Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Ranking Blogger Has Me Comparing Oregon & Washington & Texas


The Microsoft Start page in the Window's Edge browser is a treasure trove of information tidbits. Some a bit dubious, like ranking the best frozen pizzas, or fast food fries.

Or, like the All 50 states ranked from worst to best, according to a 45-year-old blogger who has been to each one multiple times you see screen capped above.

I did a good guess at which states would be in the Top 10 best. I've been to all of them, except Hawaii.

The state I am currently in did not rank nearly as well as the state I was born in, Oregon, or the state I was living in before moving to Texas, Washington.

24. Texas
Abbamonte wasn't charmed by any of Texas' major cities and especially disliked the traffic in Houston.

But he said he loves Big Bend National Park near the border with Mexico.

The Abbamonte blogger did not have a lot to say about Texas. Did he visit Hill Country? Visit in wildflower season? Visit Galveston and the rest of the Gulf Coast? San Antonio and its Riverwalk? Did not like any of the Texas major cities? Dallas has a lot going for it. I liked Dallas upon first meeting the town. Now, if Fort Worth was the only major Texas city the blogger visited, I would get the not being charmed comment.

And then we get to my old home state, which the Abbamonte blogger seems to have liked a lot.


 8. Washington
Abbamonte said Seattle is the "most beautiful city, surely in America and maybe anywhere." In the summer, he added, Mount Rainier can be visible from the city, which is "a stunner."

Besides Seattle, Abbamonte loves how Washington state reminds him of Canada. "You feel like you're in Canada, but you're in America," he said.

How often it rains is the only downside of the state, in Abbamonte's view.

Seattle is a beautiful city, but the most beautiful anywhere? And yes, it does rain a lot in Western Washington, but even in Western Washington there are areas which are in the rain shadow of the Olympic Mountains, hence way less rain. And all you have to do, to be rain-free, is drive over one of the Cascade Mountain passes to Eastern Washington and you are in a sort of desert environment, with a lot of orchards and vineyards.

The blogger liked California best. Also in the top ten where states like Utah, Arizona, Alaska, Colorado, Montana, Nevada.

And Oregon. The blogger like Oregon more than Washington.

I've long liked Oregon, but Washington has way more going for it.

The states share the Columbia Gorge.

Oregon has only one active volcano. Washington has five.

Oregon has only one national park. Washington has three.

Oregon has Portland. Washington has Seattle.

Washington has a much longer coastline, and a much less accessible Pacific coastline than Oregon's scenic coast.

Eastern Washington grows a large percentage of America's apples, cherries, apricots, peaches, grapes and stuff I'm likely not remembering. Eastern Oregon is not an agricultural wonderland like Eastern Washington. Likely due to no big rivers providing irrigation.

Washington has one of the world's largest ferry fleets, taking people across Puget Sound, or to the San Juan Islands. Oregon has no islands in need of a ferry. There is even a ferry in Eastern Washington, to ferry you across Lake Roosevelt, you know, the reservoir formed by Grand Coulee Dam. Oregon has zero dams of the Grand Coulee sort.

The blogger made mention of Canada. Washington shares a border with Canada. It used to be so easy to cross the border and spend the day in Vancouver, or elsewhere. I understand that, post 9/11, that is no longer the case, with cross border traffic not what it used to be. That needs to be fixed.

All this Washington and Oregon talk is making me homesick...

Monday, August 10, 2015

In Oregon Building The Yaquina Bay Bridge In Less Than Four Years While Celebrating A Hotpepper Birthday

Today is Elsie Hotpepper's 30th birthday. Happy Birthday, Elsie. I must check in to see if the Hotpepper is available for a Happy Birthday lunch today.

Changing the subject from a young lady leaving her twenties in the rear view mirror to the photo you see here.

A D/FW native is currently up north, on the Oregon coast. Hunting sea lions, among other things. Those are sea lions you see in the lower part of the photo, lounging on a dock in Newport. I do not know if this dock is in Yaquina Bay or not.

