaps it only happens when people are watching? :)