Wardy's twin
Well-known member
- Oct 21, 2014
- 8,867
- Thread starter
- #41
More importantly, was the dress you were wearing white & gold or blue & black?
No a pink frilly one , would you like to borrow it ?
More importantly, was the dress you were wearing white & gold or blue & black?
Did you take the photo on Saturday morning by any chance?
Because on Saturday morning I saw two shapes on the horizon just like in your 1st photo, but I saw them from the West Hill in Hastings! The sky was this exact same colour too.
It had me confused as I've never seen them before. I put it down to cloud formation in the end but they looked uncannily like land masses.
Surely it's not possible to see the IOW from Hastings!? I'm intrigued now though. Anyone any ideas?
How high is West Hill above sea level? Elevation and atmospherics have a lot to do with how far you can see.
Did you take the photo on Saturday morning by any chance?
Because on Saturday morning I saw two shapes on the horizon just like in your 1st photo, but I saw them from the West Hill in Hastings! The sky was this exact same colour too.
It had me confused as I've never seen them before. I put it down to cloud formation in the end but they looked uncannily like land masses.
Surely it's not possible to see the IOW from Hastings!? I'm intrigued now though. Anyone any ideas?
These pictures are a few years old (2011). I knew it was the IOW as you can see it 50-100 days a year from high spots in Brighton. Often it is a smudge, less often it is a very well defined shape and this one of those days.They usually occur around storms when I guess the air is cleanest though there might also be some of other factors influencing the light. So I would say the conditions at the weekend could well have allowed viewing as they were similar to when I took the pictures. Hastings is a big ask as it would make it 70 miles but who knows.
This picture was taken from top of Bear Road and in the centre shows the IOW (sorry if I am stating the obvious). However hat I cannot work out what/where the white cliffs are in the smaller landmass as I thought everything down to Portsmouth was flat. Any thoughts?
View attachment 79619
If that is Nelson's Monument on Portsdown Hill, then you'd have most of Portsmouth between that and the Isle of Wight. The monument is only 120 feet tall and it looks like empty land between than and the land mass out as sea. Surely the tall buildings in Gunwharf would be visible too, if you could see the monument.
I think the land mass is actually cloud formation, as others have said.
It's all to do with the earths curviture, the cliffs an monuments combined above sea level height is far far greater than say the spiniker tower hence with the slight curve you can see the cliffs.
Are the White Cliffs not Culver Down North of Sandown on IOW? I reckon both landmasses are Isle of Wight, but the adjoining section is low lying and cannot be seen.
View attachment 79635
I've enlarged the image, for members of the Flat Earth Society and others. See that thing sticking up on top of the hill, it's a monument to Nelson. That's Nelson the sailor not the ex President of South Africa. I suspect most of you thought Nelson's column was in Trafalgar square.
View attachment 79636
I did wonder that myself but I think skipper734 has some pretty decent evidence to prove it is Portsdown Hill.
Unfortunately and with the greatest respect to skipper734, his evidence is flawed. Portsdown Hill and the Nelson Monument lie almost due West from Bear Road. A direct line between the two passes over land the whole way. Whereas plenty of sea can be seen in your photo between you and the Cliffs in question.
If you draw a line on a map from Bear Road to St Barts Church, then Brighton Station , then extend it out over the sea to the Isle of Wight it ends up at Culver Down. The monument on top is Yarborough Monument.
If that is Nelson's Monument on Portsdown Hill, then you'd have most of Portsmouth between that and the Isle of Wight. The monument is only 120 feet tall and it looks like empty land between that and the land mass out as sea. Surely the tall buildings in Gunwharf would be visible too, if you could see the monument.
Unfortunately and with the greatest respect to skipper734, his evidence is flawed. Portsdown Hill and the Nelson Monument lie almost due West from Bear Road. A direct line between the two passes over land the whole way. Whereas plenty of sea can be seen in your photo between you and the Cliffs in question.
If you draw a line on a map from Bear Road to St Barts Church, then Brighton Station , then extend it out over the sea to the Isle of Wight it ends up at Culver Down. The monument on top is Yarborough Monument.
View attachment 79635
I've enlarged the image, for members of the Flat Earth Society and others. See that thing sticking up on top of the hill, it's a monument to Nelson. That's Nelson the sailor not the ex President of South Africa. I suspect most of you thought Nelson's column was in Trafalgar square.
View attachment 79636
40 miles away, and yet you can still see that column clearly? surely not?
Also what are those unidentified shapes on the horizon to the left of the photo?.
40 miles away, and yet you can still see that column clearly? surely not?
Also what are those unidentified shapes on the horizon to the left of the photo?.