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Lucky Moray residents come across rare and fleeting hair ice


By Lorna Thompson

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A RARE winter wonder has been spotted around Moray in recent weeks by Northern Scot readers.

Hair ice, also known as ice wool or frost beard, forms on dead wood and takes on the appearance of fine, silky hair.

It is reported mostly at latitudes of between 45 and 55 degrees north in broadleaf forests.

Regular photo contributor to the paper Alan Fraser, from Lhanbryde, came across the uncommon sight while out walking in the nearby Crooked Woods on Saturday morning.

Alan Fraser, from Lhanbryde, came across the uncommon hair ice in the nearby Crooked Woods.
Alan Fraser, from Lhanbryde, came across the uncommon hair ice in the nearby Crooked Woods.
A picture submitted by Alan Fraser, from Lhanbryde, who found hair ice in the nearby Crooked Woods on Saturday.
A picture submitted by Alan Fraser, from Lhanbryde, who found hair ice in the nearby Crooked Woods on Saturday.

Mr Fraser said: "It's something I only ever see once or twice a year, if I'm lucky."

Another reader, Suzie Clark, from Forres, spotted the fleeting ice formation at Randolph's Leap on Sunday.

Suzie Clark, from Forres, captured this image of hair ice at Randolph's Leap at the weekend.
Suzie Clark, from Forres, captured this image of hair ice at Randolph's Leap at the weekend.

The phenomenon occurs when ice crystals form at below-freezing temperatures and are then sculpted into fine strands by a fungus, exidiopsis effusa.

The delicate structure will instantly melt and disappear if touched.



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