Saturday, December 24, 2011

Dubai


I just returned from a quick trip to Dubai, United Arab Emirates...
...Interesting place !

 Saw mosques in many, many places.

 New construction was everywhere...many new high-rise buildings.

 Most buildings seemed to include a water feature of some sort, fountain, pond, etc. 
Maybe as a result of being in a desert country...

 A large, resort hotel out on the large man-made island,
shaped like a giant palm tree.

 ...and more construction...

 Including the world's tallest building.

 Cool, new Metro system opened in 2009.

 ...and more buildings...

 The tall building, called the Burj Khalifa, towers above Dubai Mall,
the world largest shopping mall.
(it doesn't really lean...
...it just took a wide-angle lens to get it all, and it's a little distorted)

 The Beach in the "Marina Area",
with the luxury hotels on the Palm showing in the background.

The beach-front street is lined with shopping areas,
restaurants, and high-rise condos. 

The pool on the 8th Floor of my hotel.
(Sat here to post "Baby Number 7,000,000,000")


That's it for now.  Didn't have much time for photos, many of these are from the car as we zipped around.  I hope to be there again early next year, so I'll try again.


Take care all.

- Mark W. Laughlin





Saturday, December 17, 2011

7,000,000,000...


“Baby Number 7,000,000,000”

I read in November’s National Geographic Magazine that, according to the U.N., the world population was expected to reach 7 billion in October, 2011...7,000,000,000 !  They used words like “expected to reach” and “approximately”, because, as you can imagine, it’s tough to get an accurate count of so many of us.  And of course, more of us are being born every moment.
The point of the short article was that if “Baby Number 7,000,000,000” was born in one of the wealthier countries (the USA, Western Europe, Japan, etc.) then there is a good chance that the baby will reach the ripe old age of 100 years, because conditions are good in those countries, and progress is made continually  on nutrition and health care.  Life expectancies are growing, as access to healthy foods and good health care increase, and as we live healthier lives.
I had a grand-daughter born in October.  Was she “Number 7,000,000,000” ?  Well, that’s pretty tough to answer, but she could have been.  Will she live to be 100 years old ?  Well, I certainly hope so, and I wish her, and everybody else on earth at that time, all the best, and I hope their quality of life continues to improve.

-          grand-dad ...(Mark)

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Drought - 4th and Final Update


It's the Trees....


The lasting legacy of the 2011 Texas Drought will be the huge numbers of dead trees. 



Marked for Removal

In Houston, and in the eastern portion of the state, we have a (very) large number of Pine Trees.  When drought strikes, the trees are put into stress.  When they are in our yards, or other locations where we can reach them with water hoses, frequently we can prevent the stress from becoming severe. 


But in may areas, watering the trees is just not possible or practical.  In those places, many (many) Pines are stressed enough that they fall victim to Pine Bark Beatles.  These burrowing insects eat into the trees, finally circling the tree, invisibly, under the bark, until the tree dies. 


The dead pines die with their needles still in place, which turn a rust red and hang on for quite a while before falling.  In adition to Pines, several broadleaf species will succumb to stress, and die in a similar way, dead, red leaves, clinging, indicating that the tree has no hope.

When flying, I've estimated that in some places, 20% to 30% of the trees are dead.  In a small park near our home however, a place where watering isn't practical, I believe 50% of the trees have died (the above photos are all from that one small park).



Estimated number of dead trees on City Property inside the City of Houston =     12,500
City Property is about 1/4 of the land inside the city, so...........................x 4 =       50,000
The City is only about 1/3 of the area of Harris County, so......................x 3 =     150,000
Around 60 of Texas's 254 counties have similar trees, so......................x 60 = 9,000,000

That's a LOT of dead trees.

- Mark W. Laughlin
12-November-2011

3rd Update:

Really cool photo !! 
Fire (very) near Bastrop, Texas.


This was circulating via e-mail on Thursday (thank you DS!).  I have attempted to find the photographer, but no luck yet.  If I do, I will give full photo credit here on the blog.  

It was noted as having been taken that morning, which doesn't work if you look carefully at the photo (with the morning sun at your back, the view would be toward the west, with the flag indicating a breeze out of the South, which has not been so in the area, and if you do "street-level view" on Google Maps, the business signs do not line up with properties in the area).  So, I finally figured out that it's actually an afternoon photo, looking East, which makes all the signs, shadows and breeze line up.  (a minor point, morning or afternoon, but the prominent Home Depot sign that didn't line up with the local businesses made me think it was a fake)

Anyway, it's a really cool, very nicely lit photo, very nice focus, color and contrast.  My compliments to the photographer, I hope we can make contact.

Still ain't rain'n, here in Houston or in Bastrop.  There is another storm in the Gulf, but it isn't predicted to be of any help.  

