Doug Shepherd's photos with the keyword: Storm

Summer storm clouds passing by

02 Jul 2022 31 26 303
Not a drop of rain did we get. The storm drifted eastwards out over the North Sea, about 4 miles/6 km away.

Zeus's dog

09 Apr 2021 20 22 213
Zeus - God of the sky

The gathering storm - Loch Cluanie

15 Dec 2018 34 33 561
Loch Cluanie (Scottish Gaelic: Loch Cluanaidh) is a loch in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland at the south-east end of Glen Shiel. It is a reservoir, contained behind the Cluanie Dam, constructed by Mitchell Construction and completed in 1957 as part of the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board's Glenmoriston project to generate hydroelectricity. Water feeds the dam from the west via two flows, from a tunnel from the dammed Loch Loyne (below) and via the River Moriston. (Photo taken by the A87 road on the way to the Isle of Skye. It was a short stop, as can be seen the rain was not too far away!) Loch Lyone

Stormy sky, winter sunset, North Yorkshire

Storm clouds over Borrowdale, Cumbria

27 Jul 2017 22 24 606
Best Enlarged View to the south down Derwent Water from Friars Crag towards Borrowdale and Castle Crag, which has a height of 290 metres. Castle Crag has an impressive appearance, a rugged height apparently blocking the valley of Borrowdale, which is squeezed between Castle Crag and Grange Fell, its neighbour on the other side. This narrow gorge known as the 'Jaws of Borrowdale', and is prominent in views from Keswick and Derwentwater. The summit area of the fell is believed to have been an ancient hill fort Derwentwater (or Derwent Water) is one of the principal bodies of water in the Lake District National Park in north west England. It lies wholly within the Borough of Allerdale, in the county of Cumbria. The lake occupies part of Borrowdale and lies immediately south of the town of Keswick. It is both fed and drained by the River Derwent. It measures approximately is 4.8 km long by 1.6 km wide and is some 22 m deep. There are several islands within the lake, one of which is inhabited. Derwent Island House, an 18th-century residence, is a tenanted National Trust property open to the public on five days each year.

Stormy skies over the Skye Bridge