Hi Hive Lovers

We are sometimes above the clouds, sometimes in the clouds, and most of the time we are below the clouds.
They always agglomerate, forming something that is often abstract but sometimes resembles something that has previously resided in our memory. I once saw a cloud that was like a horse raising its front legs. Also never seen a cloud like a human face. I just perceive.
Clouds always look enigmatic. When it is near, "I will touch it." But who has ever felt the clouds when I had to sit on a plane that was repeatedly hit by clouds and felt like it was shaking?
The following are photos of scattered clouds that I took while on a low-flying plane using the #SamsungA52 cellphone camera in normal camera mode, and I edited them a bit with #Snapseed:






How can I touch those clouds?
Above the clouds
feels like scattered wads of cotton. Maybe I'll float above it if I jump there.
We will be blown away by the wind like Aladdin, who sits on his flying rug. following the movement of the clouds that only the wind knows. If the cloud we climbed disappears, we will fall and be greeted by another cloud below.
in the clouds
Will it suffocate us? or we'll get lost and can't see anything because everything is obscured by a veil of white clouds, but white isn't a color.
If you are in a cloud (which is absolutely certain), it is like being shaken. You'll notice from the pilot that it's because we're entering the cloud.
"Under" the clouds
This is what we often experience; we always look up at the sky and see the various beauties that the clouds offer us.
Sometimes we see a beautiful blend of white clouds and blue sky. Sometimes the clouds in the sky are red at dusk. Sometimes we paint clouds in shapes that confuse us.
which is actually
Have you ever been outside on a foggy morning? Then you know how it feels. Like nothing.
Fog is nothing more than a low-density cloud. The only thing a person in a cloud will feel is moisture, depending on the density of the cloud. You won't touch it. You won't feel the air.
said my friend, who often "crashes" clouds when skydiving. What he feels is "not feeling anything." It's only slightly damp (but not wet) and could cloud glasses. I guess it's like steam coming out of a kettle filled with hot water.
You can't really touch it from above, within, or beneath the clouds.
Do you love the clouds?
These photos are for the "Love the Clouds" challenge #160 managed by
.
