Ninn S Ninn S

July 8th

We report: the sky is wide open, and the sun is somewhere above our head, too bright for us to try and look for it. Bales of hay have been appearing on top of the hills, and the remaining grass underneath has been left to yellow in the heat. A bit of wind steals our hat.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 7th

We report as light moves from the sky to the street lamps: there is a patch of wasteland between two houses where heather blooms in the summer. Our expert took us there tonight, and the crickets could be heard from down the road, and the smell of the dry brush coloured the air.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 6th

We report: a lot of the weather lately has been exceptions upon oddities on top of anomalies. There is something comforting, then, in knowing that the moon tonight was to be a waxing gibbous in Scorpio, somewhere around 85% full; and that is what the moon was indeed.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 5th

We report in between bouts of rain - we can tell we are in between because while the rain has stopped, we can already feel new drops on our face. The clouds are churning, brewing up a few showers in advance. Though it has been raining all day, the air is still a little warm.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 4th

We report: today again, the clouds come close to full bloom. There are developing cells everywhere, pockets of hot steam sculpted into strange shapes that consistently catch our eye. They never seem to reach the next stage of potential storm, however, still subject to gravity.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 3rd

We report as nightfall grows nearer: the calls of the chimney swifts echo across the pasture, high-pitched chirps that we have been hearing through the whole evening. In the colder months, the belt of Venus would have been visible, but the horizon remains perfectly clear today.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 2nd

We report: it is an odd reminder that we are still able to feel cold at this moment, but the humidity is not at the service of the heat anymore. It is an abstract hour of the almost morning, the wind is blowing into our eyes and ears, and the clouds are somehow pinned into place.

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Ninn S Ninn S

July 1st

We report: we fall into July with morning rain, and the sky is a sweet shade of dark overcast. On the open sea that is the undulating clouds, we relish the absence of a horizon line. A lot of the June heat is running down the side of the road, a long overdue respite.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 30th

We report about shadows, and a long afternoon, dry grass, dust and the heat on our eyelids. The air tastes all these things wrapped into one, carried by a warm wind. While the sky shifts into something new, we remain in place, stuck on this flavour of a summer day.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 29th

We report while June winds down, still hot, still bright. We try to treasure the light that we only get to enjoy in the weeks surrounding the solstice. It means we often catch ourselves with our chin in our hand, looking through the window until there is nothing left to see.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 28th

We report: deep in the night, the thinnest drizzle falls in near silence, almost unseen if it were not for the streetlights. We walk through the clouds, the front of our coat catching most of the water as we disturb its suspension. In the morning, it will all look like dew.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 27th

We report mid-morning: this time, there was no waiting around for rain. It looked like it was about to rain, and then it rained, which was a straightforward process that we appreciated for both its simplicity, and the fact that it happened. Now, we would like for it to continue.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 26th

We report: noon light above the growing crops, the sun is pressing down on our face, hot and sharp. There is not a lick of a breeze to displace the mass of heat on the ground, yet we see the soil breathe when we watch with intent. And we watch. And the horizon line oscillates.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 25th

We report while waiting for rain clouds that will not come: at least we saw the atmospheric pressure change, and the way it took everything down with it when it fell. We think the clouds got turned around when the wind went anticlockwise, somewhere off the coast.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 24th

We report: the loudest nights are upon us. The frogs, the cicadas, the bats, and the odd owl are all working together to drown out the mosquitoes, for which we are thankful. Near the ground, the humidity cuts through the heat of the days, and a sense of peace washes over us.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 23rd

We report in the late afternoon: we saw the bewilderment in the eyes of our expert before we saw the funnel cloud for ourselves. It never made it to the ground; there was never a storm, nor even a cumulonimbus in sight. And just as quickly as it had formed, it vanished.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 22nd

We report: the sky has frozen into the motion of the wind, all the ways across, turbulence and all. This quilt is stitched in sunshine, ice, and time - fragile pieces of fabric, and it is no wonder that it is already starting to unravel. The waves get rowdier among the clouds.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 21st

We report on the earliest of mornings of the year: the ruins of the night are coming down in premature warmth. We are  already awake, unable to sleep in the summer fever; our expert is still deep in their dreams. The sun is barely above the horizon, cloaked by the clouds.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 20th

We report: sure enough, even when the summer solstice comes around, we see the day snuffed out. Then again, we did get more than our fair share of sunshine this week. While the vault gets painted with darker shades of blue, we take the long, reluctant way to sleep.

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Ninn S Ninn S

June 19th

We report at the height of today’s temperatures: it would appear that these skies cannot bear heat for long before they get overwhelmed — in the same fashion we do. This afternoon, while walking in the sun, we did silently plead for some shade, and it seems we conjured it up.

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