Well, I stayed up all night playing Risk and Hearts online, and I heard a familiar scream out the window. The neighbors across the street were at it again. Usually the Fat Idiot Guy (FIG) is ranting and screaming at the woman.
Ofentimes, this results in him peeling the car backwards out of the driveway, then peeling rubber down the street out of the neigborhood. She sometimes runs in front of the car. He USED to STOP.
Its gotten worse lately and I have been very worried about her safety. And recently, there has been a child involved in the fight. FIG suddenly likes to take the infant with him in the car. Driving away recklessly.
This morning, FIG took off again. with infant, and the woman stood there screaming. I have intervened before with threats of "calling the cops". I have spoken to the renters there (there are at least 2 couples, I think). Its hard to tell.
But this time I asked the woman (18? 21?) if she needed help. She asked my to call the police. I did.
They were there in 5 minutes. Two County and two State cars. I explained that I had called on her behalf, and backed off so they could talk to her. One cop stayed aside , and I gave him a brief background on the problems of the past year.
He talked to the woman for about 20 minutes, giving her advice and explaining the limitations (FIG IS the child's father, so it isn't kidnapping). I lent her my cordless phone to call friends for a safe haven. I was amazed the phone worked outside like that, but it did.
After overhearing that she needed to file legal papers at the County Courthouse10 miles away (and knowing she had no car), I offerred to drive her there if her friends/family couldn't. I'll bring a book if asked to drive. Paperwork takes time.
But I just couldn't continue to hear her screaming in mental agony every week. Yes, maybe I should have acted more forcibly before. But it is difficult to know the dynamics of bad relationships. I have acted before in other places and been told (rather forcibly) to "BUTT OUT". But I guess I judged this one correctly.
I did not know before this that there was physical violence involved. It was all yelling and screaming before. But she had blood on her nose (interestingly, she was not aware of that). That shows how bad things can get behind closed doors.
I'm glad I called the police, I think she is going to get some legal help and it is now "on the record".
On the other hand, this FIG is a real looney tunes type. If someone bangs on my door, I will answer through the computer room window. That's safe. If it's the woman, I will drive her to a safe house or legal place of her choice. If its the FIG, well, I have a real Gladius propped by the front door and another at the top of the stairs for self-protection. He IS the kind of person who would beat down a door and attack.
Sorry to bother you all with this, but I have to write sometimes to get things straight and put disturbing events in print. Some good news. A car pulled into the driveway a few minutes ago. It wasn't FIG. It was her dad. (Well, I went out and asked) He came by to help her pack some things and bring her home for some shelter for a while. I offerred any help I could give.
*SIGH*
BTW, the cats didn't know the earthquake was coming, but they DID know the neighbor screams were going to start before I did. They went all poofed and UTB about 3 seconds before I heard the first yells. Good for them.
(Very Tired) Mark
Monday, October 3, 2011
Friday, September 30, 2011
Garden Watering Stand
I like to keep the garden watered, but it's boring. It's wasteful to use an oscillating sprinkler on the raised veggie beds because of the walkways between them, and the flowerbeds are too narrow for one. It is too boring to just stand there and water all the beds by hand. I have drip irrigation hoses, but they all broke off at the raised brass couplings under the weight of the snow 2 winters ago (haven't quite figured out how to repair them).
I had developed a rather convenient way to water them all a patch at a time using a fat hose nozzle and a spading fork. I stabbed the fork in the ground abut 10' away and nestled the fat hose nozzle (shower setting) in the fork's D handle. But that required getting the garden fork firmly in the ground at each 6' section or raised bed. Naturally, if I needed to water the beds, the lawn soil was rather hard to penetrate with the fork.
I needed a better way. My first thought was a pole with a clamp on top and a flat "X" at the bottom with spikes to "step" into the lawn. I couldn't find any parts like that, and I'm not a welder. Then I looked at my camera tripod. It looked a bit flimsy, needed some kind of attachment at the top, and I wasn't sure how waterproof it was. But a tripod seemed the way to go.
