Hi Horse - those pictures show on page 1, don't know what happened on page 2. Posts seem to be a bit jumbled. Yes, I did see those puffs of smoke coming from the cranes engine (I think). Also saw the fog rolling in or smoke coming from the ocean side on cam4. Thought it was smoke but it seems to be fog, perhaps? UFO's are always a touchy subject, either you believe in them or not, no problem. Not here to convince anyone BUT the Annunaki Sumerians is worth looking into. I agree, that reddish color area on top of R3 could easily be a red crane, too blurry to confirm what it is.
Thanks for all your recording sparks and webcam watching.
Hi Cali, they did show on pg 1 and I didn't know I was on pg2. Posts not jumbled, just me, spent too much time at ENENews lately. Puffs of smoke were bigger, longer than the suspected crane exhaust, maybe other bigger cranes on the dock. Hazy sky all day but the two small events twenty minutes apart are unlikely to be fog, just my opinion. I was thinking maybe incinerator smoke but we don't know where those are. Pia and Lucas would like observations, data, and real evidence posted because the webcam forum is documenting history at Daiichi and of nuclear in general. I agree with them. Not sure if you’re trying to bait me or if you think we need more sensationalism to get people to look at the cams. I don’t know much but I like to speculate too. So as not to wreck the webcam thread, I suggest moving some of that speculation to a new thread in the Café lounge.
"The map is not the territory that it is a map of ... the word is not the thing being referred to."
Good observations by Majia. Fog isn't common where I live so I don't know what's normal for a small coastal region surrounded by mountains. Rain, high humidity are reported at Fukushima so a natural fog is to be expected. What does not appear to be usual are some of the wisps that come in isolated and intermittent when no other fogging is occurring. Fog is usually fairly uniform; however, notice the times when the fog is thickest over the reactor buildings and csfp area where radioactive particulate would be concentrated. Can't show it in a pic or vid but watching the two views north and south, it is interesting the way the fog drifts in the wind, first on one cam, then the other. It looks more like a fog cloud drifting about rather than an expected uniform fog. My call is that weather conditions create conditions for fogging and the radioactive particulate in the air around the plant promotes heavier fog formation.
"The map is not the territory that it is a map of ... the word is not the thing being referred to."