Book: Secrets of Sand Mountain by Philip C Elrod

Posted By on August 30, 2017

sandmountain_cover_mdEvery once in a while I strike up a conversation with a lessor known author about their writing SecretsOfSandMountainKindle and want to read their work. Philip C. Elrod is one such author and after exchanging a few messages, I decided I should at least give the first book of his series about events atop Sand Mountain in Alabama (fiction). I’ll attempt to fill in a little detail below after reading and will likely purchase the second book in the series if I like the plot. Stay tuned.

Family weekend, a new Volkswagen and the prodigal son returns

Posted By on August 29, 2017

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Hurricane Harvey continues to dump on Texas and Louisiana

Posted By on August 28, 2017

Having been away from my computer this past weekend has left me way delayed on posting the landfall of Hurricane Harvey as it piled into southeastern Texas with enough category 4 wind to pummel the coastline and an unprecedented amount of rain causing catastrophic flooding.

The residents of the fourth largest populated city of Houston are continuing to suffer as the now tropical storms movement is to the north and east. This slow progression adds to the already devastating rainfall and flooding. As if that wasn’t enough, some forecasters have Harvey scooping up more moisture from the Gulf of Mexico and threatening to flood well into Louisiana and even further east. Preliminary losses due to this storm are already making this killer hurricane (at least 8 deaths) an insurance nightmare as JPMorgan sees them as high as $20 Billion.

In the Greater Houston/Southeast Texas region, an estimated 9 trillion gallons (34 km3) of rain had fallen by the afternoon of August 27, more than any documented tropical system in U.S. history. 

An additional 5 to 10 trillion gallons (19 to 38 km3) are expected before the storm dissipates. Many locations in the metro area observed at least 20 in (510 mm) of precipitation, with a maximum of 39.72 in (1,009 mm) near Dayton. The local National Weather Service office in Houston observed consecutive all-time daily rainfall accumulations on August 26 and 27, measured at 14.4 in (370 mm) and 16.08 in (408 mm) respectively. Locally, some areas may receive as much as 50 in (1,300 mm) of rain.  During the storm, more than 800 Houston area flights were canceled, including 704 at George Bush Intercontinental Airport and 123 at William P. Hobby Airport. Both airports eventually closed. Several tornadoes were spawned in the area, one of which damaged or destroyed the roofs of dozens of homes in Sienna Plantation.  As of August 27, six fatalities have been confirmed from flooding in the Houston area.  Late on August 27, a mandatory evacuation was issued for all of Bay City as model projections indicated the downtown area would be inundated by 10 ft (3.0 m) of water. Flooding was anticipated to cut off access to the city around 1:00 p.m. CDT on August 28.  On August 28, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began controlled water releases from Addicks and Barker Reservoirs in the Buffalo Bayou watershed in an attempt to manage flood levels in the immediate area. According to the local Corps commander, “It’s going to be better to release the water through the gates directly into Buffalo Bayou as opposed to letting it go around the end and through additional neighborhoods and ultimately into the bayou.” At the time the releases started, the reservoirs had been rising at more than 6 inches (15 cm) per hour.  Throughout Texas, more than 300,000 people were left without electricity and billions of dollars of property damage was sustained. The refinery industry capacity was reduced, and oil and gas production was affected in the Gulf of Mexico and inland Texas.

 

How to tie a cleat hitch video by APS Advisor #sailing

Posted By on August 28, 2017

Good visual video advice on How to tie a cleat hitch from APS – three different options and reasons for each.

  1. Half Wrap Cleat Hitch
  2. Full Wrap Cleat Hitch
  3. Multi Wrap Cleat Hitch

An excellent Civil War history lesson #video

Posted By on August 27, 2017

Those cute chameleons are not as cute when they are lizards!

Posted By on August 26, 2017

LizzardOnWall

A month or so ago I blogged that the small little chameleons that ran around the condo in Delray Beach, Florida have grown up and "moved next door" … BUT thankfully they are not the ones this homeowner in Australia deals with! Yikes!

Photo (above) from July 2017 at the Delray Beach, Florida condonew residence this year!

TechFriday: Testing the portrait-mode on the iPhone 7 Plus

Posted By on August 25, 2017

PortraitModeiPhoneCameraWhile listening to the early comments from the technology pages and news programs regarding Samsung (Galaxy Note 8) and Apple (iPhone 8 – ???)releasing their new smartphone models, I realized there are features I haven’t used much.

One of the camera upgrades coming to the new Samsung Note 8 phone is a portrait mode like my current Apple iPhone7 Plus. I’m including  a "portrait mode" photo … although an attempt without a human model — just an insect. The blurred background is a selective focus feature those of us who enjoy "real photography" as a hobby have used for years. The technique is to use a longer lens, faster shutter and lower f-stop (open aperture). It is a great feature to put on smartphone IF users remember to use it.
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Making a Maple High Chair to match our New Maple Kitchen

Posted By on August 24, 2017

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Can Sharks Read? #surfing

Posted By on August 23, 2017

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Quick time-lapse attempt to photograph Solar Eclipse 2017

Posted By on August 22, 2017


For the good photos check in with NASA (above) or a professional photographer who travels to the optimal locations and spends more than 5 minutes taping a welding filter to his camera … for a less than perfect “time-lapse” solar eclipse attempt, check my photos below. It was at least fun to mark the occasion; maybe I’ll give it another try in 2024?

Sun and moon eclipse photos aside, the real treat was a NASA photographer catching the International Space Station passing in front of the sun while in partial eclipse (below) … how cool is that?

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog