This past weekend I woke up early and ventured out onto the beach, as I do most mornings, this morning however, it was sooooo cold the ocean had some seas smoke on it. Sea Smoke is formed when VERY cold air goes over warmer water…it’s technically fog, but as you can see not really…
Notice the cloud cover on the horizon…well, that’s not really the horizon, there is an Island right there [1/2 mile from where I’m standing] it’s just completely engulfed in the sea smoke. As the day heated up and the “smoke” lifted the island appeared to be floating ontop of the ocean. I wish I took a pic, it happens every couple weeks when it is VERY cold.
Early Sailors loved when they saw sea smoke because it usually was a precursor to a heavy winds with zero cloud cover…great for sailing.
I’ve seen that, but it was when hot air passed over cold water. Good Harbor Beach, Gloucester, MA in May. It was eerie to see it creep up onto the beach.
I remember making an Operation Northern Wedding deployment in… oh, I’d say about 1987… when the Navy was using the *USS Nimitz * to test the feasibility of operating aircraft from our flight deck in an Icelandic fjord. Vestfyord, I believe it was named.
On the transit north, and subsequently on our circumnavigation of Iceland, we often experienced sea smoke.
I’ve seen this over wet fields.
There is one section of the highway that’s built like a bridge and there’s a mile of soggy grasslands below. On a sunny moring you will come down from one side of the valley and cross to the other and be just above or under this thin sheet of fog/clouds.