Saturday, June 15, 2019

Here It Is The End Of The First Week Since Devistation Struck

and while signs of progress have been made and are still being made, what stuck me was the  now browning of leaves and small branches by the hundreds of thousands still every where in sight. The staging area at Lake Highlands High School has returned to normal with so signs of all the stacks of utility poles, flat bed trailers of transformers, pallets of wire, dumpsters marked scrap metal while others were marked trash.The mobile command center Oncor set up is gone now, as are all the trucks loaded with utility workers from 11 states that came to help. Parks and Recreation Crews are still cleaning up the trees that were lost to the storm. The gaping holes in the canopies where hundred year old trees stood only a week ago are more than just noticeable, they are painful memories of what once filled those vacant openings. As of Friday, the total count of felled trees stood at 62. Damage to tops and upper limbs run well into multiple hundreds. In the deep woods of White Rock Creek  to the west of Goforth going north to the curve of the northeast service center where are near a dozen more that were not counted, although three at Flag Pole Hill were included.

Landscape crews, both park and recreation and private landscape companies will be cleaning up for not weeks but months to come. My interest has begun to shift to the summer rains and what will flow into the lake yet to come. There will be problems on to that end I am almost sure.

Flag Pole Hill
Yesterday, I got my first look at the crane that collapsed onto the Elan on Live Oak Street. It is being reported that the crane will remain where it is for at least another week. The ones that were displaced and put in hotels by the owner of the Elan City Lights Apartments, Greystar
Flag Pole Hill Across street from first image.
Crane that fell during storm on Sunday,June 9th and took a life of a resident. It will remain here for at least another week. 

Greystar, ended their paying of hotel bills yesterday. Later next week, it is being reported that the cars in the multi-level parking garage will start to be lifted out from the top down beginning sometime during the coming week.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Third Set of Images from Storms

Electric Contractors from Alabama Help Oncor with power restoration.
More out-of-town contractors assist Oncor with getting the power back on.

Two more big trees lost that I missed totally. Also,found 4 more in areas that are able to be seen but cannot get close because they are on private property on the back side of homes. And, in the dense forest along White Rock Creek there are those four. That brings the total to over 50 trees down with
The number of out-of-town utility contractors are seen staged everywhere. Today, I was only mile from home when I ran across a group of guys from Sumter,South Carolina. The guys that I talked to work for the South Carolina  contractor but they were from Alabama. Alabama Power has many crews here and the 350,000 without power is now down to less than 20,000.

The park crews are making their mark on the cleanup, too. It is amazing what these guys do for the park. This year, thus far, they have had three flood clean ups on the shoreline and trails, put the carnage from this storm. For one, I know that I appreciate what they do for the park and they like for people to tell them how much they are appreciated as well as any one does. I thanked three guys today for their work.

Second group of images from Storm Damage


A Thank You Picture to these Pearl River guys from B&B in Brandon, Mississippi

Electrical Transformers Await Installation at staging area in the parking lot at Lake Highlands High School.
More supplies with another out-of-state utilities that came to help Oncor.

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Two Years Ago When A Storm Blew Trough---

24 majestic and old-growth trees that had stood watch over White Rock Lake for more than 100-years
More Homes Had Trees On Them and I'm not talking about one or two
were lost to the storm and even today, they are missed  where they once stood watch.

Sunday, a powerful outflow boundary came racing across the metroplex ahead of a cold front that meet up with high humidity and dew points that had pushed the temperatures into the 90s.F. As the winds came some were recorded officially at 63 MPH, but in some places, those winds were more strong than the 63 MPH. When the winds moved past the Metroplex, the carnage of its rage was a
complete devastation.

Monday stated out with over 300,000 customers of Oncor, the delivery system for the electric utility parent, TXU Energy, without power. Quickly, the news reports came in that the storm had claimed one life when a Tower construction crane fell into a new occupied apartment building rendering the building unsafe to live in and residents were evacuated. Now, in the third day following the storm, the damage at first hand makes the storm of two years ago seem like nothing at all.

My first look at the damage left me speechless. I could not find words that could relay what I was feeling into words.  The sight of what I had seem had to be absorbed, whole streets reduced to pathways. I have a love for the lake that goes back many years. The giants of the forest have long held me captive and I am not what some would call a "tree hugger". Far from it, indeed.

