Saturday, November 20, 2021

Saturday At Wichita Falls Farmers Market Looking For McNutty Style Big Beautiful Buns

This morning I made mention to Thelma McNutty that I was going to the library this morning, along with possibly going to the nearby Saturday Farmers Market, if it were open, and take a walk around the block to look at, once again, the World's Littlest Skyscraper.

Wichita Falls having the World's Littlest Skyscraper may be the town's primary claim to fame.

It is an impressive structure, as you can clearly see. 

I was surprised to see the Farmer's Market totally open. I knew it had been shuttered due to COVID. Don't know how long the Farmers Market has been back up and running.

The interior space was full of vendors. And the outdoor space also had multiple vendors.


There were a lot of free samples being handed out. But, I am wary of such, in this COVID era. But I did try some lamb sausage, due to the fastidious way the lamb samples were being handed out.


 Another view of the outdoor vendor area. Live music was also adding to the festive mood.


When I mentioned I was going to the Farmers Market, Madame McNutty asked if cinnamon rolls were sold there. I replied that on previous visits I do not recollect seeing any bread products. Not that such would have left a lasting impression upon my memory.

McNutty is well known in Central Virginia, centered in Appomattox, for her Big Beautiful Buns, usually of the cinnamon roll variety.

I saw no cinnamon rolls today, but I did see a lot of similar products, because this visit I was looking for them. Above a pair of outdoor vendors had a variety of bread type products. I did not inquire to get more specific.


And then inside the Farmers Market building we had HEAVENLY MANNA selling heavenly bread.


Another look at various vendors vending inside the Farmers Market building.


The lady above could be an aged doppleganger of the aforementioned McNutty, also inside the Farmers Market building, selling a wide variety of stuff, from catnip to cookies.

So far, this has been my exciting next to last Saturday of the 2021 version of November...

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Cool Walking Sikes Lake With Linda Lou & Hoodoos


Linda Lou went walking around Sikes Lake with me this morning. It has been a month or two since Linda Lou went walking with me.

Winter-like temperature arrived last night, getting into the 30s, with a freeze warning for tonight.

The recent slight bout of rain seems to have caused multiple hoodoo-like cairns to sprout at their usual sprouting location at Sikes Lake.

As you can see, there are three spouting in the foreground, with three more sprouting at the end of that stretch of green grass.


Above are those three aforementioned hoodoos sprouting at the end of that green grass strip. As you can see these are quite delicate rock balancing acts.

Methinks the current conditions have brought the annual return of mountain cedar pollen. I assume such is what is causing my current allergy woes.

It was fun walking and talking with Linda Lou today. It makes the walk seem to go faster when one is also fast talking...


Drone Eye View Of Skagit Valley Flood



This video gives you a good look at the Skagit River in flood mode this week. It begins with a couple fly overs of the new bridge across the Skagit which connects Mount Vernon with Burlington, Burlington being the town I grew up in. 

I believe that new bridge across the Skagit was built in less than a year. Over, as you can see, actual water.

The drone flies over the I-5 bridge across the Skagit and then heads to downtown Mount Vernon.

You get a good look at the flood wall which has now successfully blocked downtown Mount Vernon from being inundated by a serious flood.

Towards the end of the video the drone gives you a panoramic view of the Skagit Flats. You see the mountains to the east and north. You see how close Mount Vernon and Burlington are to the saltwater of North Puget Sound. Or is it the saltwater of the San Juan Islands at that location? I never thought to wonder when I lived in the neighborhood.

You will also see several islands when the drone looks west, real islands, not imaginary islands created by a cement lined ditch...

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Skagit River Crests Near Record High With New Flood Wall Successful

Much of my old home zone of Western Washington is currently under water thanks to a Pineapple Express delivering an Atmospheric River.

I don't quite understand this photo from the front page of the Seattle Times, showing people on the downtown Mount Vernon Riverwalk, standing where the flood wall is.

Except the flood wall is about ten feet tall, and is not at all in evidence in this photo. 

Just yesterday Nephew Jason emailed video showing the flood wall, and commenting that he had to stand on his car's roof to see over it.

You can see that video below.

The downtown Mount Vernon flood wall is designed to install quickly by just a few installers, when the need arises. And to be taken down equally fast.

A huge improvement over the former sandbagging method of saving downtown Mount Vernon from getting inundated by the Skagit River.

