Day: September 12, 2021
Art Quote of the Day
“Good painting is the kind that looks like sculpture.” – Michelangelo
A Spiral Aurora over Iceland

What’s happened to the sky? Aurora! Captured in 2015, this aurora was noted by Icelanders for its great brightness and quick development. The aurora resulted from a solar storm, with high energy particles bursting out from the Sun and through a crack in Earth’s protective magnetosphere a few days later. Although a spiral pattern can be discerned, creative humans might imagine the complex glow as an atmospheric apparition of any number of common icons. In the foreground of the featured image is the รโlfusรยก River while the lights illuminate a bridge in Selfoss City. Just beyond the low clouds is a nearly full Moon. The liveliness of the Sun — and likely the resulting auroras on Earth — is slowly increasing as the Sun emerges from a Solar minimum, a historically quiet period in its 11-year cycle. via NASA https://ift.tt/2XgnyIE
Partly Cloudy today!

Partly Cloudy today! With a high of 23C and a low of 23C.
87 Humidity.
13 C currently.
3 Km/h Wind from
East.
87 Humidity.
13 C currently.
3 Km/h Wind from
East.
Picture of the day for September 12, 2021

Wikipedia picture of the day on September 12, 2021: Mount Hoverla (2,061 m or 6,762 ft) in Carpathian National Nature Park is the highest mountain in Ukraine. More Info
Wikipedia article of the day for September 12, 2021

Wikipedia article of the day is Mr. Dooley. Check it out: Article-Link Summary: Mr.ย Dooley is a fictional bartender created by American journalist Finley Peter Dunne, appearing in print between 1893 and 1915, and again in 1924 and 1926. The bartender’s humorous but pointed commentary on American politics and international affairs first became nationally popular during the 1898 SpanishโAmerican War. Dunne’s essays are in the form of conversations in an Irish dialect of English between Mr. Dooley, the owner of a fictional tavern in the Bridgeport area of Chicago, and one of the bar’s patrons. From 1898 onwards, the essays, and the books collecting them, gained national acclaim. Dunne became a friend of President Theodore Roosevelt, although the friendship did not curtail his satire. Beginning around 1905, Dunne had increasing trouble finding time and inspiration for new pieces, and, except for a brief resurrection in the mid-1920s, his columns ended in 1915. The columns originated lasting sayings such as “the Supreme Court follows the election returns”.