Heath Carmody | Shelter Bay #3 - Stable Inversion (4K Time Lapse Audiolizer) @heathcarmody2867 | Uploaded March 2023 | Updated October 2024, 1 day ago.
The warm weather continued over the weekend so I went back for the late afternoon on Sunday. Similar conditions and visual effects as observation #2, just maybe a couple of degrees warmer at peak.
I recorded about 3 hours of footage from 3 cameras. This is only the time lapse from the 4K camera. I placed it on a concrete picnic table to ensure there would be no tripod movement from wind, even though there was barely a breeze.
The camera was about 13-15 meters above the lake. I'm still trying to pin down my heights and the exact scale of the 18.5 km point of interest, but this observation is mostly about the dynamic visual effects of refraction, rather than empirical measurements. That water sure does consistently remain visible an awful long way past the point though..
I should note that I measured a considerable temperature inversion from near the surface to the camera location right before the end of this observation, which I'll talk about in the next video because there was an unexpected anomaly. As you can imagine, there were some giant 'black swans' from the lower cameras, where actual eye level is more measurable. I'll be featuring those as soon as this lucky spell of nice sunny early spring weather runs out.
The warm weather continued over the weekend so I went back for the late afternoon on Sunday. Similar conditions and visual effects as observation #2, just maybe a couple of degrees warmer at peak.
I recorded about 3 hours of footage from 3 cameras. This is only the time lapse from the 4K camera. I placed it on a concrete picnic table to ensure there would be no tripod movement from wind, even though there was barely a breeze.
The camera was about 13-15 meters above the lake. I'm still trying to pin down my heights and the exact scale of the 18.5 km point of interest, but this observation is mostly about the dynamic visual effects of refraction, rather than empirical measurements. That water sure does consistently remain visible an awful long way past the point though..
I should note that I measured a considerable temperature inversion from near the surface to the camera location right before the end of this observation, which I'll talk about in the next video because there was an unexpected anomaly. As you can imagine, there were some giant 'black swans' from the lower cameras, where actual eye level is more measurable. I'll be featuring those as soon as this lucky spell of nice sunny early spring weather runs out.