I do know that that is the Yaquina Bay Bridge you see in the background, which would make this yet one more of those popular bloggings about feats of complicated bridge engineering, over water, completed in less than four years.

Before I get to the bridge I must mention that the aforementioned D/FW native, currently in Oregon, is my source for this photo. Found this morning on Facebook. I had been told by the aforementioned  D/FW native that she did not want it mentioned that she had left Texas. I think I may have been forbidden to mention this on my blog.

So, imagine my surprise to check in on Facebook to see dozens of photos documenting what the aforementioned D/FW native is seeing up in Oregon.

Back to the Yaquina Bay Bridge.

This is one of the most recognized bridges on the Oregon coast. On August 5, 2005 the bridge was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

During the course of its construction around  220 workers worked to pour 30,000 cubic yards of concrete while fabricating 3,100 tons of steel. The bridge's pier pilings were driven to a depth of around 70 feet below the seabed.

From Wikipedia a description of the Yaquina Bay Bridge design elements...

The 600-foot main span is a semi-through arch, with the roadway penetrating the middle of the arch. It is flanked by identical 350-foot steel deck arches, with five concrete deck arches of diminishing size extending to the south landing. The main arch is marked by tall obelisk-like concrete finials on the main piers, with smaller decorative elements marking the ends of the flanking spans.The arches are built as box girders. The two-lane road is 27 feet wide, running inside the arches with two 3.5-foot sidewalks. The main arch is 246 feet  above sea level at its crown. Overall length of the bridge is 3,260 feet , including concrete deck-girder approach spans. The navigable channel measures 400 feet wide by 133 feet high.

The bridge uses Art Deco and Art Moderne design motifs as well as forms borrowed from Gothic architecture. The Gothic influence is seen in the balustrade, which features small pointed arches, and in the arches of the side span piers. The ends of the bridge are augmented by pedestrian plazas that afford a view of the bridge and provide access to the parks at the landings by stairways.
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Construction of the Yaquina Bay Bridge began on August 1, 1934. The bridge opened to traffic on September 6, 1936,.

That's right, opened two years, one month and five days after construction began.

Meanwhile in Fort Worth, Texas, in October of 2014, a TNT explosion was the highlight of a pompous ceremony marking the start of construction of three, simple, little bridges being built over dry land to connect the mainland to an imaginary island, with an astonishing four year project timeline.

We are nearing a year since construction began on America's Biggest Boondoggle's three simple little bridges. I drove through the Henderson Street bridge construction zone on Saturday. Little has been built in almost a year. Some short pier like looking elements are sticking out of the ground which may be bridge related.

I could not find the other two simple little bridges under construction.

So, how was an actual complicated feat of bridge engineering, over a saltwater bay with tidal changes, completed in far less than four years, in Oregon, many decades ago, while in Fort Worth, with absolutely no feat of engineering design complications, no moving water, no great height, no chasm to span, take four years to build in the following century?

Taking four years seems bizarre, yet the locals do not seem to mind. Apparently this is just one more element of what is known as the Fort Worth Way.....

Friday, July 4, 2008

Texas Not In Top Ten Fattest States

I was shocked to learn today that something called CalorieLab used something called the CDC's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System database to determine the 50 states obesity levels, so as to rank them from Fattest to Leanest.

It is not too shocking that states in the West and New England ranked lighter, while the South and the Rust Belt ranked heavier.

Mississippi has been the fattest state for three years in a row. And Texas isn't in the Top Ten. Texas is the 15th Fattest State.

The leanest state is Colorado. Hawaii is the second leanest. My old home of Washington state is getting fat at #32, but not as fat as Oregon at #29. California is the leanest west coast state at #41. I guess Alaska is sort of on the west coast. Alaska is fatter than Texas at #14 fattest.

Washington has gotten fatter since I left the state and Texas has gotten leaner since I've been here. I don't know what to conclude. Maybe I should move to Mississippi, for awhile, and see if that causes the Mississippians weight to go down and Texans to go back up.