![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVhOnvvconmVjsSz1oyt1VJycEIaZubsarrJgeZq-BxJwwdcbGmkMMQW4GYY0RsvY-T7iumKl5MfOykcwg23t8hdkqkDnDMfe2s4b9agy6kasQDi4w0pzt0Heesb3rdR7sRSE8ebyuK9U/s320/sundog1.jpg)
It's been two years since I first saw one (and wrote about it), and I've seen dozens since.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZcXaN9MO8_mLPqCS1JVf_ckIrj_9XHWw1J_lkaVNjQWQyG8sZ0D7rl_zQrQXQG_jqUg4w3pLZntGH5aWPy8GObDnMm_2rmym7TRsYU3ARvUF6JtU2XvSIOjj2wBpYu1gDGjfAwY2qzLk/s320/sundog2.jpg)
But I still haven't managed to get a good photo of one.
I see them more often in winter, especially when driving south late in the afternoon. (AL-75S gives great sundog.)
No use trying to race them home, though. They're slithery, and don't hang around for portraits.
Here's a nice, simple page with a good sundog photo, as well as other atmospheric phenomena. Here is the definitive page on the science behind the "why" of all the optics.
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The latest I and the Bird is up over at The Birder's Report. Go see!
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