Thursday, October 3, 2019

Water Towers Have A Part-Time Job and Yellow Flowers Are Still Yellow---Maybe,

As a kid, in the 5th grade, a science project was to take these very flowers and place them into a bottle of different colored inks and watch them take on the color of the ink.
Not only is the first cold front on the way, it's already crossed the Red River. Plus, the stronger cold front is also coming down the pike and get this, it's bringing reinforcements! That Fall Weather Cool down will be sooooo welcome. The heat has been relentless this year.

The post of yesterday, like so many other things, appear when they want to appear and can't be programed planned with 100 percent  reliability. Just as this image came a day later, it fits and that is why it is being included today.

I'm keeping a close eye on the October 12th arrival of the pelicans. It looks to be normal with one of the scouts already hear ahead of the main flock. That's normal. What isn't normal is the massive Hail storm that hit Big Lake  in Molt, Montana. The area is where most of our pelicans go to nest for the late spring and summer before making their winter migration back here to White Rock arriving on Columbus Day plus or minus a day or two because of weather systems.. The hail storm killed 13,000 waterfowl, of which most were pelicans. So, with some reservation, it's still a waiting game to see just how many make it back to White Rock this season.

Water Towers are not just for water anymore. They are cell towers and relays for data and who knows what else. Here, you can see the far right where the bulk of the workers were working. One of the guys standing between the lift an the units being installed waved at me. At first, I was focused on the bucket of the lift and didn't see him, but I did later and his wave was received on the ground

This was the first worker that I saw and it was several minutes later that I discovered that not only were there more humans up there, but they was working in several locations. The cables dropped down the one leg of the tower where the lift was situated.

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