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Impressive meteor
Me
Posted on 04/06/2012 11:10:52 PM PDT by The Cajun
Just saw the most impressive meteor Ive ever seen in my 65 years.
At 5 minutes past midnight was doing my usual walk around outside the house and tractor barn and saw a meteor about 45 degrees off of the northern horizon moving from east to west.
Had visual for approximately 5 seconds as it covered 1/3 of the sky.
Pretty slow compared to other meteors I have seen.
The front was orange-yellow and green towards the back.
What made it really unusual is that even with my old eyes, I could see debris, greenish in color, falling downward fairly close to the back of it.
My first impression was, holy crap, that's close.
Lost sight of it when a tree was in the way and couldn't regain sight of it when I ran to the backside of the tree.
I waited for a sonic boom, but heard none.
Could have been space junk, but that normally moves from west to east and this thing was moving from due east to west.
The only reason I'm typing this up is because I was really impressed with it, never saw a trail like that and one that apparently slow.
TOPICS: Astronomy
KEYWORDS: astronomy; catastrophism; science
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Just saw the most impressive meteor Ive ever seen in my 65 years. At 5 minutes past midnight was doing my usual walk around outside the house and tractor barn and saw a meteor about 45 degrees off of the northern horizon moving from east to west.
Had visual for approximately 5 seconds as it covered 1/3 of the sky.
Pretty slow compared to other meteors I have seen.
The front was orange-yellow and green towards the back.
What made it really unusual is that even with my old eyes, I could see debris, greenish in color, falling downward fairly close to the back of it.
My first impression was, holy crap, that's close.
Lost sight of it when a tree was in the way and couldn't regain sight of it when I ran to the backside of the tree.
I waited for a sonic boom, but heard none.
Could have been space junk, but that normally moves from west to east and this thing was moving from due east to west.
The only reason I'm typing this up is because I was really impressed with it, never saw a trail like that and one that apparently slow.
1
posted on
04/06/2012 11:10:57 PM PDT
by
The Cajun
To: The Cajun
2
posted on
04/06/2012 11:15:00 PM PDT
by
dragnet2
(Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
To: The Cajun
Interesting.
I haven’t seen any meteors. I did see some daytime UFOs with my wife but the details are both boring and unexplainable.
But if these are the pilots of the craft already underground, we all can and will blame you for the invasion!
3
posted on
04/06/2012 11:19:24 PM PDT
by
freedumb2003
('RETRO' Abortions = performed on 84th trimester individuals who think killing babies is a "right.")
To: freedumb2003
Plain old meteor or maybe space debris. Just the best one I have seen.
Have see videos of slower ones, but this is the first one that lasted over a second or two that I've see myself.
4
posted on
04/06/2012 11:23:58 PM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: The Cajun
see seen, idiot Cajun......Proof read, proof read, proof read!
5
posted on
04/06/2012 11:27:09 PM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: The Cajun
That is very cool!
I've only seen one “falling star” so I have nothing to compare it to. But I thought it was a beautiful thing!
When I was in college I experienced something I've never been able to fully explain. I was driving home from work in a rough thunder storm. It was a country road with no street lights and there was an open field on one side, occasional houses on the other.
I had slowed to a crawl because I could not see 100 feet in front of the car. With no warning all the hair on my arms stood up and the field and even the car was lit with a neon blue flicker. My passenger, a girl I worked with named Connie had her shoulder length brown hair all statically-charge-stuck to the roof of my car! There was a very soft buzz sound that I could feel in the new filling in my tooth, but no thunder clap. It lasted 4-6 seconds, starting dim and increasing in intensity and then faded again.
It was SO cool.
My dad said it was probably ball lightening. I don't know! But Connie and I made a joke that if one of us developed ESP or grew antennae we would be sure and let the other know!
6
posted on
04/06/2012 11:41:27 PM PDT
by
Casie
To: The Cajun
Do you have telekinetic powers now ?
7
posted on
04/06/2012 11:45:44 PM PDT
by
fieldmarshaldj
(If you like lying Socialist dirtbags, you'll love Slick Willard)
To: Casie
This was the first one I have seen that was more than a little flicker of light with a short tail following directly behind and only lasting a second.
