Lightning and a body of water

cabaiguan juan

Fucking Pandas
Joined
Aug 30, 2006
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Zamunda
I have always been puzzled by this question and as I’m grilling dinner while watching a thunderstorm make it’s way over the Chesapeake bay, it seams appropriate to ask this question:

when lightning strikes a lake or a bay/ocean, how far of a radius does it electrocute the water around where it strikes? For hypothetical instance, if I am floating in the water a 100 yards away from where lightning strikes the water, would I be shocked by the lightning or not? Can anyone answer or direct me to the answer?
 
I have always been puzzled by this question and as I’m grilling dinner while watching a thunderstorm make it’s way over the Chesapeake bay, it seams appropriate to ask this question:

when lightning strikes a lake or a bay/ocean, how far of a radius does it electrocute the water around where it strikes? For hypothetical instance, if I am floating in the water a 100 yards away from where lightning strikes the water, would I be shocked by the lightning or not? Can anyone answer or direct me to the answer?
 
if you hop in the water right before the lightning strikes then you won't have to ask. 😅

and besides that point, search is your friend, as I have often read here.
 
Got this one from my balcony a few minutes ago.
View attachment 46203

That is a nice one & always fun stuff to photograph lightning.

Many years ago I had a hobby within a hobby of photographing lightning. I used my old Nikon 35 mm film camera, and with no additional lens.
My favorite lightning shot was from August, 1997; I was on Santa Rosa Island/Pensacola, FL. It was about 00:30 and I captured some very excellent CC lightning, with a 15 second shutter time. Color film, of course but at 00:30 it sure looks B&W. The shot captured the sugar white Appalachian granite beach, the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the clouds, and of course the CC lightning. Fantastic shot. Fun stuff .......
 
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