A vision in white

Photo by Sandy Reed| Reader Sandy Reed submitted this photo of a “fog bow” that she snapped while walking along Graysmarsh Beach late Tuesday afternoon, March 25. A fog bow is different from a rainbow because fog droplets are much smaller than raindrops, which minimizes color and makes the bow appear white. Reed said that although it was sunny in Sequim, the Strait of Juan de Fuca was shrouded in thick fog. Suddenly, the sun broke through and formed a fog bow. “This one literally shimmered!” she wrote in an email to the Sequim Gazette.

Photo by Sandy Reed| Reader Sandy Reed submitted this photo of a “fog bow” that she snapped while walking along Graysmarsh Beach late Tuesday afternoon, March 25. A fog bow is different from a rainbow because fog droplets are much smaller than raindrops, which minimizes color and makes the bow appear white. Reed said that although it was sunny in Sequim, the Strait of Juan de Fuca was shrouded in thick fog. Suddenly, the sun broke through and formed a fog bow. “This one literally shimmered!” she wrote in an email to the Sequim Gazette.

Photo by Sandy Reed| Reader Sandy Reed submitted this photo of a “fog bow” that she snapped while walking along Graysmarsh Beach late Tuesday afternoon, March 25. A fog bow is different from a rainbow because fog droplets are much smaller than raindrops, which minimizes color and makes the bow appear white. Reed said that although it was sunny in Sequim, the Strait of Juan de Fuca was shrouded in thick fog. Suddenly, the sun broke through and formed a fog bow. “This one literally shimmered!” she wrote in an email to the Sequim Gazette.

Photo by Sandy Reed| Reader Sandy Reed submitted this photo of a “fog bow” that she snapped while walking along Graysmarsh Beach late Tuesday afternoon, March 25. A fog bow is different from a rainbow because fog droplets are much smaller than raindrops, which minimizes color and makes the bow appear white. Reed said that although it was sunny in Sequim, the Strait of Juan de Fuca was shrouded in thick fog. Suddenly, the sun broke through and formed a fog bow. “This one literally shimmered!” she wrote in an email to the Sequim Gazette.

Photo by Sandy Reed| Reader Sandy Reed submitted this photo of a “fog bow” that she snapped while walking along Graysmarsh Beach late Tuesday afternoon, March 25. A fog bow is different from a rainbow because fog droplets are much smaller than raindrops, which minimizes color and makes the bow appear white. Reed said that although it was sunny in Sequim, the Strait of Juan de Fuca was shrouded in thick fog. Suddenly, the sun broke through and formed a fog bow. “This one literally shimmered!” she wrote in an email to the Sequim Gazette.