Spyke
lemmy.world

They went on forever and they, when I, we lived in Arizona and the skies always had little fluffy clouds in them and, er they were long and clear and there were lots of stars at night and, er, when it would rain it would all turn, it, they were beautiful, the most beautiful skies, as a matter of fact...

80
Kylereply
lemmy.ca

I was hoping this comment would be here. I feel seen.

19

This one caught me off guard – first time I wish we had awards here!

15

I scrolled specifically looking for this.
It was important that this be posted here.
You've done a man's job, sir!
It's too bad she won't live... but then again, who does?

7

Annnnd, now I'm going down that nostalgic track rabbit hole for the evening. 🤘🏼🥰

5

I know this isn’t the reference but this reminds me of that Reddit account something like commamassacre or commanightmare?

1

There were way, way, way more bugs. Yesterday I spent about 12 hours on the highway, and I didn't need to pull over to clean my windshield once. 20-30 years ago my windshield and headlights would be completely plastered after a few hours.

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Arrakisreply
lemmy.world

That's not because of the number of bugs, it's because your newer car has better aerodynamics than your 20/30 year old one.

9
crilenreply
kbin.social

10 trillion members as late as 1875. Soon after, their population rapidly declined, with the last recorded sighting in 1902, and the species formally declared extinct in 2014.

jfc

9

my mom still drives the same car from the late 80s and the difference on it is drastic.

10

I remember stars covering the sky in a shower of light. Not just a few here and there, but the literal Milky Way band. Light pollution has grown at a concerning pace in my own lifetime and I wonder what it will look like when my children are grown.

17
lemmy.world

The skies were full of birds. Like 50 times what we have today.

17

And bugs. And there were frogs and lizards everywhere (not in the skies though).

10
kbin.social

Night sky had the Milky Way. Same place now, can probably only see a hundred stars total.

17
letter_dreply
lemmy.world

So much light pollution. I grew up without mountains and now live somewhere with mountains. Miss that wide open sky. Day and night.

12

High desert mountains are, or were, a great place to see the Milky Way. You had the mountains and the openness. It's been a few years or 20 for me, though. No idea if those places are still dark enough.

2
kbin.social

Roughly the same. I remember more lightning bugs, though, if they count as "sky." Not sure if that was peculiar to where I was living at the time, outside Memphis, Tennessee.

15
nuachtanreply
lemmy.world

There are definitely less lightning bugs now. I remember there being tons growing up, but now I rarely see them, and I live very close to where I lived as a kid.

6
lemmy.ml

Concord's roaring overhead. Miss those planes.

13
ChatGPTreply
lemmy.world

It’s an experience everyone should have I did NYC to London and flew back from Paris on Air France. I really hope they make a comeback.

6
lemmy.world

Unlikely, the fuel consumption rates were a main reason for the end of the plane.

Given that consumers are more environmentally conscious now, were unlikely so send a Concord when we could send four to five 747s instead.

3

1% chance of a single cloud being in the sky

0.00005% chance of a thunderstorm

-50% chance of snow

The sky is completely white some days. Not clouds, but LITERAL SAND.

You can cook an egg using only the sun.

One more thing: when it rains, it's usually only for a few seconds. I repeat: seconds.

8
kbin.social

Ah, the old "contrails/chemtrails didn't exist when I was young" argument. Yes, they did; you didn't look up when you were a kid.

3

When Laurence Olivier was filming Henry V in 1944, he had to go to the north of Scotland because of all the contrails from military planes further south.

5

I always noticed them when I was younger, because I thought it was food for clouds so they could get bigger.

I didn't really understand the concept of planes when I was 5. Lol

2

You reached the end