Showing posts with label Rain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rain. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Cold Rain in Dallas, Today.

 Rainy days and Tuesdays. The day has been busy creating backpacks using our photos in  abstract and also was able to add new categories to our light boxes on our Dreamstime portfolio. It should make it easier for the graphic arts crews to find what they want much faster, even giving them more choices at one sitting rather than going through a few thousand images there searching for one specific topic. 

Every one be safe and stay well for 2024.



Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Finding Humor In All Things

Happy St. Patrick's Day to ya
To concur with the health authorities, it makes sense to limit yourself from crowds. I've been doing that the past 20 years!! So, since the life-saving trip to the hospital and the 5 and 1/2 weeks stay in a Batesville Casket Company's off shoot--a Hill-Rom made for hospital and nursing home bed, I don't get out as much as in the before hospital stays time frame. Needless-to-say, getting out has been more difficult of late with record rains on top of record rains. Dallas is now the all time wettest start to this point with over 14-inches plus of rain since January 1.

Yesterday, the rain let up for the first time in a week lone string of nine rainy days. It was time to hit the road to see my favorite time of the year when the song birds are singing, the hawks are selecting their mates and sitting their prettiest in the top of trees and poles. The buds springing out and flowers beginning to bloom will get an old man like me every time. Plus, as an added bonus, seeing  fishermen in their boats up stream on White Rock Creek brings back a lot of memories of my dad. And, if all that didn't make me happy, the sun tried to reappear a few times along the way. My eyes just could not take the brightness---it had been so long since I had seen the sun. I even began to wonder if I was not in Texas any more.

With Dallas getting near 3-inches of rain (officially Dallas got .98 inches because DFW is the official collection gauge for Dallas) the night before. Love Field got the 3-inches, the former home of the official gauge. The water in the streams, creeks and at the lake were near but had been over the banks. Debris was everywhere and rivers of it were moving across the lake with the flow current.

As I went about the route that makes a full circle of the lake, I was looking for the pelicans that migrate here every Columbus Day. Wondering were they might have moved to when these kinds of conditions happen during their stay here over winter, my concern was growing as I covered all the places where they duck (pardon the pun) into during these unusual rearranging of the lakes silt and where sandbars have shifted where the pelicans like to hang out.

Then, out of the blue, it occured to me that there was more missing to this puzzle. The absents of the cormorants and seagulls were also noted. Then, my brain clicked on like a thermostat control (one of my old friends, a shrink, tells me that is called a Eureka Point) and I realized it was the third week of March--the time the pelicans head North again. These birds are social and they stay together. So where the time went is just mind blowing. The pelicans arrived and six weeks later I'm in the hospital. I get out and six weeks later plus 2-weeks for weather confinement and the pelicans are gone!! This season of migration, for the most part, came as it flew out of here almost without notice. 

After the lake's tour it was on to my little grocery store to  get a couple of fill in items. Once again, what's missing? EVERYTHING! The shelves as the news has been reporting were wiped out.
It was an instant live view of what my little store's customers are buying and not buying. The over all customer base did not buy the things I don't buy and they buy every thing that I do buy!!. It was better than listening to the news. This was first hand and live shopping---very live shopping during an unusual start to this year's first quarter. 
Kestrel Hawk aka Sparrow Hawk

Not Blue Bonnets Yet, but these are blue bells!

If you live above the Mason-Dixon Line remember the annual heavy wet snow that falls two weeks either side of St. Pat's Day. Maybe, you will be the lucky one where it didn't fall, because it's coming. The Upper Level Low sitting off the coast of California tossing moisture at the High Sierra's left Truckee with a  foot and a half of snow over night Sunday. It rained on Monday until the temps began to fall again and they got another dumping of snow. Problem is that with the virus alerts no one seems to be flying into the airport but the Amtrak's Zephyr is still pulling a consist of 11 cars. That's pretty normal for the Zeph! But, the traffic to the slopes is down somewhat. However, the ULL system is now moving east so history will show that someone is going to be getting that St. Pat's snow storm! With Brady leaving the Patriots--look out Boston! Mother Nature does dish out Karma ( you know that when you fail to replace the toilet paper and you are the next to use the toilet!). From the looks of the grocery shelves besides toilet paper, a lot of people have experienced some bad karma.Me included.









Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Raining Cats and Dogs Again.

Rain being trapped in a gossomer web looks like ice

Crow in a Halloween Tree. Gloom, Gray and Ghostly
Texas is a crazy place for weather. Right over Dallas is the "mixing bowl" of cold air, warm humid air, Gulf moisture, Jet Streams, High Pressure Systems and just about anything else that can be blended for some mixture that we call weather. Hail. Tornadoes. Flash Floods. Ice storms. Snow. Tropical Systems. Eastern Pacific Hurricanes that come in over the Baja of California into the desert southwest and get picked up by the jet streams. Speaking of things that get picked up....a few years back, a run of tornadoes danced just south and east of the Metroplex and picked up semi trailers and were floating them around the funnel like they were little toys. To see the video of that was just wild.
But, in the scheme of things it all fits together and trying to figure it all out waste so much time of our short time on Earth. The lesson then, must be: Don't worry about the things you cannot control. Worry, after all,is interest paid twice. The animal kingdom knows this. We are the ones who have a difficult time figuring it out early in life. 

In the winter of my life, I don't want to spend all my time inside so I make a point to get out of the house by noon for three or four hours very day. Today was no exception even though it as raining like crazy. I'm a patient driver and try to stay safe. The second worse thing to being inside the house would be to be in the hospital.. I drive my 18-mile route which is like the spoke of a wheel. It's 18 miles up one side and 18 miles back the other side. 36 miles is about the same as one gallon of gas.