I built one using pressure treated wood and stainless steel hardware. The PT wood is 2x2"deck balusters. The tripod is designed with 1 forward and 2 back legs. It is 2 back legs to resist the backwards force of the water and the weight of the hose.
The balusters come with pointed ends. I wanted the points for the bottoms, but I wanted flat tops to attach a nozzle platform. So I cut off the tops of each of the 3 balusters. Then I cut 3" off the 2 back legs to use to widen the attachment surface. Two pieces of scrap wood added some width. It was all glued and screwed to the front leg.
Next, I used a tapering jig on the tablesaw to cut angles for the 2 back legs to attach to the front leg. They are shorter because I used 3" to make the top attachment surfaces, but also because the front needs to be longer to create an upwards angle for the nozzle platform. That will make more sense in the last pictures. I can't give an exact angle for the cut (I really just overlayed one on the other and eyeballed the "right" spread). It looks about 30 degrees though.
I needed to drill a hole through the 3 legs for an axle bolt. I rigged up some stops and supports on my drill press for the 2 angled back legs. The front leg just needed a spacer to account for the platform support.
It looks like this when the bolt and nut is put through all 3 legs. This holds the legs all at the angles. But I also wanted to be able to store it easily for the winter. That meant being able to collapse it. So I took the back legs back to the drill press and lifted them up slightly to angle the holes.
I may not be explaining that well. To store it, I wanted the 3 legs to compress flat to each other, and the lengthened hole allowed that. And so that the bolthead and wing nut (for tightening securely on a flat surface, I used a forstener bit to make an angled hole the size of the flat washers. I don't have a picture of that, but it will be obvious when/if you make one of these yourself.
Notes: 1, The washers between the legs were removed later. I realized I DIDN'T want the legs to slide easily when being set up. 2, The spacer washers below the wing nut are there because the wing nut catches on the wood before the bolt is tight. 3, Use a bolt with threads the whole length. The bolts with about 1" of threads don't have enough thread length.
Here is the tripod in the storage position. That's what I mean by "compressing flat" and why the back legs have elongated holes.
Here is the tripod set up, minus the hose nozzle platform on top... You can see that with the front leg longer, it creates an upwards angle.
Here is the finished tripod. A piece of PT board is glued an screwed to the platform support on the front leg (the screws are countersunk under the wand nozzle). Copper clamp-downs hold the wand in place with pan-head exterior screws. A wand nozzle is much easier to attach than a standard nozzle. The wand, BTW, has the most uniform spray of any nozzle I have ever tried. This brand is Melcor; others may be just as good.
To relieve hose-weight pressure on the wand, I attached an angled hose connector. I have quick-connect attachments on all my hoses and attachments.
And here is the watering tripod in action! Adjusting the angle of the front leg easily adjusts the angle of spray.
It's easy to move from spot to spot, stores nicely, and should last decades!
I had developed a rather convenient way to water them all a patch at a time using a fat hose nozzle and a spading fork. I stabbed the fork in the ground abut 10' away and nestled the fat hose nozzle (shower setting) in the fork's D handle. But that required getting the garden fork firmly in the ground at each 6' section or raised bed. Naturally, if I needed to water the beds, the lawn soil was rather hard to penetrate with the fork.
I needed a better way. My first thought was a pole with a clamp on top and a flat "X" at the bottom with spikes to "step" into the lawn. I couldn't find any parts like that, and I'm not a welder. Then I looked at my camera tripod. It looked a bit flimsy, needed some kind of attachment at the top, and I wasn't sure how waterproof it was. But a tripod seemed the way to go.
I built one using pressure treated wood and stainless steel hardware. The PT wood is 2x2"deck balusters. The tripod is designed with 1 forward and 2 back legs. It is 2 back legs to resist the backwards force of the water and the weight of the hose.
