A STRANGE optical phenomenon was spotted in the skies near Hengistbury Head.
Nik Spicer captured a picture of a circle of light that had formed around the sun.
The spectacular sight, which was visible from the beach at Hengistbury Head on Sunday, September 15, is known as a halo.
Nik said: "We were sitting at the beach with a flask of coffee, watching the waves, and the weather turned.
"My husband, Lee, spotted it, and I looked up to see a ring of light around the sun.
"It looked like a portal; I was hoping it could transport me to Ibiza."
The circle of light called a 22-degree halo, is produced by light interacting with ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere and gets its name from its radius of roughly 22 degrees.
The Met Office says: "Haloes require ice crystals to form - either from high cirrus cloud of free falling crystals.
"Typically, sunlight or moonlight is reflected by ice crystals, producing a white halo.
"However, if the light rays strike the light at a particular angle, some light may be refracted. In such situations the halo will have a faint colouration."
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