The flood control wall was just part of a $25 million riverfront rebuild in downtown Mount Vernon. If I remember right the flood wall cost something like $8 million of the $25 million.

Meanwhile, there is this backwards town in Texas with imaginary flooding issues, trying to get the rest of America to pay around a billion bucks to build an un-needed flood control system in an area which has not flooded in well over half a century because of flood control levees the rest of America paid for way back in the 1950s.

I read yesterday that Fort Worth is starting the process of taking the land needed to dig the cement lined ditch that will go under the three little bridges which took seven years to build, creating an imaginary island, solving an imaginary flood control problem.

I would have thought that the land for the ditch had already been acquired. I suspect soon more classic Fort Worth eminent domain abuse will be underway, taking property for an imaginary public works project the public has never voted to support.

And people wonder why I refer to that Texas town as being backwards....

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

11/16/2021 Jason Drives Us To Downtown Mount Vernon To See Flooding Skagit River



In the above video my Favorite Nephew Jason drives south on I-5, beside the flooding Skagit River.

And then Jason takes us to a closeup look at the Mount Vernon Skagit Riverfront's first major test of the new flood wall.

Record Storm Tips Semi-Truck On Washington's Deception Pass Bridge




Yesterday, November 15, 2021 wind, rain and flooding pummeled my old Washington state home zone. Late in the day on YouTube, via Thelma McNutty, formerly of the Skagit Valley, I watched video of a semi-truck toppled over by the wind whilst driving over the Deception Pass Bridge. 

In the video you can clearly see the hurricane like wind's effect on trees and water. The video also shows Whidbey Island's waterfront being flooded by the storm surge.

Today the Skagit River may reach a record breaking high. Last night I saw the Skagit Valley's other river, the Samish River, was also in extreme mode and two of my high school classmates had had their farmhouse surrounded. They managed to get their vehicles to high ground, but did not have enough time to rescue hay bails, which soon floated away.

Last night Linda Lou sent me video she took whilst standing behind the downtown Mount Vernon flood wall. The river looks more dangerous than I remember ever seeing it. 

The crest of the flood may top downtown Mount Vernon's new flood wall today. Seattle TV stations have been in place for two days to cover it. I can get the Seattle stations on my TV, so that should be interesting.

Nephew Jason is expected to be sending photo documentation later in the day.

And here is the video Linda Lou shot yesterday from behind the downtown Mount Vernon flood wall...

Monday, November 15, 2021

Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds Is Not In Lucy Park


After a virtual yoga session with Thelma McNutty this morning I was off to Lucy Park for a warm communing with nature. 

There is a possibility today will reach a record breaking high. 

The first time I visited Lucy Park I parked near that which you see above. At that point in time I did not know why Lucy Park was so named. Thus, seeing the above I thought the park's name might somehow be derived from the famous Lucy archeological dig in Ethiopia, back in the 1970s. 

But, alas, Lucy Park's name has nothing to do with the famous Ethiopian Lucy. You can read all about that Lucy in the Wikipedia Lucy Australopithecus article.

An interesting blurb from the Wikipedia Lucy article..

"Lucy" acquired her name from the 1967 song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" by the Beatles, which was played loudly and repeatedly in the expedition camp all evening after the excavation team's first day of work on the recovery site. After public announcement of the discovery, Lucy captured much public interest, becoming a household name at the time.

There is no explanatory signage explaining what looks like an archeological dig in Lucy Park. Maybe it's there and I missed it.

Back during the dinosaur era the Texas region played host to a lot of those long gone reptiles. You can see some of their remains, well, fossilized footprints, at Dinosaur Valley State Park, near Glen Rose and the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center.

It is time for lunch, walking around Lucy Park, after strenuous virtual yoga with McNutty, works up an appetite...

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Pineapple Express Atmospheric River Deluging My Old Washington Home Zone


A Pineapple Express, also known as an Atmospheric River, is currently dropping a lot of water on Western Washington. I can not remember if it is in an El Nino or El Nina year that a tropical air mass gets over heated and over saturated with water, and then heads north to drench the west coast.

My Favorite Nephew Jason (FNJ) emailed the photos you see above and below, arriving in my email inbox this morning.

I believe the above photo shows the current Skagit River status in downtown Mount Vernon, while the below photo shows preparations for the disaster flood of 1995..

