Monday, May 17, 2021

Second Tornado in the same place in 18 months

 It's unusual, but 5 tornado's struck North Texas yesterday afternoon. When my phone app went off, it said that there was a dangerous tornado in the High-Five area. Take cover.

Today, the National Weather Service was out doing surveys of the damage to determine the strength and if tell-tale signs of the destruction could be found. In short, the three tornadoes  south of us were caught on tv news feeds and they were rated as EFU tornado's but no touch down or damage.The NWS had video of those which they reviewed. However, the two in Dallas locations of University Park (SMU area) saw winds of 70 MPH upwards as EF0 and the second one in my old neighborhood just north of University Park as EF1. Winds were in the 90 MPH with structure damage and trees down. The unusual part is the this EF1 struck the same area in the 2019 tornado . A house had just been rebuilt and a well-established local garden center and nursery was also struck again. Had it continued on that path it would have been knocking on my door as the 2019 tornado did.

Short waves are moving through one to two times a day with strong storms, heavy rain, hail, damaging wind and dangerous flooding. We are forecast to have an additional 7-8 inches of rain before the system moves east and and is out of here. Already, we have had enough rain the first 15 days of the month to saturate the ground and fill the lakes to the Conservation Level in most of the local lakes that supply North Texas with drinking water. Earlier today, the Trinity River was 5 feet above flood stage; levels we have not seen in the past couple of years. 

As I finish up here, approaching strong storms from the west are moving into the County Watch Areas Western approaches til 1 AM ; the heart of Dallas 2-4 AM and eastward 5-8 AM for thunderstorm watches and warning.

University Park funnel touched down right in the area of City Hall. Tennis courts fences were down and old growth trees were toppled. The famous LO VE sculpture was spared with cameras showing the strong winds and rain pounding the area. You can go to our profile portfolios at Alamy, Adobe or Dreamstime to see the storm damage of the area from 2019 tornado.

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Besure to check out the slide show

 We have redone the slideshow on the fifth tab of our website. While spending a lot of downtime inside of late, the images are all part of the journey around the Metroplex the past 12-years. Some of the images, though not many, our regular readers might have seen here and there, but never in a constructed slide show. 

The slideshow repeats at the end of the cycle. However, should you see a blank page now and then, you do not need to do anything but wait a few moments. The show will continue where it paused. We are using a vendor's server to run the show and sometimes, their server will pause a few moments from their own traffic. It's not even a caveat type warning to worry about.You didn't break anything. Even if you are one of the rare viewers that get the pause for a brief moment.

Off to the races and other light adventures. 

If you are an avid enthusiast or have a hobby tinkering in the world of digital dust, it is always good to go down that rabbit hole now and then. For example: when we go back into that digital dust of our own images, we find things that we can actually remember. As if only a few moments in time had passed. Details of the shoot unfold automatically. Even the memory of the weather of that day can reveal itself. Very few images stump our thinking about the shot, but a few still do. We always check the detail tab about the image that records the time and date stamp. It is still stunning to find images where a lot of water has passed below the bridge and you find that years have passed before our eyes viewing those images. 

Usually, when we post, it is on subject matter. The look for images fit that subject matter.  But, once in a while, something rings the bell in our brains and the "remember" light comes on with little tidbits like a quote from Ben Franklin pops up, which we use, instead of an image or with an image.  It can be but is not only timely, but actually fits a topic, or image. "its hard for an empty sack to stand upright." old kite- in- a- thunderstorm Ben has declared. But, that quote does have a lot of merit for text as well as images.

For the first time ever, one of the most interesting things happened that was an absolute surprise. Watching on zoom the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Board Meeting was top on many fronts. It ran about 4 hours, but the gems of the event were when the three main characters running the event spoke.

Warren Buffett is an amazing man and not only for his ability.  Charlie Munger, sat quietly with folded hands (except when he was sneaking peanut brittle on camera). Greg Able was the lesser of the three but after all, he is the chosen air-to-be CEO in-waiting to Warren Buffett.  Just watching two 90 year-old billionaires from Omaha, Nebraska was absolute amazing in and of itself. When we watch those two and then see  Mark, "the Zuckerberg", a third of Buffett's or Munger's age, with many more billions than Warren or Charlie is outrageous. Berkshire Hathaway is so much more well-managed. And we are more than ever sure that the government should break up Facebook, sooner than later, than when they split AT&T. In fact, it's time to be looking to revisit  ole Ma Bell's morphed structure again. They continue to live the lie about DSL from the Federal Lawsuit settled a few years back. Speaking about morphing....they are doing the same thing again only in a morphed smoke screen. 

