Rare double “red rainbow” seen over Lewis County’s Highmarket area | St. Lawrence County | nny360.com

2022-05-21 14:40:13 By : Mr. Shoplanyard Sale

Please purchase a subscription to read our premium content. If you have a subscription, please log in or sign up for an account on our website to continue.

Please log in, or sign up for a new account to continue reading.

Thank you for using NNY360! We hope that you continue to enjoy our free content.

Welcome! We hope that you enjoy our complimentary NNY360 content.

Thank you for using NNY360! Support local journalism — join now!

Thank you for using NNY360! Support local journalism — join now!

Thank you for signing in! We hope that you continue to enjoy our free content.

Thank you for using NNY360! We hope that you continue to enjoy our complimentary NNY360 content.

Thank you for using NNY360! We hope that you continue to enjoy our complimentary NNY360 content.

Thank you for using NNY360! We hope that you continue to enjoy our complimentary NNY360 content.

Thank you for using NNY360! We hope that you continue to enjoy our complimentary NNY360 content.

Thank you for using NNY360! We hope that you continue to enjoy our complimentary NNY360 content.

Checking back? Since you viewed this item previously you can read it again. To enjoy all our content, join now!

Log in or sign up for a new account and join now to continue reading.

Join now to continue reading.

Your current subscription does not provide access to this content.

Sorry, no promotional deals were found matching that code.

Promotional Rates were found for your code.

Partly cloudy. A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. High 82F. Winds WSW at 10 to 20 mph..

Scattered showers and thunderstorms. Low 62F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 60%.

The rare double “red rainbow” seen Saturday from a Highmarket cabin in Lewis County about two miles into the woods off Dolan Road was captured by Sidnee D. Holland’s granddaughter, Ayla C. Holland. Provided photos

The rare double “red rainbow” seen Saturday from a Highmarket cabin in Lewis County about two miles into the woods off Dolan Road started with all of the colors of the spectrum, as captured by Sidnee D. Holland, before the shorter wavelengths of light disappeared, leaving only red. Provided photos

The rare double “red rainbow” seen Saturday from a Highmarket cabin in Lewis County about two miles into the woods off Dolan Road started with all of the colors of the spectrum, as captured by Sidnee D. Holland, before the shorter wavelengths of light disappeared, leaving only red. Provided photos

The rare double “red rainbow” seen Saturday from a Highmarket cabin in Lewis County about two miles into the woods off Dolan Road was captured by Sidnee D. Holland’s granddaughter, Ayla C. Holland. Provided photos

The rare double “red rainbow” seen Saturday from a Highmarket cabin in Lewis County about two miles into the woods off Dolan Road started with all of the colors of the spectrum, as captured by Sidnee D. Holland, before the shorter wavelengths of light disappeared, leaving only red. Provided photos

The rare double “red rainbow” seen Saturday from a Highmarket cabin in Lewis County about two miles into the woods off Dolan Road started with all of the colors of the spectrum, as captured by Sidnee D. Holland, before the shorter wavelengths of light disappeared, leaving only red. Provided photos

LOWVILLE — Catching a glimpse of a rainbow, or even a section of a rainbow, feels like a special moment for most people. If you are lucky enough to see one from end to end touching the horizon or, even better, a double rainbow, that feeling will probably be amplified.

When Sidnee D. Holland, who lives just outside of Port Leyden, walked out of her family’s log cabin to see what she anticipated would be the full spectrum of colors arched across the sky, a wide red band caught her off guard. The band — so high and rounded that it almost resembled an orb — was backdropped by red and purple sunset hues.

“We were so excited. We went out to see a rainbow and it ended up being that picture,” she said.

“That picture” was captured by Mrs. Holland’s granddaughter, Ayla C. Holland, 20, late Saturday afternoon at the family’s lodge a couple of miles off Dolan Road in the Highmarket area of southern Lewis County.

Ayla initially noticed the rainbow through the lodge window and the two generations of Holland women went outside together to appreciate the view and get some pictures after ducking back in to grab a camera phone.

“It had changed colors from the time we first went out and it just kept changing colors,” Mrs. Holland said. “It was purple and pink and then red. It was just amazing. I’d never seen anything like it before.”

Mrs. Holland is not alone.

“Red rainbows” — especially double red rainbows — are a relatively rare phenomenon.

A normal rainbow with most of the spectrum’s colors visible is created when sunlight slows down and bends as it goes through water droplets denser than the air, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Droplets act like prisms and refract the light after it’s bent, or separated into its component parts — seven different wavelengths of color ranging from blue, the shortest, to red, the longest.

With all that bending and color separation, a rainbow is the result.

The second, fainter rainbow of a double rainbow is created when the light bends twice in the water droplets.

Normally, a “red rainbow” can result when that process happens around sunrise or sunset when the sun is near to or even below the horizon. The dust, mists and fumes in the atmosphere — that cause colorful sunsets by dispelling the shorter blue, indigo, violet and green wavelengths of light — also cause only the red wavelength to make it through to be bent and reflected by airborne water droplets, according to the World Meteorological Organization’s online International Cloud Atlas.

Anyone looking at a red rainbow is bound to have the sun setting behind them.

In Highmarket on Saturday, however, the double red rainbow happened at about 5:30 p.m., long before the 8:19 p.m. sunset.

This rare rainbow’s cause was also unique, having “more to do with clouds interfering with the sunlight and less with the sun’s position in the sky,” explained Katelyn A. Barber, a SUNY Oswego assistant professor of meteorology in the atmospheric and geological sciences department.

“The beginning phase of the rainbow looks to be a more traditional form,” she said. “As more clouds passed through the area the total sunlight passing through was reduced and only the red wavelength was able to pass through.”

The clouds coming between the sunlight and the water molecules were the likely culprit for scattering the shorter wavelengths of color, leaving only the red for the viewer’s eye.

Mrs. Holland said it was still daylight but “starting to cloud up because it was raining” just as the colors other than red seemed to disappear and it was pouring with heavy wind when the red was at its brightest and the wide-angle picture was taken.

“It was really weird,” she said. “It was just amazing to see in person.”

Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items.

Your comment has been submitted.

There was a problem reporting this.

Keep it Clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language. PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK. Don't Threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated. Be Truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything. Be Nice. No racism, sexism or any sort of -ism that is degrading to another person. Be Proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts. Share with Us. We'd love to hear eyewitness accounts, the history behind an article.