“Introduction to Digital Photography: The Basics” class now available for registration.

Photography students in the foothills of the Colorado Front Range.Tired of getting pushed around by your camera?  Want to enjoy the photographic arts rather than fighting with technology?  Join me on September 22nd and 23rd (Saturday and Sunday) for “Introduction to Digital Photography: The Basics.”  Registration is now open, but limited.  I only allow eight students into the class because I want to maximize personal interaction with each student.  Whether you’re just starting out with a point-and-shoot camera, or you’re a more advanced shooter with a digital SLR, this class will help you become a better photographer.  We will spend the first day learning the basics of shooting in the beautiful foothills around Boulder, Colorado, and the second day learning how to edit and organize in a state-of-the-art visualization studio.  Our class topics will include basic composition, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, focusing, and others as decided by the students.
Follow the link above for more information, and please feel free to contact me with any questions by leaving a comment here, on my Facebook wall, or by email.

A warm welcome to NaturalHazards.org visitors!

Some of you might be feeling a little lost, so allow me to explain by way of a little history. NaturalHazards.org began in my basement fifteen years ago. Having just graduated from college with a freshly developed interest in all things disastrous, I began scouring the Internet for whatever information I could find on thunderstorms, floods, blizzards, and the like. I found quite a bit, but it was scattered. NaturalHazards.org was born as an effort to congeal all this information into one place. It served that purpose well for a decade and a half, rising to the top of many indices ahead of the USGS, NASA, and other agencies. I received countless questions from school children and college students around the world and got to know many amazing people. However, as an experienced teacher, I still felt that the site lacked the interaction, currency, and visualization necessary to become a powerful education tool. With limited time, I was finally forced to let it fade into Internet history on March 1st of this year. In its place is this website, WeatherChrome, which blends art and science into a more faithful representation of my vision. A little less disaster, a little more wonderment.  I hope you enjoy watching it grow, and I hope you keep in touch.

Today’s Extreme Weather Photo: The Sky of a Chinook Wind.

Chinook Wind cloudsToday’s weather in Boulder, Colorado shows the hazards of living in the lee of a large mountain range.  With a low pressure system to our east, a high pressure system to our west, and the mountains pinching the flow between them, a dangerous Chinook Wind has developed.  Just as seen in February’s Photograph of the Month, these high wind events are notorious wildland fire starters; as I’m typing this post, a grassland fire is being extinguished near the city’s northern limits.  A quick look at an anemometer near my studio indicates a peak gust of 91.3 mph as I’m typing this sentence, which is sure to make firefighting difficult.  Often, these events begin on perfectly cloudless nights, leaving me with little to photograph. Today, a little extra moisture near the tops of the mountains allowed for a somewhat uncommon and very beautiful look at the dynamics of these powerful events.  The bottom of the image shows the typical smooth wall cloud at mountain top.  The highest peaks of the Rocky Mountains are tucked inside of it.  The blue in the middle is the “Foehn Gap,” where the extreme downslope winds keep any clouds from forming.  But what goes down, must come up.  Rotors, or waves, develop over Boulder, as the air hops up and down in the wake of the Continental Divide.  As the turbulent air rises, it forms the mesmerizing, broken edge of an altocumulus cloud bank, seen at the top of photo.
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