While I had survived the initial power outage, my power went out abruptly last night just as I was set to listen to the symphony. It had been a long and stressful day and I wanted to relax. That, didn't happen. About 1:30 a.m. this morning, without lights, air conditioning, not even a fan, I slept until 4:30 a.m.when I  got up, dressed and headed for the car. The park portion of the lake opens at 5 a.m. and having stopped at McDonald's for coffee and some breakfast food,  I started the first trip around the lake when  I didn't have to worry about traffic and started  the first stage of an in depth look at the damage of the big majestic that were laid out broken with me hurting at the loss.

Two years ago, I had counted and recounted the loss in the big majestic. That count was at 24. Already this morning it was at 32 with more to come. I headed toward home arriving home just 15 minutes after my power had been restored.  I went to bed and slept a solid 4 hours. Once again, I dressed, packed my camera case and snack tote and headed out to find the caravan of linemen that were arriving in Dallas to help Oncor restore power.

There were crews from Texarkana, TX., Brandon, Mississippi, one group from Alabama and several other smaller utility contractors.The crews were bringing back the power as they worked.  Other crews were sawing the big massive trunks into pieces that were being loaded onto tucks. The Oncor staging area in the parking lot below the towering press box of Lake Highlands High School where it was like a military precision run operation. During the afternoon search for trees that I had missed, turned up more than I had expected making this storm, the worse that I have seen in the past 20 years at the lake. I have 331 images from the first round and 53 more on the second run. These images were only of trees that showed that recognizable tell-tail sign of bright new wood showing, full trees uprooted, old growth that had stripped half the trunk size into two pieces, trees that fell on houses, cars, buildings such as the boat house or office building along a major roadway that surrounds the lake borders.

Since I can only display three images in each post, it would be nearly impossible to show all the images. Some are professional quality while others are for archival record which means that they are
Dreyfuss  Club Picnic Area
The Boat House at White Rock Lake, c.1930s and a Giant cottonwood 
excellent at a smaller size but will not blow up beyond 50 percent. So, I will start with the three most powerful images and then do a couple more post.

There are trees that I miss not being there like we miss loved ones in our lives that are now gone so this really is a spiritual exercise for me. I had a longtime LH resident tell me today, "Thanks for what you are doing". That is what drives me more than anything. It meant something to her and that is good enough for me.



Corrections on 6/12/19 to omitted text because of previous updates prior to publishing.

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Mother Nature Still In Control

A high meadow planted in wildflowers that have bloomed for a couple of weeks now, had another surprise as these peony poppy like plants have come up through the bed of prairie grasses that were cut in the fall and were bedded down over winter after being  sown with wildflowers.

The point is this: one must visit the meadow three or four times a week as plants come up almost over night with the warming temperatures and the large amount of rain that we have had this year already. The flowers are stunning and coming into the last phase of such beauty.The view changes as more species come up and bloom.

For a better look at the beauty, you can click on the image and it will open up at a higher percentage for viewing. See the total beauty of these wildflowers that nature held back until the very end of her spring run.

Friday, June 7, 2019

Finding All Kinds of New Blooms In Wildflower Seedings

It has been amazing to discover all the new species  of  wildflowers that were sown this year at and around the lake. Yesterday, I discovered a cousin of a common weed, Thistle.Today, I found new blooms that seemed to have grown almost over night. These, were cousins of the peony poppy that were so stunning at the Water Filtration Building. Since seeing those, I have seen not only more of the pink but also have seen them in the purple that is almost like the thistle in color. However, unlike the so many other things, there is a big difference when seeing them up close.
These are much like the peony poppy.

This is more like the common thistle

I
This little guy hangs out here. I first found him last season on a different bush. He seems to like this one better because he has a great viewing


Monday, June 3, 2019

Flycatchers Out In Large Numbers

Wildflowers Thrive After Record Rains and that lends itself to increase in insect population. Thus, flycatchers have ample food and numbers increase.


Flycatcher sits on top of sign with a large meadow down below. These birds can hover like a hummingbird. And that is when you see the color under the wings and side of the body with that orange and yellow brightness.

This Red Shoulder Hawk sits on the very top of a high-tension pole that is even higher as it sits on a hill where you can see downtown Dallas from near the High 5. Later, he was seen riding the thermals going into the cloud base  which was being reported at 1500 feet.

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...