Sunday, December 24, 2023
Getting All Shook Up In Texas On Christmas Eve
My old home zone had a Christmas Eve earthquake this morning.
4.0 on the Richter Scale.
I have not felt the earth move since the 1990s.
There was a period of time, during that time, when multiple earthquakes shook me up, epicentered near Big Lake, only a few miles from my east Mount Vernon abode.
Those Big Lake quakes ranged between 2.0 and 3.0 on the Richter Scale. Due to being shallow quakes, with the epicenter so close, that cluster of quakes was loud, with the vibrating shaking quite noticeable.
During one of those quakes I was sitting in my living room. A room with a lot of windows, looking out at big fir trees. When the quake hit, the windows flexed and made a popping noise. The trees shook violently.
As the windows popped and flexed, and the trees shook, I heard a cracking noise in the kitchen. When the quake ceased shaking I walked into the kitchen to discover the quake had cracked the tile floor.
Earthquakes are a bit scary, due to there being no warning, unlike other Mother Nature being angry events, like hurricanes, or tornadoes, or floods.
Though, I have to say, while there may be a tornado siren warning a twister is in the neighborhood, it is still a scary thing, but not suddenly startling, like an earthquake.
Since being in Texas I have experienced being near three tornadoes. I have never seen the stereotypical twister phenomenon associated with tornadoes. All I have seen is a dark, greenish wall of clouds.
Anyway, hope y'all are having yourselves a very merry Christmas Eve...
Friday, December 22, 2023
Merry Christmas Crying With Santa, Ruby, Theo & David
This is one of my all-time favorite photos.
I'd estimate this photo was taken over a decade ago.
That is Ruby and Theo being expressive on Santa's lap.
Ruby and Theo became teenagers last Sunday, hence the decade ago estimate.
Big brother, David, looks away, looking amused.
I have never eye witnessed any of the Tacoma Trio crying.
When I've been around the three they spend most of the time being funny and laughing...
Thursday, December 21, 2023
Welcome To 2023's Start Of Winter In Texas
That which you see above showed up in my email this morning, from the Friends of the Tandy Hills.
A Winter Solstice Greeting.
Hiking the Tandy Hills, year-round, is one of the few things I regularly did in the Dallas/Fort Worth area that I miss.
The only hill hiking available at my current location is hiking to the summit of Mount Wichita, which is a big pile of dried-up mud, dredged years ago from Sikes Lake.
Another thing I miss from D/FW, that is not available at my current location, is Asian grocery stores. Arlington has several of those, which I frequented frequently, able always to get any ingredient I wanted or needed.
The inability of getting needed ingredients came up yesterday when I saw a recipe for something called Singapore Noodles. The photo of the Singapore Noodles made Singapore Noodles look really tasty. However, the recipe had several items I can not get here, starting with the noodles needed.
I have not been to D/FW since prior to COVID. Maybe I should go on a long drive and get me some special Asian noodles, among other things...
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Birds Of Different Feathers Flocking Together Today At Sikes Lake
Birds of different feathers, flocking together today at Sikes Lake, roosting on the collapsing coffer dam.
The white birds appear to be seagulls, hundreds of miles from the nearest sea.
The black feathered birds were geese. But in the photo documentation sort of look like penguins.
It was almost cold enough for penguins today. The temperature in the 40s, requiring a couple layers of outer wear.
Monday, December 18, 2023
Post Library Visit To Lucy Park Contemplating Mistletoe Harvesting
This third Monday morning of the last month of 2023 I had to go to the library to refresh my reading material supply.
Time flies so fast, seems like I was just at the library, but it was over three weeks ago. Today's checked out books will be due to be returned next year, in early January.
Since I was in the neighborhood, after leaving the library I headed to Lucy Park for some nature communing via a fast walk around the former Lucy Park backwoods jungle.
I say former jungle because due to the leaves no longer being in many of the trees, it no longer looks like a green jungle.
The leaves may be gone, but some of the trees sport a different type of foliage.
Mistletoe.
Which is what you see being a parasite on the above tree.
It was years ago, in Arlington's Veterans Park, I learned those blobs of green were mistletoe. A pair of women were up on ladders, picking off the green blobs and putting them in a sack. I asked what they were doing and was told they were harvesting mistletoe.
I Googled to see if I could learn why the mistletoe parasite is known as the kissing plant....
Why is mistletoe the kissing plant?
In the Norse culture, the Mistletoe plant was a sign of love and peace. The story goes that the goddess, Figg lost her son, the god Baldur, to an arrow made of mistletoe. After his death, she vowed that Mistletoe would kiss anyone who passed beneath so long as it was never again used as a weapon.
Okay, that really did not make a lot of sense...
Okay, that really did not make a lot of sense...
Mountain Rainier Looming Large Over The Skagit Flats
I saw that which you see here, on Facebook, a look at Mount Rainier from the Skagit Flats. The Mountain is about 100 miles south of the Skagit Flats.
I have seen Mount Rainier from the Skagit Flats, on a clear, smog-free day. The view you see here makes Mount Rainier look like it looms large, above the Skagit Flats.
That is due to this being a zoomed view of Mount Rainier. In reality, to the naked eye, from the Skagit Flats Mount Rainier is just a small bump on the horizon.