The text in the email from FNH---

FUD -

We are still on high alert here in the valley.   The 1990 and 1995 floods were at measured depth of over 37 feet in MV.

Projections for Tuesday evening's depth are for about 36 feet in MV.

I believe the below flood photo depicting the old sandbag method was from 1995.

Hope you are high and dry in Texas. 

-FNJ


I think the 1995 Pineapple Express is the one that sank one of the Lake Washington floating bridges. I remember watching the late night news out of Seattle. They broke in live from Mount Vernon, showing a lot of people filling sand bags by the downtown library. Showing servicemen from the Whidbey Navy base helping. Asking anyone who could do so to come downtown to help.

And so I woke up the house and we headed to downtown Mount Vernon. I had never seen anything like it. So many people feverishly working in emergency mode. Soon I was part of  a brigade passing sandbags to be stacked in a long line to attempt to stop the river from flooding downtown Mount Vernon, which, when the Skagit is in flood mode, downtown Mount Vernon is like New Orleans. As in it is below the level of the river.

By about three in the morning the sandbag wall was complete. I went home, then returned to downtown Mount Vernon ahead of the predicted 11am crest of the flood. People were blocked from entering the downtown area, but you could see the river, and downtown, from the hills due east of downtown. If I remember right I was on the old Highway 99 bridge which crosses I-5, along with a lot of other people. 

Around 11am you could see the river reaching the top of the sandbag wall, and seeming to start to spill over in spots.

And then, suddenly, the river backed off, retreated, about a foot. People were collectively thinking and saying what the hell just happened.

Within an hour or so we knew what had happened. A dike had breached down river, a break of a couple hundred feet. This quickly flooded Fir Island. An actual island (not an imaginary Fort Worth, Texas type island) made so due to being surrounded by two branches of the Skagit River. 

The Fir Island disaster triggered all sorts of emergency action, including loud sirens. Soon we were seeing things like cows being rescued by helicopter. As in a cow in some sort of harness dangling from a helicopter. 

Before the Fir Island dike breech could be fixed, and before the Mount Vernon sandbag wall was taken down, two weeks later it happened again. Another flood, this time easily re-flooding Fir Island due to the broken dike.

I remember when it was eventually allowed driving around Fir Island seeing the destruction. I'd never seen anything like it before.

There were a few more floods where a sandbag wall was used to protect downtown Mount Vernon. And then it was decided there needed to be a better solution.

A better solution to a real flood problem, not a goofy incompetent solution to an imaginary flood problem, such as what I have witnessed in Fort Worth for a couple decades now, expecting the rest of America to pay a billion bucks, or more, for what the Fort Worth schemers claim is a vitally needed flood control project, but is, in reality a corrupt money making scheme geared to line the pockets of those foisting the project on the public.

Meanwhile, in Mount Vernon, Washington, it was decided to build a new flood control system, a temporary wall which can be installed in a few hours by a few installers. Not an army of sandbaggers.

That is the new flood wall you see in the photo at the top. It is part of Mount Vernon's rebuild of its riverfront into a sort of riverwalk. If I remember right this cost around $25 million. I don't remember what the funding mechanism was.

Likely there was a bond election with the public voting to support the project. I do know this flood control project began well after Fort Worth began its inept Trinity River Vision's imaginary flood control project, with the Mount Vernon flood control long completed, whilst the Fort Worth "vitally needed" imaginary flood control project to control floods in an area that has not flooded in well over a half century due to flood control levees already installed, had basically not even started, with nothing done other than three simple little bridges built over dry land, taking seven years to build, with the hope that one day a cement lined ditch will be built under the bridges, creating an imaginary island, and providing that vitally not needed flood control.

Fort Worth expects federal funding to pay for its not needed flood control. To that end a local congresswoman's unqualified son was given the job of being executive director of the project, to motivate his mother to get that federal funding.

Eventually it became obvious the congresswoman's son was inept at the job he was being paid well over $200,000 a year to do no one knows what, the congresswoman's son was moved to a new job, where he could do no harm, still paid that ridiculously high salary, while a person actually qualified to oversee a public works project was hired.

I am almost 100% certain that no local politician's son, or daughter, was hired by the Skagit River Vision, to motivate that politician to secure funding for the Skagit River flood control project.