The balusters come with pointed ends. I wanted the points for the bottoms, but I wanted flat tops to attach a nozzle platform. So I cut off the tops of each of the 3 balusters. Then I cut 3" off the 2 back legs to use to widen the attachment surface. Two pieces of scrap wood added some width. It was all glued and screwed to the front leg.
Next, I used a tapering jig on the tablesaw to cut angles for the 2 back legs to attach to the front leg. They are shorter because I used 3" to make the top attachment surfaces, but also because the front needs to be longer to create an upwards angle for the nozzle platform. That will make more sense in the last pictures. I can't give an exact angle for the cut (I really just overlayed one on the other and eyeballed the "right" spread). It looks about 30 degrees though.
I needed to drill a hole through the 3 legs for an axle bolt. I rigged up some stops and supports on my drill press for the 2 angled back legs. The front leg just needed a spacer to account for the platform support.
It looks like this when the bolt and nut is put through all 3 legs. This holds the legs all at the angles. But I also wanted to be able to store it easily for the winter. That meant being able to collapse it. So I took the back legs back to the drill press and lifted them up slightly to angle the holes.
I may not be explaining that well. To store it, I wanted the 3 legs to compress flat to each other, and the lengthened hole allowed that. And so that the bolthead and wing nut (for tightening securely on a flat surface, I used a forstener bit to make an angled hole the size of the flat washers. I don't have a picture of that, but it will be obvious when/if you make one of these yourself.
Notes: 1, The washers between the legs were removed later. I realized I DIDN'T want the legs to slide easily when being set up. 2, The spacer washers below the wing nut are there because the wing nut catches on the wood before the bolt is tight. 3, Use a bolt with threads the whole length. The bolts with about 1" of threads don't have enough thread length.
Here is the tripod in the storage position. That's what I mean by "compressing flat" and why the back legs have elongated holes.
Here is the tripod set up, minus the hose nozzle platform on top... You can see that with the front leg longer, it creates an upwards angle.
Here is the finished tripod. A piece of PT board is glued an screwed to the platform support on the front leg (the screws are countersunk under the wand nozzle). Copper clamp-downs hold the wand in place with pan-head exterior screws. A wand nozzle is much easier to attach than a standard nozzle. The wand, BTW, has the most uniform spray of any nozzle I have ever tried. This brand is Melcor; others may be just as good.
To relieve hose-weight pressure on the wand, I attached an angled hose connector. I have quick-connect attachments on all my hoses and attachments.
And here is the watering tripod in action! Adjusting the angle of the front leg easily adjusts the angle of spray.
It's easy to move from spot to spot, stores nicely, and should last decades!
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Pictures Again!
I've been a bit frustrated lately, often not being able to get pictures into the posts. They would upload in the Choose Files box, but would not transfer to the post. I even posted a question on the Blogger Help forum (no replies). So, today I tried the new Blogger interface, and pictures load properly.
Hurray!
I am showing the pictures of the "Poor Old Storm Drain" to add to THIS POST today...
The overview... Yes, believe it or not there is a 4x4x4 foot brick well and heavy metal grate under there!
At first, I tried to pull the debris off.
Most of it was too entangled. I wasn't surprised. The last time the drain was like this, the County needed power equipment!
But I stopped trying as soon as I saw that the brick structure was broken! You can see part of the brick wall is at an angle.
I also noticed that the metal grate on top is actually shoved OFF the brick structure! You can also see that the woody debris is packed so tightly that stones washed over the top and wouldn't fall through.
I called County Maintenance and reported the problem. They politely took all the information, but wouldn't suggest a repair date. I'll be happy to see them out here by next Spring. That's about how long it took the last time. However, I will say that they do good work when they come.
Hurray!
I am showing the pictures of the "Poor Old Storm Drain" to add to THIS POST today...
The overview... Yes, believe it or not there is a 4x4x4 foot brick well and heavy metal grate under there!
At first, I tried to pull the debris off.
Most of it was too entangled. I wasn't surprised. The last time the drain was like this, the County needed power equipment!
But I stopped trying as soon as I saw that the brick structure was broken! You can see part of the brick wall is at an angle.
I also noticed that the metal grate on top is actually shoved OFF the brick structure! You can also see that the woody debris is packed so tightly that stones washed over the top and wouldn't fall through.
I called County Maintenance and reported the problem. They politely took all the information, but wouldn't suggest a repair date. I'll be happy to see them out here by next Spring. That's about how long it took the last time. However, I will say that they do good work when they come.
Monday, September 19, 2011
A Redo On The Lawn
I haven't re-seeded the lawn in years and there are thin/bare spots. So before Tropical Storm Lee came through, I thought I would take advantage of the predicted rain for the week to keep new grass seed wet while it germinated.
I didn't realize how MUCH rain there would be and how HARD it would fall at times. Some of the seed I put down then has germinated - in thick separated bands. It looks like the lime markers on a football field! And all the formerly bare spots are still bare.
So much for THAT $42 worth of grass seed! So, today, I bought another bag and I re-seeded the lawn after mowing it down as short as I dared (1"). This time, I even raked the lawn roughly and collected dried crumbled grass clippings to cover the bare areas after seeding.
After seeding the lawn again, I sprinkled the dried grass clippings over the bare spots. Not thickly, just enough to give a little cover and hide them from the birds... Then I spent an hour gradually watering the seeds enough to let then soak up some moisture and start germinating.
I saved about a lb of grass seed for patching spots that don't grow this time. Its a blend of 3 Rebel tall fescue. I like fescue, but it isn't a spreading grass, so bare spots develop. I think I will get some bluegrass for the sunnier areas next time. It spreads. But the lawn is at least half shaded, so I need fescue on most of it.
Sorry no pictures again, but for some odd reason, I can't upload pictures on THIS blog. Works fine on the cat blog, and as far as I can tell, the settings are the same. I don't have any maximum picture upload issues, as all of mine are in the "free" range. And pictures that won't upload here WILL upload to the cat blog. It's driving me nuts. I posted a question on the Blogger Help Forum days ago, but have not gotten any responses. Any ideas are more than welcome!
I didn't realize how MUCH rain there would be and how HARD it would fall at times. Some of the seed I put down then has germinated - in thick separated bands. It looks like the lime markers on a football field! And all the formerly bare spots are still bare.
So much for THAT $42 worth of grass seed! So, today, I bought another bag and I re-seeded the lawn after mowing it down as short as I dared (1"). This time, I even raked the lawn roughly and collected dried crumbled grass clippings to cover the bare areas after seeding.
After seeding the lawn again, I sprinkled the dried grass clippings over the bare spots. Not thickly, just enough to give a little cover and hide them from the birds... Then I spent an hour gradually watering the seeds enough to let then soak up some moisture and start germinating.
I saved about a lb of grass seed for patching spots that don't grow this time. Its a blend of 3 Rebel tall fescue. I like fescue, but it isn't a spreading grass, so bare spots develop. I think I will get some bluegrass for the sunnier areas next time. It spreads. But the lawn is at least half shaded, so I need fescue on most of it.
Sorry no pictures again, but for some odd reason, I can't upload pictures on THIS blog. Works fine on the cat blog, and as far as I can tell, the settings are the same. I don't have any maximum picture upload issues, as all of mine are in the "free" range. And pictures that won't upload here WILL upload to the cat blog. It's driving me nuts. I posted a question on the Blogger Help Forum days ago, but have not gotten any responses. Any ideas are more than welcome!
Friday, September 16, 2011
Poor Old Storm Drain
Tropical Storm Lee finally did it in. I'm used to it getting covered with fallen branches and washed-down debris, but this time the washed-down stuff actually broke the storm drain apart. It is a brick shell covered by a heavy metal grate that sits on the bricks.
Not any more...
The back of the brick structure is batterred loose and at an angle. the top is covered with tree debris I can't pull apart. It is so tightly interwoven that stones piled up on the top.