(My cousin Connie says that the photographer's name is Charles Kohlmyer.  If so, great photo !)

- Mark


2nd Update:

Labor Day - We attended a party for my niece near Waller, Texas.  As we left, we noticed this large fire burning about 12 miles North of Waller, moving South in the high, very dry winds.  As we got home, I noticed on the news that the path of the fire would come perilously close to my good friend's house, near Magnolia, Texas.  I called him and found that he had just received a call, ordering the family to leave their home and evacuate the area while there was still time.  We're crossing our fingers and hoping that their house is undamaged.  

Quite ironically, the Tropical Storm that missed us to the East had the effect (just the opposite of the usual drenching rains they drop) of increasing our Fire Danger, by whipping up winds and pulling very dry air off the Central Great Plains.

Grimes County Fire / 05-Sept-2011


UPDATE:

Saturday - Well, we had hopes this week, for drought relief in the form of a Tropical Storm.  Unfortunately, it hit to the East of us, in Louisiana, leaving us on the "Dry Side" of the storm.  It was tantalizingly close...

(about 6pm, Saturday, 3-Sept)  The storm is circular, rotating counter-clockwise around the "clear spot" you can see just on the center of the right side of the picture (above the "Weather Channel" logo).  It was a center that was moving VERY slowly to the North, at about 3 miles per hour.  This very slow travel had caused the weather folks to predict very heavy rains in some areas, since parts of the storm would be above those areas, dropping heavy rains, for many hours.  We were hoping, that part of the storm would spread far enough West to hit us in Houston, but...




(about 10pm, Sat, 3-Sept)  As the storm continued to spin, the light green on the radar, indicating light rain, SLOWLY crept toward us...but as it did, the rain in the part to the North and East of us, the part heading toward us, faded and dispersed.  We had literally 2 or 3 light drops of rain, and in the morning, the ground was not even damp. 


I intended to show this picture with the original post.  It's historically what's supposed to happen, rainfall-wise, here in Texas.  Houston is located on the West side of Galveston Bay, the large bay you can see near the Southeast corner of the state, between the numerals 50 and 55.  That means we should get between 50 and 55 inches of rainfall annually in Houston.  So far this year, we are not even up to the level expected in the little white tip of far Western Texas (where El Paso is).

Oh well, it's still "Hurricane Season" for about 3 more months.  Maybe we can still get a storm in here that rains, without blowing us away.
-ML

======================================================================

I found a little data to support my complaining about the lack of rain here in Texas.  Harris County, the county Houston is in, keeps about 100 rain gages all over the county to let them know (in normal years) where flooding will occur in heavy rains.



Take a look, due west of the center of town, about halfway between the town center and the heavy black County Line.  You’ll see a number “3.32“, which is the location of our house.  That means 3.32 inches of rain (84mm)…in the last 180 days !!  Normal annual rainfall in Houston is about 54 inches (almost 1.4m), so 6 month’s rainfall should be 27 inches ( about 68 cm)….we got 3.32 in / 8.4 cm !!!  About 12% of normal.




This map shows that 1 year ago, 89% of the state was in the “normal” range, with about 11% in slightly dry conditions.  Now, 99.49% of the state is in at least “Moderate” drought, with almost 95% being in “Extreme to Exceptional” drought.


http://www.sustainabilityninja.com/eco-news/41-of-u-s-in-major-drought-14251/
It’s not just lawns that suffer.  Cattle ranchers are selling off herds as their water sources dry up.  Some ranchers have piped local water supplies, but many folks use drainage ponds to catch run-off for their cattle to drink.  Hasn’t been a lot of run-off lately.  Ponds, creeks, city reservoirs, all are drying up.
Wildlife suffers as well.  As we would expect, deer, birds and other terrestrial wildlife are having a tough time.  Of course, fish living in rapidly dwindling lakes and rivers are endangered too.  Surprisingly, even oysters are at risk.  Yes, oysters mainly grow in Texas’ brackish water coastal estuaries.  The lack of rainfall means a lack of fresh water flowing into these estuaries, and so the water is far warmer and saltier than normal, devastating the oyster crop.  I didn’t hear anything about shrimp, but they spawn in the same areas, and so they may have issues too.
So, many of us down here had a little drool on our chins as we watched Hurricane Irene crash its way up the US East Coast.  Some places up there were washing away with over 10 inches of rain.  One place got 17 inches.  I told Bren that if we got twice that much…we’d be up to normal for the year.  Bring it on !!  We’ll take it.


- Mark




Monday, October 17, 2011

Air Show, Houston


Wild blue yonder...
The Wings Over Houston 2011 Air Show 
was held this past weekend at Ellington Field, south of Houston.


