Saturday, December 11, 2021

Battening down the hatches (when you aren't in a boat)

Summer Storm over Hadley
Photo by Sharon Vardatira

The powerful cold front responsible for the major severe weather outbreak that devastated parts of Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas and Illinois (among other areas) overnight will sweep through Southern New England later this afternoon through Sunday morning. While we won’t see anywhere near that level of severity here, the front will bring the potential for strong to damaging winds, heavy rain, and thunderstorms. A Wind Advisory is now in effect from 1 PM this afternoon until 5 AM Sunday morning for our area and much of Southern New England. We are forecasted to get 25-35 MPH winds with gusts to 50 MPH (and some isolated higher gusts possible). These winds could cause isolated to scattered pockets of tree and wire damage and power outages.

I don’t know about you, but when I first heard thunder earlier this morning I leaped into action, battening down the metaphorical hatches (washing dishes, tending to laundry, bringing mail inside, and moving lighter objects off the porch). Bringing in the mail may have been most critical – I could do a collage of weather-related mailbox devastation over the years. 

Mailbox microburst takedown (past storm)
Photo by Sharon Vardatira

By the way, one of the tornadoes that struck overnight may have set the record for the longest continuous tornado in American recorded history – the path is still to be confirmed, but it appears to have stretched some 250 miles. The stories and first-person accounts coming out this morning are harrowing – our hearts go out to everyone whose lives have been so tragically upended.




Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Snow Globe December

Spring Can Wait, It's Just a Date
Enfield Mods, Hampshire College, Amherst
Photographer: James Patten

This classic winter scene, captured by Jim Patten, is the featured photo for December in the 2021 Head in the Clouds Amherst wall calendar. In fact, the jury liked the image so much it was also selected to grace the cover of the entire calendar! As Jim observed, “I loved how the colors were still popping through on the buildings as the snow was really coming down. It was like someone shook a snow globe.” Enjoy!

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Far Horizon Fading

Hay Bales at Sunset - Photo by Sharon Vardatira
November 2021, Sunderland MA

 

Through the ample open door of the peaceful country barn.

A sunlit pasture field with cattle and horses feeding,

And haze and vista, and the far horizon fading away.

~ Walt Whitman


May you find much to be grateful for today. Happy Thanksgiving to all the cloud spotters!

Goat with Pumpkin - Photo by Sharon Vardatira
November 2021, Sunderland MA


Saturday, November 13, 2021

Do cloudy days bring out the color?

Fall foliage in rain - Deerfield, MA
Photo by Sharon Vardatira

The question is not what you look at, but what you see.

 ~ Henry David Thoreau

Every year around this time, our perennial household debate: do fall foliage colors "pop" more when it's sunny or when it's cloudy? I submit for your consideration this photo, which I took yesterday during a lull in the downpours. Despite Western Massachusetts being well past peak now, this stand of orange trees under a grey stratus sky was utterly attention grabbing. Indeed, I was not the only person compelled to pull off the road and grab her camera. No surprise, then, that I land firmly on the side of "cloudy days bring out the colors." That said, I am not immune to the glory of sunlight slanting through the leaves.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Blue Heron in Fall Color at Cranberry Pond

Blue Heron in Fall Color at Cranberry Pond
Leverett/Shutesbury
Photo by Eric M. Berlin

Sometimes a photo submission just cannot be denied. That was the case with this photo, the featured image for November in our 2021 Head in the Clouds Amherst calendar. It violated one of our key cornerstone guidelines about images having to depict a recognizable location (close-ups rarely provide a sense of "place,"), but the jury was so taken with the photo they opted to override the guidance. 

Titled "Blue Heron in Fall Color at Cranberry Pond" (Leverett/Shutesbury), this photo was taken by Eric M. Berlin. This image did not come easily. As Eric describes, “I spent several days trying to capture this heron in the context of fall color. I consistently failed to get low enough to get the foliage in the background until I realized this composition.” 

Enjoy!


Monday, October 11, 2021

Talking Calendars

Sometimes, life gets in the way of art. Thus the bad news: despite my best intentions and with great disappointment, a few months ago I had to face the reality that I would not be able to produce a new Head in the Clouds Amherst wall calendar for 2022. To those who have visited Hastings or reached out to place an order by mail, thank you – your patience and understanding is deeply appreciated.

