Over the years Bonnie and I have photographed the sunset at Cowee Mountain Overlook (Blue Ridge Parkway) on more occasions than I can readily recall, and even when the creative conditions are somewhat less than what might be considered optimum, I am always glad and grateful to have made the effort to go. This week I shared Cowee with one of my students who had journeyed from Reno, Nevada. The conditions along the Parkway all afternoon had been intriguing in an odd sort of way, yet when we arrived at Cowee for sunset, it seemed that conditions might not materialize to our benefit. Then, as we watched, a long swirling mass of cirrus, of a type somewhere between fibratus and uncinus, appeared and stretched from far to the southwest all the way into the northeast, nowhere near the direction of the sunset. As the sun sank below the western horizon, the lights in the cloud mass came on, and we watched as something amazing evloved from something rather ordinary. Thus it is with sunsets.

A focal length of 160mm, on the cusp of medium telephotoland, gave me the angle-of-view I wanted, isolating a section of the cloudmass and some interesting, rim-lit portions of the hills below the overlook. An aperture of f/14, considering the camera-to-subject distance, provided depth-of-field., and of equal importance, allowed, at ISO 100 (less digital noise), for a shutter speed of 8.0 seconds and a somewhat darker-than-medium overall exposure.

I have watched the clouds over Cowee do some extraordinary things over the years; but this week they did something that was truly unique.