Showing posts with label storms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label storms. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Storms,Torrential Rains, 70 MPH Winds, Flooding,

Getting to the Dock Might Be  A Little Bit Of  A Problem.Humor Situation


Last night was a nail biter. The rain came down in barrels,not buckets. Winds hit 70 MPH, power was off for over an hour and flooding was everywhere. I'll do a couple of post with the damage. Some of it was a bit funny (as there is always some humor in the worse of situations).

One of Several Big Trees Down

A Deck Fell Into The Street.






Friday, December 28, 2018

Oh! What a Difference A Day Makes Times Two.

Within the last three days, the lake has gone from visible sand bars in places to flooding well into the parking lots along the Eastern side to receding waters. That does not mean much to some, I know, but the drastic change does have an effect on the wildlife and the visitors and the regulars; all in varied levels of stress and anxiety.

The most drastic change was in the world of the pelicans. They have a little island and logs that that they like to sun upon. The island, is actual land. It is also away from predators like coyotes and bob cats. Normal life when those factors are in place. Not so normal when they are not.

Along comes a 2.5 inch rainfall with some areas north getting upwards of 3 to 4 inches as a Pacific Cold Front moved in day before yesterday. Yesterday, the lake levels were up several feet as a result of the watershed that is collected in White Rock Creek  and the Dixon Branch, among others. That water passes into White Rock Lake and over the dam, down the two spillways and back into the White Rock Creek south of Garland Road, aka State Route 78. From there it flows back into the Trinity River on Loop 12 south of the Trinity River Audubon Center and the new Trinity Forest Golf Course on the renamed Great Trinity Forest Parkway. And from there, of course, then into the Gulf of Mexico.

The day after words, that is to say, yesterday, the pelicans were not happy campers. Even the geese were in flogging arguments in the water because the logs were all gone. Floated toward the dam, if not over it. Staying away from the dam when everyone wants to see the water rushing down the spillways is always a smart move. So, with that said, no, I have been to the dam to walk eitherside.

The island was under water. The pelicans were hanging out on the shoreline between the lake and East Lawther in front of Sunset Bay. With the holiday bowl games in town, visitors were out in force with their phone cameras. The pelicans just kept moving until they could sit still for a while. Being displaced is as bad for them as it is for humans displaced from storm damage, fire or what ever else.

Today, the island was back and the pelicans were happy to be upon it once again. However, since Christmas Day, I have not seen a single hawk of red, either shoulder or tail, an owl, an eagle or the osprey again since the awesome citing on Christmas Day of him in flight riding the thermals over the marina nearest the Culture Bathhouse. I've looked at all the known spots and a couple of spots where I have found one pair hanging out in a "new" area. Nothing. And, unusual, also.

The weather is not going to be good the next two days. It is going to be down right cold and strong winds will make the misery index even higher for North Texas. Cold rain will also return on Sunday with the thick low hanging clouds arriving over night tonight and tomorrow.
Here are some shots that will require a second post because I can only post three images at a time. Some crazy thing like band width.
Click on any of the images to open the enlarger. Then use the enlarger thumbnails to select the image you want to enlarge.  There will be another post to follow this one with just images from the day. 
For the water line to be this far into the parking lot you can see the two docks that are about 4-5 feet to be level with the ground. That's how much water rose from the run off in the flash flooding the night before.

Another view of the trash and wood from the high winds that fell and were picked up by the water being carried into the lot.

Ecology is not a cut and dried thing. There are many, many variables that all interchange like a big puzzle, with many picture to replace the puzzle just put together, so to speak.


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

The Peak Colors Stand

Well, even with the heavy rains overnight and gale winds at times, the colors at White Rock withstood the night. Although there was evidence of standing water in the low areas and leaves everywhere, the colors were full and bright.

It took a search for where the birds had gone. A few mallards were found swimming in the standing water at Preservation Grove and the stone tables. The pelicans were up at a fairly good altitude riding the wind currents.

There were more people at the spillway for obvious reasons. The waters were in a mad rush over the upper spillway. Down the spillway run and into all three channels in the flood basin continued to carry water where it rushed over  the step down spillways nearly as fast as the upper spillway rush. White Rock Creek on its way to meet the Trinity was full and the currents were swift.

