14 January 2020, 06:56 PM
QuirtEvansVolcanic Lightning
https://mashable.com/article/v...g-why-taal-eruption/14 January 2020, 10:14 PM
Steve MillerWow! Must look like the end of the world.
15 January 2020, 09:56 AM
CHASI learn a lot here.
On Facebook that is spelled "lightening".
15 January 2020, 10:39 AM
AdagioMquote:
Originally posted by CHAS:
I learn a lot here.
On Facebook that is spelled "lightening".

15 January 2020, 10:53 AM
Steve Millerquote:
Originally posted by CHAS:
I learn a lot here.
On Facebook that is spelled "lightening".
Bunch of loosers.
15 January 2020, 11:40 AM
Nina
I think there's something totally engrossing about watching volcanic eruptions. It's in the same mold as those videos of buildings being deconstructed. You just can't look away.
(As an aside, when my kids were small we had a video that was nothing but things collapsing/being destroyed. They watched it at least a thousand times. It was a godsend.)
15 January 2020, 12:10 PM
Steve Millerquote:
Originally posted by Nina:
(As an aside, when my kids were small we had a video that was nothing but things collapsing/being destroyed. They watched it at least a thousand times. It was a godsend.)
I need to find two of these videos.

18 January 2020, 07:34 PM
BeeLadyI stood on the rim of Taal in 2016 with coworkers. It was a big tourist event, we took a boat across the larger lake to the volcano whose crater was another lake, then hiked to the top (not terribly high really,our guide went up in flip flops..). There was a snack bar and tourist shop with a viewing platform...My coworkers, unbeknownst to me, had bought a souvenir for me..A volcanic rock on a little platform with my name painted on.

There were fissures that put out sulfur but nothing that seemed dangerous. (I have roasted marshmallows on Pacaya in Guatemala). We encountered farmers on horses on the walk back down to the boats. It was beautiful.
Sadly most of the water just behind us now gone..Oh, the power of Mother Nature.
Taal's Inner Lake gone