No ‘bad’ weather

15 05 2026

What follows is a random selection of cellphone pix from a couple of evenings ago in wild, woolly and very windy Spring Creek Basin.

First sego lily of the season! That I’ve seen, anyway. It was SO windy, the flower was whipping around like crazy, so I tried to hold it still for my phone. It’s always a bit of a crap shoot to try to take pix of small things with my phone because I can’t see at all whether the *thing* is in focus or whether it’s the background.

Case in point: I took several pix of this beauty, within a couple of feet of the first one, and only the last one was in focus (that could have been the wind). I adore these lilies – in the desert! These seemed smaller than usual, but I’m glad to see them.

While the pix of the sego lilies seem to suggest that it was sunny, mostly we had these crazy, wildly dramatic clouds looming over the basin. These are mammatus clouds. Looking eastish-northeastish.

Google AI says:

Mammatus clouds are distinct, pouch-like cloud protrusions that hang downward from the base of a larger cloud, usually a towering cumulonimbus. Named after the Latin word for “udder” or “breast”, these stunning formations are fascinating for their unique shape and the rare meteorological process that creates them.

How They Form

Unlike most clouds, which are created by rising air (updrafts), mammatus clouds are formed by sinking air (downdrafts). [1]

  • The Process: Pockets of cold, dense air saturated with heavy ice crystals and precipitation sink downward from the parent cloud (usually the “anvil” of a thunderstorm).
  • The Shape: As these dense, cool pockets of air descend into warmer, drier air beneath the cloud, the ice and water begin to evaporate. This evaporation cools the air even more, causing the pockets to sink further, creating the characteristic rounded, bubble-like pouches. [1, 2, 3]

What They Indicate

While their ominous, alien-like appearance might make them look like the beginning of a severe storm or tornado, mammatus clouds are generally a sign that the worst part of the storm has already passed or is off in the distance.

  • Severe Weather Link: They are most commonly spotted in the vicinity of strong thunderstorms. If you spot them during the summer months, it usually means there are powerful storm cells nearby.
  • Safe or Not: Mammatus clouds themselves do not produce severe weather and are not dangerous to anyone on the ground. However, pilots are warned to avoid them because the sinking air can cause intense turbulence.

Key Characteristics

  • Composition: Because they hang high in the atmosphere, they are primarily composed of ice crystals rather than liquid water droplets.
  • Lifespan: They are relatively short-lived, typically appearing and dissipating within 10 to 30 minutes.
  • The Best Time to See Them: They are particularly striking at sunset or sunrise, when the low angle of the sun illuminates the underside of the pouches, turning them brilliant shades of gold, orange, pink, or deep blue.

In our case, they appeared around three hours before sunset, so we didn’t get the color, but they’re still pretty amazing to see, even if they also did NOT bring us any rain.

This was taken at about the same time, now looking eastish to southeastish. And quite a bit later, it looked REALLY rainy out beyond our local horizon. So hopefully somebody somewhere got some wet stuff.

Have to have a pony walking the skyline. 🙂 He was heading to the Spring Creek arroyo (down to the left), and pretty soon, his band followed. Looked like it was raining somewhere out in that direction, too (westish-southwestish).

And at the very end of the day (an hour or more later than the last pic), a pretty glorious and somewhat unexpected (and *very* brief) shot of sunset brilliance from the west end of the basin looking westish-northwestish. There were horses immediately behind me, but they were already in the shade of the hill, and that side was already fairly darkrainydusty (? did I mention the howling wind?).

Even under the “worst” conditions, there’s always such beauty. 🙂





Un-phased

14 05 2026

Clouds – and wind – kept the temp below 90F yesterday. It was SO windy. The clouds were great (it was raining somewhere, on somebody … but not on us), but that wind! Not so much. Chipeta doesn’t look bothered by it, which is good because the mustangs can’t escape it until it just dies down.





Girls’ drinks night

13 05 2026

Mysterium and Gaia had just had their evening drink with the band at a seep, and Gaia seems to be checking that Mysterium enjoyed her drink, too.





Feeling nostalgic

12 05 2026

Flashy Flash. He has grown into a most handsome young stallion, even while he’s greyed out and lost his spots.

Where have the years gone? 🙂





Land of wilderness

11 05 2026

A brief glimpse of Buckeye the other day as the rain clouds cleared. They were way deep in Spring Creek Basin’s eastern McKenna Peak Wilderness Study Area, and there wasn’t much evidence that it *had* rained. The thirsty land and vegetation slurps it up, and the wind takes care of any water that was “foolish” (!) enough to puddle.

When I first saw them from a distance, they were south of a known seep; by the time I got out to them, they had walked north and crossed my (their) trail. There’s water in a pond not far west, and the fact that they were as deep as they were leaves me knowing that they have water sources that *enable* them to stay as deep as they do. Not where *I* know water can be found but where *they* know water can be found.





Happy Mother’s Day!

10 05 2026

Terra was napping in the sunshine and wind … her tail caught in a random … stick of some kind? She did eventually turn and wander off to graze, yanking her tail free of the stick as she went, so it wasn’t nearly as caught as it looked. 🙂

Happy Mother’s Day to all great mothers out there! For every little thing you do with care and love – even exasperation at times! – we thank you and love you back. 🥰

Huge love to my own mom, who is the awesomest mom! I love you! 😍





Contrast

9 05 2026

Alegre on the move, ruffled by wind. Usually, her mane – and her fabulous braid – is all on the right side of her neck.





A conversation in a look

8 05 2026

Hey, human, trying to eat over here. A little privacy, please?

Sorry, pal. I have to take every chance I can get to show off your handsomeness.

Poor Corazon; he tries to avoid the camera at all costs. 🙂





Emerging

7 05 2026

Bia in her very own secret forest. She’s as beautiful as a fairy princess!





Fillin’ da belly

6 05 2026

Big-belly-boy Skywalker. 🙂

By the time you read this, we might be getting rain??!! Keep those fingers crossed!