All in all, nature gave us a few more days to observe the beautiful colors over the upcoming weekend before the growing season gets stopped with the first frost maybe next week. In the meantime, here are a couple of shots from the afternoon beauty.
The White Rock Mist

Even the beaver was packing away twigs for food later.

At times it really got misty. It looked like smoke a couple of times.

Plenty of colors left.

Friday, October 3, 2014

Mother Nature's Fall Prunning

A line of severe thunderstorms stretching from Mexico to Canada moved through Dallas late yesterday afternoon. The squall line only lasted about 45-minutes but it was a long 45-minutes. Winds were at hurricane force when the bow-echo came through. Over 140,000 people were without power, even today. Roofs came off buildings in Arlington, brick walls collapsed in the stockyards in Ft. Worth. Trees in University Park fell across streets and in Lake Highland, trees fell on houses. Very large trees fell on houses, in fact.

The last time that I saw rain come down in a horizontal pattern was during Hurricane David when it struck the South Carolina coast in 1979 but, yesterday, it came down that way here in Dallas. Today, I went over to Whole Foods to get some pistachio. I had to go around the block because Dart Police had the crossing at Blackwell and Greenville closed. After getting the cholesterol-lowering tasty things, it was on to White Rock for the first time in several weeks. In June, I had posted a blog post on the Cremation of the Big Oaks at White Rock. I wanted to see how much damage had occurred. Into the short trip over to the lake  it didn't take long to see that the damage from the wind was more severe than I had thought. In the course of three miles, I came across three houses with big trees laying across  their roofs. At the lake on the west side, there was damage to two of the trees that I had written about. On the east side of the lake, the damage was even more severe. One tree at the Stone Tables had been completely uprooted with the cement post barriers still in the root system and sod.

I'm not a tree-hugger but I hate to see beautiful old trees with so much character taken out in such large numbers. It was only 90 days ago that another storm had take out a massive old oak on the curve just east of the stone tables. And the one taken out Thursday was not the only one at the stone tables. There are also some wooden tables south of the shelter house at the stone tables and a big tree branch covered at least three of those tables.

The parking lot at Winfrey Point was covered in leaves and twigs like carpet. Along the drive down toward the parking lot of the ball diamonds were a couple of big branches that were hit as well.

Take a look see.
House # 1 damage

House # 2 damage

Stone table area with another big tree at the road and behind here  that was felled by the storm.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Remember The Old Barometers

No one talks about the old barometers that we grew up with hanging on a wall or on a mantel. Some had a thermometer and a clock. It was the barometer that was the most interesting. It had little pointers that you could mark the setting and see if it went up or down. If it went down and sometimes really down, you knew that a bad storm was on the way. In the wintertime, that usually meant snow!

While they are still used today and the weathermen still report the readings daily on the weather forecast not much attention is paid to them. Even the Weather Channel reports in millibars rather than in inches of mercury. I suppose that is in part because millibars are metric and uniform worldwide

The point here is this: The lowest reading recorded in the East was during the Hurricane of 1938 in New England and Long Island  at 946 MB of mercury. This storm (Sandy) is now at 952MB. While it is low--very low-- I still relate to what a low reading did to us that grew up with old barometers recording in inches. Anything that got close to the 28.00 inches was a deep low pressure or major storm. It was a reading that got people excited and started making plans. [Us kids] didn't know exactly what was going on but we knew something was brewing and we took notice.
 
The blizzard of January 26,1978 over Lake Erie saw 20 foot snow drifts and of course blizzard condition winds. As the low pressure  moved out over Lake Erie the lowest pressure reading was 953MB or 28.05 Inches of HG(Mercury). That was only 34 years ago. Less than the once in 50 years or only a third of once in a 100 years type storms, This will be #4 of once in a hundred or 250 years that I have lived through to date.

The 952 MB being reported for Sandy now is only 1 MB off from the Blizzard of 1978 and that was 28.05 inches. If it hits the projected 946 as some experts forecast, then the readings will be down in the 27.90 range. A normal for good weather is 30.00 inches and 31.00 is super blue skies.

 The conversion forMB is the mb reading times 0.0295301 to convert to inches. Since some of you most likely still have that old barometer handing on the wall or siting on your desk or siting on your mantel go set the pointers and see how much more it drops. Don't feel bad if you do still have an old barometer,it's one of those things that we know about the weather that the younger generations have no clue about!  Don't it make you feel good to know these things!

                                             

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...