Unless I misunderstand the relationship of shadows to the angle of sunlight as it sits above the horizon… shadows should be equally “long” in the morning when the sun is similarly inclined in the sky. Of course, it will be in the process of “shortening” but at any given moment [the elusive, evanescent “right now” included] shadows in the late afternoon will be in correspondence with shadows at definable moments in the morning.
BE THIS GUY almost 4 years ago
He must hate noon.
Walrus Gumbo Premium Member almost 4 years ago
George and Mary Sundial in Central Park.
Doug K almost 4 years ago
Her shadow: “Isn’t it nice to ‘grow’ together?”
guyjen2004 almost 4 years ago
Is that Central Park? Judging by the length of your shadows you have about 20 minutes before the muggings begin.
jagedlo almost 4 years ago
Also, time to get those stretches in!
mistercatworks almost 4 years ago
At noon, I’m just a shadow of myself.
the lost wizard almost 4 years ago
So long, I’ll be going soon.
David OBrien almost 4 years ago
We’ll go to any lengths to understand beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Rabbit Brown 2105-30 P coat almost 4 years ago
is that what happens after you call Baton Rouge? It sure looks like Baton Rouge.
uniquename almost 4 years ago
He’ll be longing for the sun soon enough.
jimmjonzz Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Unless I misunderstand the relationship of shadows to the angle of sunlight as it sits above the horizon… shadows should be equally “long” in the morning when the sun is similarly inclined in the sky. Of course, it will be in the process of “shortening” but at any given moment [the elusive, evanescent “right now” included] shadows in the late afternoon will be in correspondence with shadows at definable moments in the morning.