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Welcome to Vulcan - red sky!

Therin of Andor

Admiral
Moderator
3945036257_d7707e767d.jpg

6.15 am, Planet Vulcan.
Stardate: Now.

No, actually it's Sydney, Australia, after a night being buffeted by winds blowing in from drought-ridden regions around Canberra, Tipaburra and Broken Hill, NSW.

Dust, dust, dust! The "red centre" is now on the east coast?

Funny, a few months ago Star Trek fans here were complaining that JJ Abram's planet Vulcan had the wrong colour sky in the 2009 "Star Trek" movie. As in, "How could a planet have red sky some days (TOS, ST III, ENT) and a blue sky (ST XI) on other days...?"

Well... here we go!

http://therinofandor.blogspot.com/2009/09/welcome-to-planet-vulcan.html
 
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Cool pics. Weird country. :p

I never understood what people's hangup about a blue sky on Vulcan was, anyway. If it's an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere, it's likely to have a blue sky.

Colors tend to mean things about chemical composition, that's why I was taken aback when Dax on DS9 said she preferred "purple oceans." Yeah, I too love oceans that are chock full of in hydrogen suflide-producing purple photosynthetic bacteria!

I always assumed the red Vulcan sky in Amok Time was 1)a VFX limitation and 2)a result of time of day and atmospheric dust conditions. Just like Australia's red sky (well, the second one, not a VFX limitation of the Australian continent :p ).
 
Just like Australia's red sky

The important distinction here is that Australia's "red centre" in the outback often has skies this colour, during duststorms, although I've never seen them, nor has most of our population. The red colour is of the sky is caused by the natural colour of the airborn sand of our desert areas, much like the deserts around ShiKahr.

Yesterday's event was a once-in-70-years event for Sydney, our largest city, famous for bright blue skies. The winds had died down, but the red dust was still suspended, and had driften hundreds of miles. (It once occurred that the dust blew all the way to New Zealand - and they woke up to red snow on their mountain tops!)

Walking out into the back yard yesterday morning really did feel like walking out into an alien landscape. To all those ST XI unbelievers, who proclaimed the choice of a blue sky for Vulcan was a huge canonical blunder, Sydney says, "Now we know better!"
 
Walking out into the back yard yesterday morning really did feel like walking out into an alien landscape. To all those ST XI unbelievers, who proclaimed the choice of a blue sky for Vulcan was a huge canonical blunder, Sydney says, "Now we know better!"

There were probably news reports on Vulcan about the freak weather conditions (perhaps recent torrential rain?) that meant the sky turned blue for the first time in 70 years.
 
Just like Australia's red sky

The important distinction here is that Australia's "red centre" in the outback often has skies this colour, during duststorms, although I've never seen them, nor has most of our population. The red colour is of the sky is caused by the natural colour of the airborn sand of our desert areas, much like the deserts around ShiKahr.

Yesterday's event was a once-in-70-years event for Sydney, our largest city, famous for bright blue skies. The winds had died down, but the red dust was still suspended, and had driften hundreds of miles. (It once occurred that the dust blew all the way to New Zealand - and they woke up to red snow on their mountain tops!)

Walking out into the back yard yesterday morning really did feel like walking out into an alien landscape. To all those ST XI unbelievers, who proclaimed the choice of a blue sky for Vulcan was a huge canonical blunder, Sydney says, "Now we know better!"
Ah, I missed that. I was thinking you lived further inland--if the sky suddenly became red over Columbia, I think I would freak out.

Very weird country. :p
 
Just like Australia's red sky

The important distinction here is that Australia's "red centre" in the outback often has skies this colour, during duststorms, although I've never seen them, nor has most of our population. The red colour is of the sky is caused by the natural colour of the airborn sand of our desert areas, much like the deserts around ShiKahr.

Yesterday's event was a once-in-70-years event for Sydney, our largest city, famous for bright blue skies. The winds had died down, but the red dust was still suspended, and had driften hundreds of miles. (It once occurred that the dust blew all the way to New Zealand - and they woke up to red snow on their mountain tops!)

Walking out into the back yard yesterday morning really did feel like walking out into an alien landscape. To all those ST XI unbelievers, who proclaimed the choice of a blue sky for Vulcan was a huge canonical blunder, Sydney says, "Now we know better!"
Have you evolved inner eye lids yet?
 
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