Now here’s the good news: our team has already gotten a serious head start on the 2023 calendar, which will be available next summer, even earlier than our typical fall release date. The photographers whose images would have graced the 2022 calendar will be featured in 2023. And in the past few months, I’ve uncovered even more local weather history, and the 2023 calendar will include additional daily entries highlighting weather events going back 400 years. Still, I know it will be tough to get through a year without knowing when thunderstorms destroyed the upper dam at “Factory Hollow” in North Amherst, whether a full moon will interfere with the Orionids, and what night broke records for UFO sightings across the local area! If absence really does make the heart grow fonder, 2023 should be a banner year for our next calendar!

The first Head in the Clouds Amherst calendar – for 2014 – went on sale on October 23, 2013. That year, all 12 featured monthly photos were my own. In addition to listing major holidays, the calendar also included 40 daily entries highlighting local weather events. From the beginning, we sold the calendar through Hastings and Amherst Books as well as online.

Our first calendar, 2014
All photos by Sharon Vardatira

Our calendar has evolved continuously over the past eight years – indeed, aside from the title, the 2021 calendar bears little resemblance to our debut 2014 version. The first major change came about in 2016, when the calendar began featuring monthly photos by 12 different photographers

2016 Calendar
Cover photo by John M. Cushing Jr.

And in 2018, as more photographs were submitted for consideration, we instituted a juried selection process. Altogether from 2016-2021, 41 different photographers have been featured, some in multiple years. The daily entries – including astronomical events visible from Amherst with the naked eye, holidays, and history-making local weather events – have multiplied every year, going from 40 in 2014 to over 240 projected for 2023!

In 2019, our calendar took another major turn, moving to a professional look and feel, with saddle stitch binding, coated glossy heavyweight paper, and individual shrink wrapping. The 2021 calendar, with its edge-to-edge cover photo, is arguably our most beautiful.

2021 Calendar
Cover photo by James Patten
As a small, boutique production, our goal has never been about profit – it has been about building community, bringing together people who love our corner of the world, and celebrating each new season unfolding. To underscore that purpose, in 2021, we decided to donate all proceeds to a different local charity each year – in 2021, we selected the Amherst Survival Center, and in 2023, proceeds will go to the Kestrel Land Trust.

Thank you for traveling with our Head in the Clouds Amherst community. We look forward to opening the calendar for 2023, and finding new ways for all of us to share our love of the sky and clouds, nature and weather, and all those places, locally and more distant, that take our breath away.

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Walking in the Rain

Stratocumulus over Hadley, 5-30-21
Photo by S. Vardatira

 Don't threaten me with love, baby. Let's just go walking in the rain.  Billie Holiday

Stratocumulus clouds over Hadley yesterday. Maybe not the weekend you wished for, but still beautiful in its own way.

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Seeking Storminess

Hazy May - Hadley MA - May 2021
Photo by Sharon Vardatira

Could a stormy, summery afternoon be in our near future? I took a tour around the Valley a few hours ago, and concluded that today may not be that day. Anyone who is a fan of the movie Twister should picture me, like Bill "the human barometer," looking skyward, letting a handful of dirt fall from my hand to see which way the wind blows, letting the energy in the air wash over me. (That image makes me smile every time.)

Although today does have the feel of an afternoon that could melt into storminess, based on the more scientific weather forecast (and my keen intuition, of course), we are likely to get more of that stormy weather about 24 hours from now. Our excessively long spate of days of puffy, lovely cumulus clouds has been fair-weather fabulous, but their more energetic cumulonimbus cousins can be downright awe-inspiring. 

This is what it's like outside right now in the Pioneer Valley. Please post any stormy weather you catch over the weekend - or stormy weather scenes from days gone by.

Sunday, May 16, 2021

"The older I grow, the more I do love spring"

How glad I am that spring has come, and how it calms my mind when wearied with study to walk out in the green fields and beside the pleasant streams in which South Hadley is rich.... The older I grow, the more I do love spring and spring flowers. Is it so with you?"  
~ Emily Dickinson, May 16, 1848, Letter to Abiah Root (173 years ago to the day)

Spring Clouds over the Mojave Desert


Anyone feeling inspired to do a similar time lapse video, only for the Pioneer Valley? We have had some great cloud formation vistas these past few days and could definitely match the Mojave Desert. (That said, we do have more trees to contend with!).