Now, you wonder why we took the turn from images and digital dust after the first paragraph beyond the bold type break above. Well, by not doing as many editorial photos from editor calls has made me a bit smarter about pictures as an image manager today. Surprisingly though, my sales have increased as a simple little change can make so much of a difference. So, as stated  above, sometimes, you need to go down that rabbit hole in the digital dust world. Just don't stay there! You hear!

The winter Storms in February killed the power and caused 185 deaths (at last count)
 


Direct for the upcoming Olympic Games in Japan 2021.


Monday, May 10, 2021

Pinning a White Rose for Glendine on Mother's Day

Dallas Paparazzo Pro Connect with Glendine's Fashion Design Works https://twitter.com/@dallaspaparazzo http://www.dallasdigitalphotos.blogspot.com http://www.dallaspaparazzo.com

 

Connect with Glendine's Fashion Design Works

http://www.dallaspaparazzo.com

 

An old Southern Tradition on Mother's Day is to wear a white rose for non living and a red rose for a living mother or dad. Today, that tradition is not seen as much, but the tradition was one of the greatest respect jesters that I can remember from childhood. I would love to see it bloom again today.

 

Sunday, April 11, 2021

A Beautiful Clear Day with a high of 86.

Did the bus-train routine again. Even with the longer times between Sunday schedules, I have learned how to build a transport info reference that gives me even faster informed info than talking to DART directly. This is the second week that I have used the info that I was able to assemble from DART schedule postings and know how to cut that wait time down to almost zero on some routes. What I'm saying is this:"I don't mine using public transportation on the weekends, anymore." I have even learned how to use the train and bus to cut down on route travel time overall. That does not always translate into more photos. Actually, today, it translated into having a great deli- lunch in downtown, Garland. It also translated into learning something new today (I like that more than anything). 

Over the past several months, while I have had a lot of hospital downtime not related to COVID, One of my agents and one of my vendors for curio items have both gone  to mobile image uploads. That down time has been devoted to learning the system where I can upload to the agents while on the train or bus, although, the train is more smooth for doing that. There is a silver lining to that cloud, however. I was able to gleam a shot of the new plantings in the Square. They  haven't been there before. Where those famous chairs for the White Mountains of New England were,  are gone this year. Replaced with a large array of picnic tables on the green now with standing pots with flowers in them also at the ends of the tables.


Also, I have now seen the migrating Black and Yellow Swallow-tail Butterflies. It's been over the past week that I saw the first of the Great Lakes-bound Monarchs, also.

The weather is going to step down a notch or two with showers and much cooler temperatures, so today was by all accounts, a GIFT. Hope you were able to get out and enjoy at least some of it, too.


Friday, April 9, 2021

Watched the Space X Tray of 60 Satellites Pass Overhead Last Night

 If you have every watched the Space Station fly overhead, seeing the array of Elon Musk satellites were just a ditto of watching the space station with one exception last night. The array of satellites was a straight line of lights versus the space stations single dot moving at about 15,000 MPH. Never-the-less, things like that have always interested me. This was no exception. When you think what Elon Musk has done with Tesla as a car, the batteries, electric semi-trucks, Space X reusing their rockets boosters more than any other agency, including NASA, to Hi-Speed Internet that is already being used by people in the northern latitudes it's all hardware. 

Then, there is Jeff Bezos that is converting our shopping malls into Distribution Centers. Both are multi-Billionaires, but there is a keen difference between the two men. Elon built a space station in Texas and invited people to move there. Jeff Bezos, on the other hand all he did for Texas was to do a lot of lean-on  talking to see what cities like Dallas and Austin would offer. And then  he build his HQ2 in Virginia. I'll take Elon Musk as a neighboring Texas over Jeff Bezos any day of the week. But, that is just my opinion and how I view the differences in the two men.





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...