I actually saw some detail with the *green sparkles* falling downward.
Happy as all get out that I saw it.
8
posted on
04/06/2012 11:50:03 PM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: fieldmarshaldj
Why no, but I now have the ability to detect wise-a**es a great distances, LOL!
9
posted on
04/06/2012 11:51:57 PM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: The Cajun
Thanks for posting the account of this. I love to watch for shooting stars.when I cant sleep I go find the utility trailer out back and lay thete watching the night sky
10
posted on
04/07/2012 12:02:59 AM PDT
by
gunsequalfreedom
(Conservative is not a label of convenience. It is a guide to your actions.)
To: The Cajun
Wow, wish I’d seen that :-)
11
posted on
04/07/2012 12:03:17 AM PDT
by
Bobalu
(It is not obama we are fighting, it is the media.)
To: The Cajun
Sounds almost exactly like the one that my husband and I saw a couple of years ago...it was gorgeous.
Of course, at the time, part of your brain is saying “that’s beautiful!”...the other part is saying “good grief...what the heck is that...should I run?” LOL!
To: gunsequalfreedom
When I was younger we would go out in the bayous and canals in the flat marsh in the middle of no where to bass fish and frog at night.
You could see from horizon to horizon, the belt of the Milky way and an unbelievable amount of stars and their colors with the naked eye, no light pollution.
You would always see several meteors during the night, very bright and fast, but nothing like this one.
Guess that's why I was so impressed with it even with the light pollution.
My house is well lit up outside and the backyard where I was standing has two 100 watt floods shinning and also a street light at the front and one at the side of the house and another at the barn.....Light pollution max.
13
posted on
04/07/2012 12:20:38 AM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: garandgal
I honestly thought I was going to hear a sonic boom, but I didn't.
Probably was a lot further away and higher than I was assuming.
Your distance perceptions can play tricks on you with stuff like this, especially with no reference points.
14
posted on
04/07/2012 12:26:26 AM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: The Cajun
Probably was a lot further away and higher than I was assuming.The one that we saw looked absolutely huge from our vantage point in Central Iowa...but it landed in Wisconsin.
To: Casie
16
posted on
04/07/2012 12:59:47 AM PDT
by
A.Hun
(Common sense is no longer common.)
To: Casie
I had a similar experience while sailing through a severe thunderstorm. It was daylight, so there was no visible light, but the rigging on my boat buzzed loudly. The rain from the storm missed us, but it was very windy though. My companion touched the main shroud and a spark 4” long zappped him.
He had a red whelt in his palm for days. Really spookie sail.
17
posted on
04/07/2012 1:35:12 AM PDT
by
Islander7
(There is no septic system so vile, so filthy, the left won't drink from to further their agenda)
To: Islander7
Have been in my bass boat (fiber glass) where the hand railings begin to shock you, you know it's time to head in and take cover.
Another good sign is when your mono-filament fishing line doesn't drop in the water but floats in the air above it, you are being charged up dangerously.
18
posted on
04/07/2012 1:51:52 AM PDT
by
The Cajun
(Palin, Free Republic, Mark Levin, Newt......Nuff said.)
To: The Cajun
Record your Lat/Long position and the direction you were looking and the ascension/declination where you saw it. If you can find pieces of it, they’re worth money. Or you can report it to the meteor hunters and let them go find it.
19
posted on
04/07/2012 2:04:03 AM PDT
by
Samurai_Jack
(ride out and confront the evil!)
To: dragnet2
A few years ago i was driving over this small bridge in my home town when this fireball literally screamed directly past my windshield and into the darkness to my right.
It was unbelievable.
It was a fireball about the size of a washing machine that missed my car by like 5 feet.
If it was not for my bitch ex-GF in the car at the time nobody would have believed it.
The next day me and my buddy scoured the park next to the bridge for the meteor to no avail, it probably landed in the Charles river.
It really was an amazing experience though...
20
posted on
04/07/2012 2:21:11 AM PDT
by
mowowie
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