A Celestial Hit and Miss

Tuesday, March 3, 2026


The planetary "parade" on Saturday evening, February 28, 2026 was viewable in Eastern Iowa, the following total lunar eclipse on the morning of March 3 was not. Even the February 28 event was not a slam dunk as a large bank of clouds approached my location, but as it turned out a gap in the clouds to the west and dissipation of others allowed viewing of the planets Venus, Saturn and Mercury. Some of the remaining clouds can be seen at right in the image above, looking west at 6:45 pm from Lowe Park in Marion, Iowa. The 1.24 magnitude planet Saturn can be seen at center top, -3.36 magnitude Venus at center just above the horizon, and 1.49 magnitude Mercury right of Venus. Image is a 1/3 second exposure at f/4, ISO 1000, 42mm focal length.






 


Zoomed in capture (63mm) at 6:47 pm. Air temperature was 27 degrees F. Nikon Z6ii camera.


Sad that skies were overcast on March 3, preventing the viewing of a probable beautiful lunar eclipse!

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Just Enough Crystal Drift

Tuesday, February 24, 2026


 


Though the morning at this moment (7:14 am CST, Sunday, February 22, 2026) was not particularly frigid (8 degrees F) there were enough ice crystals drifting downward in the upper atmosphere to create a brief sundog and sun pillar as shown here from parking lot at Noelridge Christian Church in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Ice crystals act as prisms and when they form horizontally they create the distinct parhelia phenomenon known as sundogs and sun pillars. This horizon display did not persist for long after its capture. Image is a 1/400 second exposure at f/11, ISO 100, 26mm focal length. Nikon Z6ii camera.

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Leftover Pics From July 3, 2025 Storm

Wednesday, February 4, 2026



FROM THE ARCHIVES: 

The 2025 severe weather season in Eastern Iowa was very quiet, without much to capture photographically. Therefore, the following are some leftover archived images not originally used on my website from that active day north of Cedar Rapids on Thursday evening, July 3, 2025. The image above looks north at 8:03 pm CDT while on Alburnett Road in Marion, Iowa, about one mile south of County Home Road. The (severe-warned) storm cell seen in the background was located about 30 miles distant, near the town of Independence in Buchanan County.






8:08 pm. An inflow cloud (warm air feeding into the storm) silhouettes itself in front of the setting sun, producing brilliant backlit rays. This image looks west while northbound on Highway 13, just north of County Home Road, near Marion, Iowa.







8:11 pm. Northbound on Highway 13, north of County Home Road. A low cloud base can be seen on the horizon at right.







8:13 pm. Dynamic looking inflow cloud feeds into severe-warned storm (right), which was located in southeastern Buchanan County. Image captured northbound on Highway 13 about 2 miles south of Central City in Linn County.






8:23 pm. Two inflow tail clouds converging into the storm, with a forming wall cloud at center. This image looks northwest from Highway 13, just east of Coggon, Iowa in Linn County and just west of Monticello Road.







8:26 pm. Northbound on Highway 13, just south of Ryan, Iowa in Delaware County. A funnel cloud has now formed from the wall cloud (behind trees at right). 






8:27 pm. Looking northeast at a funnel while eastbound on County Road D47 (310th Street), about .4-mile east of Highway 13 and about .6-mile southeast of the town of Ryan.







8:32 pm. Looking north from 190th Avenue, about .1-mile south of 295th Street, and about 3 miles northeast of Ryan in Delaware County. Behind the trees at center is Golden Church. The amazing illuminated inflow cloud stretches over the buildings, and feeds into a severe-warned storm (right), located about 8 miles to the northeast, near the town of Manchester.






8:32 pm. Similar image. 






8:32 pm. Similar image. A lot going on in this picture: Inflow cloud at left, cloud striations above center, two more inflow clouds at right, an RFD clear slot between them and a lowering beneath them. Nikon Z6ii camera.




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Color My World

Tuesday, February 3, 2026



Eastern horizons were briefly brilliantly color-splashed in the northeast quadrant of Cedar Rapids, Iowa during the morning of Sunday, February 1, 2026. Red sky at morning usually means imminent precipitation, buy only light snow fell a few hours later. The image above looks east at 7:14 am CST as seen from Brentwood Drive. Air temperature was 15 degrees F. 