Friday, November 12, 2021

Seeing Underside Of Deception Pass Bridge Takes Us To The Underside Of Fort Worth's New Bridges


Saw that which you see above this morning on Facebook. Instantly knew what I was looking at, as would most anyone who has lived in the Skagit and Island County area of the Puget Sound region of Western Washington.

I walked by this scene dozens of times when I lived in the neighborhood, passing under the Deception Pass Bridge on the way to hike up adjacent Goose Rock.

The water below is known as Deception Pass, so named because it is a connecting passage between two different tidal zones. When the differential between the two tidal zones is at an extreme it causes the water to pass through Deception Pass with great force, so much so that it is virtually impossible for a boat to go against the tide.

Literally.

Looking at this photo it appears that a tide change is underway, but not quite of the extreme sort. I have seen the extreme sort a time or two, and it is something you do not forget.

On my Washington blog I have blogged about the Deception Pass Bridge several times...

and
July 31 Deception Pass Bridge 75th Anniversary Celebration Picnic

The Deception Pass Bridge was built in less than a year, way back in the early 1930s. Built over that deep, at times fast moving water of Puget Sound. 

Such may be among the many reasons I have found it to be bizarre to witness slow motion bridge building in the Texas town called Fort Worth.

Seven years to build three simple freeway overpass like bridges over dry land.

Touted by local politicians, and those building the bridges, that the bridges were being built over dry land to save time and money. As if it were an option to dig the cement lined ditch first, then fill it with water, then take even longer than seven years to build the bridges over the ditch.

Because, if it took seven years to build these bridges, in time saving mode, how long would have taken if a water filled ditch was in the way? 

And how is it that these propaganda spewers have gotten away with that "built over dry land to save time and money" nonsense for so long?

Either the propaganda spewers know the population to whom they spew the nonsense is too gullible and stupid to figure out the claim is idiotic.

Or it is the propaganda spewers who are idiotically stupid and actually believe their bridge building over dry land to save time and money nonsense is factual.

Due to all the dumb stuff I have read the propaganda spewers spew I opt to believe it is the latter explanation. That they are so idiotically stupid they don't understand that which they spew is idiotically stupid. We have seen plenty of evidence of this.

As in, have you watched or read a J.D. Granger interview?

So, now that those bridges are open and carrying traffic, is the ditch digging underway?

It must be, because, way back when this century began, what was then simply called the Trinity River Vision was touted as being a vitally needed flood control and economic development scheme, developed in an area which has not flooded for well over a half century due to flood control levees already in place.

Surely if this is such a vitally needed plan a local funding mechanism must have been in place before the project began, you know, with the public voting to support a bond issue to pay for the alleged vitally needed flood control and economic development scheme.

Surely no town wearing its big city pants would rely on hoping to secure federal funding for such a vitally needed project...

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Sikes Lake Litter Aftermath With Video Of Last Night's Storm


Last night's predicted Severe Thunderstorm arrived soon after the sun ceased its illumination duties for the day. All but one possible predicted element arrived. Strong wind, gusts, hail, lightning, thunder and rain. But, no tornadoes.

I was in my slumber chamber chatting with Thelma McNutty when the storm arrived. It was loud. I shot a short video out of my slumber chamber window. You can view that below.

By morning the sky was back blue. There was a lot of flotsam blown about, and my usual route to my motorized motion device was flooded.

I drove that motorized motion device to Sikes Lake about an hour before noon. As you can see, above, the Blue Bayou of Sikes Lake has been recharged with new water. 

And Sikes Lake, in addition to the new water, also had some litter delivered.


The above was one of three flotillas of litter seen on Sikes Lake today. When this happens the floating litter usually quickly gets removed.

One benefit of a downpour, pertaining to Sikes Lake, is the downpour washes away the accumulated goose poop that one tries to avoid whilst walking the paved trail around the lake.

Those buildings you see at the end of the lake are three Hiltons. On the left it is called Hilton Homewood Suites. Next to that is Hilton Home2 Suites and Tru by Hiltion. The last time I saw Elsie Hotpepper in person she was staying at the Hilton Homewood Suites. The Hilton Home2 Suites and Tru by Hilton have been built since Elsie Hotpepper last visited.

The aforementioned Blue Bayou of Sikes Lake is a short distance to the left, or south, of Hilton Homewood Suites.

And now that video of last night's storm....