Friday, May 7, 2021

Seeking Photos for the 2022 Head in the Clouds Amherst Calendar!

Your photo could be featured (kind of like this) in our 2022 calendar!

CALLING ALL AMHERST and WESTERN MASS PHOTOGRAPHERS

The times they are a-changin' (thank goodness!), and what better way to celebrate the end of quarantine and 2020 than going outside and capturing the beauty of the world all around us. From our ever-changing cloud canopy to our beautiful valley, with endless trails and side roads, wide open spaces, quiet ponds, and woods (lovely, dark and deep), there is so much to explore.

We here at Head in the Clouds Amherst believe there is no better time than right now to celebrate our corner of the world. In other words, we are seeking photo submissions for our 2022 community calendar!

As in past years, our 2022 calendar will once again feature monthly photos taken by 12 different photographers. And you don't have to limit yourself to Amherst locations - we are accepting photos taken across the Pioneer Valley and Western Massachusetts. 

So now is your chance to share your favorite scenes with calendar fans far and wide! Start flipping through your photo collection – or grab your camera, take to our scenic highways, byways and trails, and make some new memories. We can’t wait to see what you’ve got!

Submission Guidelines

The deadline to submit is Saturday, June 5, 2021 at 11:59 pm. Submissions can be emailed or uploaded via your Google Drive to CloudsAmherst@gmail.com. Please enter "HITC 2022 Calendar Photo Submission" in the subject line and submit your highest resolution version. 

Please include the following for each photo you submit:
  • A caption or title
  • Where the photo was taken and what scenic feature is depicted (please indicate if your location is Kestral Trust conserved land)
  • Who is in the photo, unless it's a crowd scene or taken from a distance
  • Photographer's name
  • Your contact information
If your photo is selected, you will be asked to provide additional information, including a written comment about your photo to be included in the 2022 calendar.

All submissions must be taken in Western Massachusetts. Priority will be given to photos showing locations in Amherst, other sites across the Pioneer Valley, and Kestral Trust conserved land locations. Your photo should evoke the seasons and the intersection of life and weather. In addition to those qualities, if your photo also captures one or more of these themes it will get special consideration:
  • Unique renderings of iconic local landmarks (natural attractions, university/colleges, museums, popular scenic destinations, etc.)
  • Conservation areas, including Kestral Trust conserved lands
  • Clouds formations and weather phenomena (over or around the Pioneer Valley)

Click HERE for additional tips on submitting winning Head in the Clouds Amherst photos. Keep in mind that we cannot consider photos that are low resolution, low quality, or that contain inappropriate material. Ideally your image should be at least 300 PPI, and we will not consider images below 200 PPI. (If in doubt, send your photo to us, and we will let you know.) You can see our 2020 calendar, here and our 2021 calendar, here

We welcome landscape oriented, color photos by professionals and amateurs. And we’re also counting on friends of Head in the Clouds re-submitting photos you’ve already sent to us over the year - don't assume your photo is being considered just because you sent it to us at some other point in the past or we posted it to Facebook or the blog. You can submit as many photos as you like.

If your photo is selected for the 2022 calendar, you will receive a free calendar and reduced rates on any additional calendars you opt to purchase. All net proceeds from sales are donated to an Amherst-area charity each year - the Kestral Land Trust will be the recipient of our 2022 proceeds.  

Sunday, March 14, 2021

More Windy Days in March

Painting, "March Wind," by Philip Surrey, 1910–1990
Painting, "March Wind," by Philip Surrey, 1910–1990

Heads up (literally). Is it never not "literally" on this page?! 

Be prepared for strong to damaging winds across our area (and all Southern New England), from this afternoon into Monday morning, with wind gust around 30 mph. Also, expect bitter cold conditions to descend tonight through Monday night, after which temperatures will moderate. If you're going outside during that period, dress for cold - not for the warm weather we have been having lately.