 





7:21am. Looking east from Noelridge Christian Church in Cedar Rapids. 






7:22 am. Looking southwest. Water tower illuminated.






7:25 am. Looking southeast. Nikon Z6ii camera.


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Gemini Dream

Saturday, January 31, 2026



The (97% full waxing) moon and the nearby and prominent -2.17 magnitude planet Jupiter were inside the constellation Gemini high in the eastern sky during the night of Friday, January 30, 2026. The pairing of the moon and Jupiter was striking. Also in this image captured near Bowman Woods Park in Cedar Rapids, Iowa at 8:08 pm CST are stars from Gemini. Left of the moon is the 1.90 magnitude star Castor, at lower left 1.15 magnitude Pollux, upper right of the moon 3.05 magnitude Mebsuta, right upper is 1.90 magnitude Alhena and at far right is 3.35 magnitude Alzirr. The moon was captured separately as a 1/250 second exposure at f/5, ISO 400, 36mm focal length; and Jupiter and the stars a one second exposure at f/5, ISO 400, 36mm focal length. Both images were composited into one. Air temperature was 8 degrees F. Nikon Z6ii camera.

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Snow Squall Blow Hard

Thursday, January 22, 2026




The National Weather Service (NWS), in this case via an AccuWeather email notification (above), posted a Blizzard Warning at 11:24 am until midnight CST, January 21-22, 2026 for five Eastern Iowa counties. Light but steady snow then began to fall around 2:00 pm over the Cedar Rapids metro area, but with little or no wind. But by about 4:50 pm the snowfall had stopped, and small parts of the sky were actually clear.








I began to think the NWS had "dropped the ball," not fully paying attention to a small but intense winter storm cell that had formed in Wright and Hamilton counties in north-central Iowa and was steadily tracking southeast toward Cedar Rapids (IEM archived radar map images above).







At around 5:15 pm I finally became aware of the storm cell's imminent approach and decided to head to one of my favorite spotting locations, the grounds at Noelridge Christian Church on C Avenue NE, north of Boyson Road to get some possible good snow and wind captures. This somewhat tranquil image, captured at 5:28 pm, looks northeast from the parking lot. It is a 1/2000 second exposure at f/4, ISO 2000, 24mm focal length.







5:29 pm. The tranquility ended less than a minute later as the above image attests. The winter storm cell, now a full-blown snow squall, had arrived with ferocity, packing over 50 mph winds, and creating total white-out conditions. Dark pieces of small flying debris can be seen in the foreground. 1/160 second exposure at f/4, ISO 1250, 24mm focal length.






5:29 pm. Similar shot, seconds later. Same camera settings. I was firing off shots at will as the winds blasted over me! The temperature at this time was not bad--31 degrees F.







5:30 pm. Similar shot with my spotting vehicle seen at lower left. The worst of the squall was now quickly ebbing, as fast as it had began. 






5:32 pm Radarscope image of the storm cell (yellow) as it was passing through the Cedar Rapids area.







5:35 pm. The fury of the storm had now lessened at this location, but you could still see wind-driven channels of snow flowing through the parking lot. 1/40 second exposure at f/4, ISO 1250, 24mm focal length. Nikon Z6ii camera. (As the storm pushed southeast into far eastern Iowa and western Illinois, it actually intensified enough to set off my weather radio!)


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Hot Dog! ...er, Cold Dog!

Wednesday, January 21, 2026


 


Frigid conditions on the morning of Monday, January 19, 2026 in the Cedar Rapids, Iowa area were certainly favorable for the formation of a sundog (and sun halo): minus 2 degrees F with wind chills in the negative 20s. The following two images were captured looking southeast from Bowman Woods Park in Cedar Rapids. The above image was captured at 8:16 am CST and is a 1/400 second exposure at f/13, ISO 100 and 24mm focal length. Below, the camera looks the same direction from a slightly different position at 8:41 am, with same exposure settings. Nikon Z6ii camera.






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