The 7 best places in America to watch the sunset

Sit back and watch the sunset.

Beautiful skies enchant people all over the world at all times of day. Sunrises light up the morning, cloud gazing livens up lazy afternoons, and stars add some sparkle to the night sky. And, of course, no discussion of gorgeous horizons is complete without mentioning sunsets.

The shades of orange, red, yellow, and purple that color the clouds during sunset manage to both relax people and leave them in awe. If you want to chase that feeling of awe across the United States, then check out this list of the seven best spots in the country for watching the sunset.

Texas AD forgot how sunsets worked while trying to defend his school’s lack of alternate jerseys

The sun sets on this comparison from Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte.

They say everything is bigger in Texas, but things aren’t different colors.

When discussing his school’s lack of alternate uniforms on Monday, University of Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte got a bit confused as to how sunsets work.

Del Conte wanted to justify the school sticking to its patented Burnt Orange and White (instead of wearing alternate colors) by referencing the rhythms of nature.

However, he missed the mark by an Austin mile when trying to compare the school’s home jerseys to the colors of any given sunset.

Basically, the Texas athletic director might be shocked to find out that, yes, sunsets are actually other colors than burnt orange.

Sunsets don’t really need divine intervention to morph into other colors than burnt orange, and Texas holding to jersey tradition is much more of a personal decision than a comparable act of nature.

Longhorn fans love their traditions, and burnt orange suits them. Just don’t drag sunsets into this. They aren’t afraid of alternate uniforms.

‘Monster’ catfish reeled through ice during epic Iowa sunset

An Iowa angler who was ice fishing with minnows recently on Lake Manawa was surprised by the “constant power” exhibited by the 34-pound flathead catfish at the end of his line.

An Iowa angler who was ice fishing with minnows recently on Lake Manawa was surprised by the “constant power” exhibited by the massive catfish at the end of his line.

“The fight was unlike anything I’ve ever caught through the ice,” the Council Bluffs resident told Field & Stream. “It was constant power. It was a whole new battle to get that big of a fish to turn its head on a rod and reel that wasn’t meant for something of its size.”

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The flathead catfish, caught during a spectacular sunset on Jan. 31, tipped a scale at 34 pounds before Campbell placed the fish back into the hole and watched it swim free.

He told Outdoor Life: “I only caught one fish that night but it took us the whole night to get it in.”

The catch caught the attention of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, which on Wednesday shared the news via Facebook.

“Surprise! That’s no panfish. That’s a 40-inch, 34-pound Iowa Master Angler flathead catfish!” the agency exclaimed. “Gavin Campbell was recently ice fishing Lake Manawa when he pulled this monster from the ice.”

Many of the comments pertained to the beautiful sunset on display in the image captured by Campbell’s friend,  Ryan Higginbotham.

Iowa’s Master Angler Program recognizes exceptional catches in state waters.

Campbell told Field & Stream that it was his largest-ever ice-fishing catch.

For the sake of comparison, however, the Iowa state record for flathead catfish stands at 81 pounds. The behemoth was caught at Ellis Lake in 1958.

The all-tackle world record is the 1998 catch of a 123-pound flathead catfish at Elk City Reservoir in Kansas.

Thar she glows! Dramatic sunset reveals whale likeness

As the sun dipped beneath the Southern California horizon Thursday, a glowing shape materialized that resembled the profile of a sperm whale.

As the sun dipped beneath the Southern California horizon Thursday, a glowing shape that resembled the profile of a sperm whale materialized above the ocean’s surface.

Enough of a resemblance, anyway, to compel me to capture a few images from the overlook at Moonlight State Beach in Encinitas.

©Pete Thomas

To ensure that I hadn’t visualized something that existed only in my imagination, I shared the images with a whale researcher, Alisa Schulman-Jainger, and asked her opinion.

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“I does look kind of like a sperm whale with its mouth open,” she conceded.

©Pete Thomas

The source of the whiteish glow outlining the whale shape might have been a contrail illuminated by the sun.

Hardly a spiritual revival of Moby Dick, but perhaps a likeness that fans of cetaceans, sunsets, and cloud formations will appreciate.

–Images courtesy of ©Pete Thomas