2025-06-15 11:55:00
Goownown Growers
The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
Today we had to collect washed up seaweeds for a craft workshop on seaweed pressing. We love the pressing process as a way to engage people with seaweeds.
The day is perfect and I had more time than I usually do to collect. The seaweeds best for pressing are red seaweed that tend to grow at the bottom or below the intertidal zone. When they become dislodged from their holdfasts, dying, they wash up. A northerly wind blew from the land, making the nearshore water calm – it was bliss.
Over the last half a year we have been trying to learn a little how to interpret these beautiful satellite images of familiar landmasses and unfamiliar cloud masses, not often sure what exactly we are looking at. One thing has been certain over the last few months – it’s been mostly warm and dry. We have seen many clear outlines of the cornish coast send down to us via audio file from the satellites.
It feels sadly fitting to have spent these months with our ground station, thinking more about weather, whilst the coast our work focuses on is current experiencing the warmest heat waves since records began.
Throughout April and May we have seen an ‘unprecedented’ marine heatwave in the northeastern Atlantic. The Met Office has described this heatwave as being unusual in its intensity and persistence.
The last time this was observed was in 2023, at the time the most severe marine heatwave recorded in this part of the ocean. Then, both Ruth and I were working harvesting seaweed at every low tide on The Lizard peninsular. Unaware of the data being gathered that summer, we anecdotally saw a large bleaching and dieback of our favourite seaweed Dulse. We worried about its recovery after this local marine heatwave and we wondered what data was being gathered on the effect of heat on the very shallow waters of the intertide. The Dulse seemed to recover well but we couldn’t help wonder how many of these events the ecosystem could withstand. Now working less physically close to this ecosystem, seeing more extreme marine heatwaves, we are left even more concerned for their future.
Today, whilst the tide is metres above most species, I swim in the unseasonably warm waters and gather dead floating seaweeds, a tool to teach people about the ecosystem. I wonder how many of them have died prematurely due to heat or if this is just the normal natural lifecycle.
2025-06-13 09:04:26
Tom Lye
Bidston Observatory, Wirral, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
Very gusty on the roof today with fast clouds and pockets of sunshine! Nice to have a morning pass with NOAA-15 before I head back to London.
2025-05-16 11:42:31
Derrick Yohn
Transfer, Pennsylvania, United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-05-01 11:18:19
Sasha Milonova & Julia Nueno
London - Goldsmiths, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
it's the hottest labour day that we have on record
it was our first time capturing satellite images
in our image we can see sunny London and cloudy Madrid
2025-05-01 11:21:38
Manu Sancho, Omar Ferwati
Goldsmiths University, London, UK
UK
NOAA-19
It was a very sunny day in London, it was 28º
2025-05-01 11:20:01
Bernal Pérez, Florence To, Laura Palmer, David Birkin, Debora Swistun
College Green, Goldsmiths University, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The weather was summy, clear, 27 degrees celcius. Capturing the waves started with white noise then eevntually after 5 minutes it became clear and sharp. Image captured from 11:18 - 11:26. It was a collective exercise with open weather community at Goldsmiths Univerity in the green.
2025-03-19 18:35:00
The Seaweed Institute and Goonown Growers
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, UK
UK
NOAA-15
Blue skies for installing the ground station the day before this first image uploaded, we worked together with Ray from Goonown. It was warm and springlike in Helston, the magnolias on the streets around CAST had just come into their element.
We thought we knew the aspect of the building but we were surprised by the direction of true north, we had been looking closer to north north west. Spent some time pondering magnetic deviation, unsure if the smart phone compass already accounted for it, wished we had a proper compass with us.
We chatted with Ray about the dry weather and how different it’s for them planting this year compared to last.
A few passers-by already stopped and mused on the new feature - ‘are you installing Sky TV?’.
The computer, sitting under the desk of the buildings office, seemed to be working okay and we were intrigued to see if it would upload. Ruth listened to the audio file before we saw the first image, as the automatic upload didn’t work the first time - a strange sound.
Seeing this first image we couldn’t quite comprehend any features poking through the noise, it wasn’t until someone else pointed out Scotland and Ireland beneath the clouds, upside down. We worried the granite building was obscuring the reading too much but were excited to see if we could trouble shoot the image with help from Sasha and Soph.
The Seaweed Institute