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Sado Island Thunderstorm - Japan Photo Workshop

Aug 16, 2025 | By: Blain Harasymiw Photography

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There were heavy thunderstorm warnings the other evening at my Niigata, Japan, summer home. It’s a traditional Japanese home, known as a Kominka, that was built over a hundred years ago, just a few minutes' walk from the Sea of Japan, in the Sado-Yahiko-Yoneyama Quasi-National Park. The park is quasi-national, as it includes the sea, as well as my Kominka’s hamlet on Japan’s main island, Honshu.  The other evening, I was tutoring University visual arts students when I saw lightning flashing through my Kominka’s windows. I opened the shoji windows, and we watched the lightning for about five minutes. Then, we headed for the beach, a few minutes' walk away, with our camera gear. My local beach is one of the few beaches on our planet that is growing, not eroding.  This is due to ’the Sado Island effect’, which reduces heat fluxes from the sea surface by weakening leeward winds.  At the same time, the horizontal wind convergence downwind is weakened. And Sado Island often endures a thorough pounding from thunderstorms. In winter, heavy winds and strong Ocean currents bring heavy deposits of sand to the Ocean front. In the summer, so we have a beach and can swim, every March to June, heavy equipment such as front-end loaders and other heavy machinery remove tons of sand for city works and farms, leaving us a shoulder deep 100 meter long by 700 meter wide natural Sea of Japan swimming pool, including tetrapods with ropes attached to them for swimmers’ safety. This is truly the perfect beach for summer sports. 

Lightning Storm with lightning strikes hitting Sado Island, I watched this storm all night long. I took this shot, about a minute before sunlight hit the water.

Meanwhile, from our vantage point with no rain and clear skies above, my students and I viewed Sado Island, which is 32 kilometres out to sea and perfectly centred from the beach. We spent the entire night photographing the thunderstorm that hit Sado Island. My favourite shot was in twilight, about a minute before the sun washed out the scene. The Ocean turquoise or Miami blue colour is due to the way sunlight interacts with water at shallow depths, and the clarity of the water, plus particles or plankton in the water, allows more light to penetrate and reflect, and with light coloured sand, we get these beautiful coloured water shades for a few moments just before sunrise. At sunrise, when the sun hits the water, the turquoise colour is washed out, and that is when it’s time to head home. And wait for the next thunderstorm. 

 

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