So many photos of Mount Rainier do that camera zoom thing, making The Mountain look bigger and closer. Thus when tourists visit Washington for the first time expecting to see Mount Rainier looming large, like it is hovering over Seattle and Tacoma, when it really does not look like that.
Even so, it is still a rather cool thing to see whilst on the Skagit Flats, looking south to the Mount Rainier volcano, looking east at the Mount Baker volcano, which is way closer than Mount Rainier.
I have not seen a real mountain this decade, not since I was in Arizona in 2019 have I seen a mountain...
Saturday, December 16, 2023
Happy 42nd Birthday To Linda Lou From The Blue Lagoon Of Sikes Lake
Yesterday, due to rain, my endorphin inducing aerobic walking location was Walmart.
Today, on this third Saturday of the last month of 2023, it was to Sikes Lake I ventured for a fast walk around the lake.
As you can see via the view of the Blue Lagoon of Sikes Lake, the rain clouds have gone, replaced by a clear blue sky.
The retreated clouds left cold air in their wake, hence a slightly chilly outdoor experience today.
Today marks the 42nd birthday of Linda Lou.
Linda Lou and I have been friends since first grade.
It is a well known fact that I calculate a person's age by adding their chronological age to how old they look to how old they act, and divide by three.
I have not seen Linda Lou in person since October of 2018, when she flew south to Arizona to spend a few days with me in an Airbnb in Sun Lakes. We had ourselves a mighty fine time...
Friday, December 15, 2023
With Theo & Ruby & Mama Michele In Disneyland
Last night a new Where in the World email arrived in my inbox. With the subject line being "Where in the World Part 2."
I knew the twins were going to Disneyland, again, part of their happy birthday week, with Theo and Ruby's birthday being next Sunday, December 17, the day they become teenagers.
The photos which came in the email had one-line descriptive text, above all the photos, which had me guessing what text matched which photo.
The text matching the above photo was easy to discern...
"Pit stop between soccer camp and Disneyland."
I knew Ruby was in Southern California to attend some sort of soccer camp. I do not know if Theo also went to this soccer camp.
The text I think I correctly matched with the above photo...
"Inside Millenium Falcon ride."
There was no text which seemed to match the above photo, but I think I can guess that the trio is standing in front of the Millenium Falcon, in the Star Wars section of Disneyland.
This is the only one of the photos I thought must maybe match the following text...
"On a spinning car of the Ferris wheel. Only ride I’ve ever been in where they provide barf bags. It’s something."
In this photo I think the twins have left Disneyland and are in Disney California. The following is the only text I thought might match this photo...
"Radiator Springs. Amazing ride based on the Cars movies."
I am fairly certain the above photo is also from Disney California, with the following text explaining what I maybe be looking at...
"Backside of the Grizzly River raft ride."
Two lines of text I could not figure out matched any photo, those text lines being "After riding Grizzly River 3 times in a row" and "Big Thunder."
Two lines of text I could not figure out matched any photo, those text lines being "After riding Grizzly River 3 times in a row" and "Big Thunder."
It has been almost three decades since I have been to Disneyland. Christmas day of 1994. That was a fun day, but exhausting, staying in the park til closing time.
Thursday, December 14, 2023
Mount Rainier Is Back Fully Clothed In White
Saw that which you see here, via Miss Chris, on Facebook.
At the Chris and Sheila vantage point at their previous home in Kent, a suburb south of Seattle, they had no direct view of The Mountain, also known as Mount Rainier.
At the new Knappson location, a smart home they built in Lacey, a suburb of Olympia, Chris and Sheila have a direct look at The Mountain.
Just a short time ago The Mountain had lost most of its white covering. Glaciers were melting away.
The Mountain looked naked.
But now, in mid-December, The Mountain is back being totally covered in white, thanks to a couple Atmospheric Rivers dumping a lot of water on Western Washington, which arrives in frozen form at the higher elevations.
At my current location we do not get any precipitation from Atmospheric Rivers. However, rain is in the forecast for later today.
But there are no higher elevations for hundreds of miles, which would get snow covered by incoming rain...
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
Nightly Walmart Swarm Of Thousands Of Blackbirds
Alfred Hitchcock Birds night, again, at my least favorite local Walmart. Thousands of these devils fly about, as the sun sets, looking for a roosting location. The photo does zero justice to how bizarre this is.
Thousands of what I have been told are blackbirds, roosting on every tree, on every building. Filling the sky.
It is like a dystopian nightmare of bird weirdness.
Til I was corrected by a self-proclaimed ornithologist, I thought these birds were grackles.
I have been seeing this blackbird swarm at Walmart, and neighboring stores, for about a month. And that first experience with the blackbird invasion was a doozy. I drove onto the Walmart parking lot, immediately startled by seeing so many birds, in the air, in trees, on the pavement, on the building's edge, lined up like sentinels doing guard duty.
I parked, opened the door to find myself startled by two extremely loud explosions across the street.
Explosions with fireballs.
I quickly assumed the birds had somehow shorted out a transformer. Or two.
And then walking towards the Walmart entry I saw the store was dark. The exploding transformers had knocked out Walmart's power. Oddly, the stores on the side of the street where the transformers exploded, still had power.
Why do these birds choose to roost each night at Walmart, and Walmart's neighbors, like ALDI and Home Depot? Where do the birds go during the day? Why don't they choose to nightly roost at a less congested by humans location, like Lucy Park, or Lake Wichita Park?
It is quite perplexing...
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