When chasing birds, I always go back to where I saw the bird last. It seems that they are more creatures of habit than us humans. I saw one guy doing at least 80 down a stretch of road. It was an accident prime for pileup and I saw a few of those while I was out. I'm thinking already, gee, this could turn into more of a Live News Feed kind of day than chasing beautiful hawks, eagles, ospreys, or Great Blue Herons. Egrets are every where. It's the elusive Great Blue that  can smell a camera a mile away. That's the challenge. I've been more lucky of late but then, the dang bird, like crows, knows me with their keen recognition ability. I talk to the animals too. It's amazing how they can sense the tone of a voice if it is friendly or a threat. The squirrels now come and pose when they see me parked. That's how I got the shot of the Chick-filet-A squirrel fabricating that cup for his nest.

 The one thing that I have trouble adjusting to in Dallas is the way the streets drain. The curb lane is always blocked with water. Sometimes, for nearly a half a mile before a drain to taking the run off. I'm not used to slanted roads like that. I much prefer the high crown that drains to both sides of the roadway and work much more efficiently at draining runoff away from the curbs than making one side of the road a lake.

I saw one young guy walking get drenched by this car that came barreling down the curb lane sending a spray of water a good 6 or 7 feet high and  drenched this young guy from head to toe. The guy that was responsible didn't even slow down. He just kept going like nothing had happened. I felt sorry for the guy that was walking. He looked like he might have been trying to go to work or to a bus stop.

Then, I started to see telephone poles lined with birds just sitting on the wire not moving an feather. It's rather comical how they line up row after row. There is one like pole at an intersection and the birds have been on that pole every day this week. Just sitting there. Rain, heats or what ever. It must be a daily afternoon ritual. The pelicans take their bath every day about the same time after they come in from riding the thermals. So you see, humans, we are not far removed from that point of God's creation. We think we have it all figured out. We do have the ability of speech, although animals have their own form of speech. We can reason. I've seen lesser animals reason almost as well if not completely better than us humans at times. Even the turtle came up at the dock a few days ago and begged for some bread. He's learned that humans toss bread to the birds so now, the turtles are begging like the birds. Got that image published. It's a learning experience for all ages to see an image of that turtle begging for a hand out. Have not seen the sea gulls yet this season. With the Gulf being churned up with storms, the picks are better there than here, I'd say. We will see later if they eventually show up en mass like years past.

Anyhow. The lake was beginning to flood when I ended the trip and started to head for Aldi's to fill in milk, eggs and bread. They had whole chickens for just over $3.00. Kroger's had wanted nearly $6.00 for the same whole chicken. To me, a chicken is a chicken is a chicken. I put it in a kettle and boil it for 40 minutes until the meat falls off the bone and then I make my dumplings and drop them in with seasoning and yum, yum yum. I'll get about three meals out of that. It's going down into the 40s next week so between chicken and dumplings and home made chili, that's when I don't mind staying in the house. Yet, I do supplement my income with picture sales and you got to shoot the pictures before they can be sold and converted into income. Someone ask me once why I did this? I tried to explain what I just explained here and they couldn't get it. Then, I said, " You create the beast you got to feed it." They understood that instantly. Now, when someone ask a similar question, I give them that answer and not once has anyone ask me, "What do you mean?" They all get that. Strange to me why such phrases stick to the wall where others fall off, but hey, we are humans. Some birds know to get in out of the rain and hang out on bridges under the over hangs. while others are out and about doing the bug and grub thing in the grass. Then, there are those like I saw today sitting on a wire in the midst of a downpour  seeming to be just find with the rain for what ever reason. Life is strange in that way. It's another reason why we should never judge. Even when we think we have sufficient reasoning. Enough rambling. There is a point to this.Some will get it. Others will not. Some will snuff it off  with no thought. Those---I will pray extra hard for tonight.

I'm parked watching the trash flow in to White Rock Creek from this branch of the Trinity Watershed that will hit the lake around the bend, flow over the dam and spillways and then hit the Trinity Rive for it's final trip into the Gulf of Mexico. I'm wondering why people don't use trash containers? Oh, yeah, they are just humans! They have more important things to tend to than waste workout time to walk over to a trash container.

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Looking Back Over March

Sometimes, even with good intentions, things get missed. So, this serves as a sweep of things that did get missed. However, outside of the President and Air Force One being here (which are archived on the Live News Feed) the one central topic seemed to be the weather.

In cleaning up March-- as everyone already knows-- it was a windy little end to the first quarter of 2016 with storms, hail, tornadoes (again). Luckily, only about 20,000 were without power at any one given time in the Metroplex. The hail damage was bad--to say the least-- on cars and roofs. Some of those 12,000 new residents that arrive here every month got that old fashioned Texas Spring Hail Storm initiation. Welcome, to Texas!

At the end of the first ten days of the month, a young fisherman calls it quits as the wind and rain move in. A very wise young man, indeed.

Near the end of the month with about a week to go, the wind was still howling. The low-level stratus had lifted to clearing skies,however.

Yep! even the ducks were bobbing on the rolling waves and white caps.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Latest Update on Rain Totals

At the 21:53 update, another 1.25 inches from the previous update totals. DFW has recorded 5.85 inches up to this latest update with 2-5 inches predicted for tomorrow thru Sunday. 

It All Started in the wee hours of May 28th when 80 MPH winds was tossing everything against the side of my house.

 Those winds were substained for well over 40 minutes. The results were trees everywhere down or large branches broken off. One of my bus ro...