Manzanita morning. I could never be bored at the Oregon Coast.
@pimoore No storm, just the clouds over the ocean. Maybe the cloudmeister @cliffordbeshers has some insight on what’s happening.
@jean I wish I could dance ballet with a ballerina, in slow motion in that sand, and have a space orchestra handle the music. Muy hermoso! ✨💃🕺✨🌈🎵
@jean @pimoore Best guess, partial matine layer, formed by the meeting of cool, wet ocean air and dry, warm air from land. In the spring in San Diego, the marine layer forms a solid blanket over the coastline and is called May Gray and June Gloom.
Update: I would guess this is "partial" because the temperature difference is much smaller in summer.
@jean This is why I am glad that I live within an hour of the coast. I need some sea air at least once a year.
@1pairofshoes Having grown up in Miami Beach and lived on the East Coast before Oregon, I have a hard time imagining I could feel right anywhere further away from an ocean.
@cliffordbeshers Thank you! I was going to suggest a marine layer, until I realized I didn’t actually know what that means.
@jean Well, I went back and read about a marine layer... The details aren't what I remember. The marine layer consists of air cooled by the ocean.It becomes denser, and is then trapped below the warm, lighter air above. Clouds can form within the marine layer. And sometimes, stratus clouds form at the boundary between cold below and warm above. I think that last is what you captured.
@jean I think my impression comes from Columbia river crossing, steep sides, craggy or at least rock filled. I thought mountains met ocean for most of shoreline.
@jean I traveled up the Oregon coast in 2012. I expected it would be a good trip, but it ended up being in my top three trips ever. The wide beaches are spectacular. Fort Stevens State Park was my favorite spot.
@robknight I haven’t been to Fort Stevens. But I have been to Cape Disappointment, which was not one. 😊