B-29, with an F-18 zipping by overhead




B-25, Mitchell Bomber




P-51 Mustang...Still the Cadillac of the Sky ! 




Japanese Zero Fighter




B-25, simulated bombing




P-51's are highly photogenic !




...and so are the Corsairs !




...too blue.




A B-17 Flying Fortress, one of my favorite aircraft,
bristling with at least a dozen defensive machine guns,
known for making it back to base, even when they were all shot up.



If you have a chance to go see vintage WWII aircraft, do it.  
They won't be around forever !


- Mark W. Laughlin

All photos by MWL


Sunday, September 25, 2011

“The Valley of the Fox"





We have located “The Valley of the Fox” ! 

Well, we have located a valley that looks plausible as a location for the Rock and Cloud Villages in “The Trail of the Fox”.  It may seem strange, but rather than picking a setting before I began to write, I first conceived the idea and started the story.  I based it on my travels through New Mexico in the past, sometimes hunting, sometimes skiing, sometimes just driving through. 





But after writing the first 2/3 of the book, I thought about the need to pick a certain location, to see if it would be a practical, workable setting.  In particular question was the ability of, the likelihood of, the Rock and Cloud people walking down out of their valley with The Trader, in search of The Walking Men (which happens in Part II of the book).



So, I began with www.maps.google.com, and searched an area which I thought might provide mountainous terrain, with flowing streams and a river to follow down onto The Flat.   In particular, the location had to be close enough to the edge of the Great Plains to make a meeting of plains dwelling Walking Men and the mountain dwelling Rock and Cloud people a plausible occurrence.




With a short search, starting with the Santa Fe National Forest in north-central New Mexico, just east of the city of Santa Fe, I found an interesting valley.  If you look at Highway 63, going north from Pecos, New Mexico, you see that it runs north into the National Forest, until it ends there.  It is this main valley, and the side valleys that feed into it, that I feel makes an excellent candidate for the valley of the Rock and Cloud people.



The streams in the valley form the headwaters of the Pecos River, and the river flows out at the town of Pecos, turning east for a bit toward the flat, the Great Plains.  The Pecos continues south and east, finally joining the Rio Grande in western Texas.  Since the wintering area that I propose for the Walking Men (Seminole Canyon State Park, Texas) is very near where the Pecos River joins the Rio Grande, near the town of Del Rio, Texas, I think this makes it also plausible that the Walking might follow the Pecos north in the spring time as the grass begins to grow, and the buffalo head north to graze.



My wife, Brenda, and I flew to Albuquerque, New Mexico and drove the 60 miles or so up to Santa Fe.  We stayed in Santa Fe for a couple of days while looking at both Highway 63 and at Highway 475 which heads northeast from Santa Fe into and also ending in, the Santa Fe National Forest.  We also drove along Interstate 25 East from Santa Fe, towards Las Vegas, New Mexico, on the edge of the plains.  We noted several points along the way which looked like plausible way-points for the Rock and Cloud people on their trading mission.  We ended at the Las Vegas National Wildlife Refuge, an 8700 acre migratory bird sanctuary, which provided some nice photos of the plains, uninterrupted by (modern) human activity.



We would definitely recommend a stay in Santa Fe to anyone interested in traveling to New Mexico.  There is a long standing, active arts community there, ranging from formal galleries, informal outdoor exhibitions to street vendors.  The town is beautiful with most architecture following guidelines for the use of adobe and stucco construction with Mexican roof tile.  Late September is an excellent time to see the turning fall colors in a beautiful and very interesting part of the American West.

-       Mark W. Laughlin

All photos by MWL


Thursday, September 22, 2011

Cool Buildings


Empire State Building, New York City








Some buildings are cool 
because they are really tall.












Some buildings are cool for where they are.


Seven Falls, Colorado Springs, Colorado
.


Model of Notre Dame, Paris
Even tiny buildings can be cool.


 
Russian Orthodox Church, Tallinn, Estonia
Churches can be quite beautiful.



Flower Shop, near the City Wall, Tallinn
               Some buildings are cool on more than one level...
                                                                   ...or from more than one angle.         
Bankia Building, Madrid, Spain




Old State House, St. Louis, Missouri
 
Sometimes old and new sit right together.







Castle in Japan, taken from the "Bullet Train"
Some sit for centuries while we race by.



Church near Sussex Street, London
Some sit silently on a side street.



Just a red brick building, New York City
Some are surrounded by color…
...while others hide themselves in the clouds.
Crawford at Walker Street, Houston, Texas







Parliment, London
Some stand tall and proud, no matter what...

...others stand only in our memories.
Lower Manhattan, where the Twin Towers should be standing, New York

 

Buildings are some of my favorite subjects.
-       Mark W. Laughlin

All photos by MWL