I would show the pictures of the broken storm drain, but blogger isn't letting me upload any pictures on this blog.. I getting a bit pissed about that. Not only that, but all of a sudden, I have to sign in to each of my 2 blogs every time with full username and password. Two days ago, I could select them from a drop-down list or use a bookmark.
Not any more...
The back of the brick structure is batterred loose and at an angle. the top is covered with tree debris I can't pull apart. It is so tightly interwoven that stones piled up on the top.
I would show the pictures of the broken storm drain, but blogger isn't letting me upload any pictures on this blog.. I getting a bit pissed about that. Not only that, but all of a sudden, I have to sign in to each of my 2 blogs every time with full username and password. Two days ago, I could select them from a drop-down list or use a bookmark.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
9-11-2011
On 9-11-2001, I was quietly doing my regular job. An odd news announcement caught my ear at 9 a.m. A plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. Strange accident, but one hit the empire State Building many decades before in heavy fog. But I mentioned it to a supervisor (his office included FEMA responses for our agency).
Then there was a 2nd.
Later, I felt a "thump" through my feet. A few moments afterwards, I learned the Pentagon had been struck by "something". I worked a couple miles away from the Pentagon, and 2 blocks from the White House. It was a really bad day after that. We all watched the terrible events. I won't go into that further.
When I got home, I bought and set out a flag from my back deck vowing to leave it there until the perpetrators were caught and punished for such a horrific act. I have decided to leave it up (4th one actually, they do wear out).
In past years, I have said many things about the events. This time, I think it best to display a couple of images. I searched 1,000s of pictures. Most I found were far too graphic, or xenographic, or bloody, or boastful.
I hope these 2 wordless graphics will strike the right balance on this 10th year commemoration of 9/11...
Then there was a 2nd.
Later, I felt a "thump" through my feet. A few moments afterwards, I learned the Pentagon had been struck by "something". I worked a couple miles away from the Pentagon, and 2 blocks from the White House. It was a really bad day after that. We all watched the terrible events. I won't go into that further.
When I got home, I bought and set out a flag from my back deck vowing to leave it there until the perpetrators were caught and punished for such a horrific act. I have decided to leave it up (4th one actually, they do wear out).
In past years, I have said many things about the events. This time, I think it best to display a couple of images. I searched 1,000s of pictures. Most I found were far too graphic, or xenographic, or bloody, or boastful.
I hope these 2 wordless graphics will strike the right balance on this 10th year commemoration of 9/11...
Friday, September 9, 2011
Earthquake and Storms
[Sorry no pictures today. Blogger has been rejecting pictures on THIS blog, but not my other. Can't figure out why. I'm not exceeding any limits.]
Well it sure has been an interesting few weeks. First an earthquake on Aug 23rd, then Hurricane Irene Aug 27th/28th, and then Tropical Storm Lee Sept 5th-9th!
It was the 1st earthquake I ever felt, and while it was nothing like West Coast earthquakes, it was certainly more of a surprise. My first thought was "It CAN'T be an earthquake, they don't happen here!", but after a few seconds, it was obvious it wasn't a tree falling on the house. And then we had to wait to see if there would be aftershocks.
Hurricanes aren't terribly common here. They tend to either make landfall south and approach over land, weakening rapidly, or pass by further off the coast. But we do get serious ones occasionally. I remember Hurricane Agnes in 1972. It came right up the Chesapeake Bay and sank the family boat (a complete loss). Then there was Hurricane Floyd in 1999. That one dropped so much rain so fast that my street was flooded, half my front yard was flooded, and I stayed up all night wet-vacuuming water from the basement. It is the only time I've ever seen the 2 storm drains next to my yard actually completely covered with standing water!
So then we had Irene. Fortunately, the ground was very dry and basically absorbed all the rainfall and there wasn't even standing water afterwards on my low front lawn. Still, 7" fell here, and it was the strongest wind I have experienced in my 25 years at this location.
Tropical Storm Lee was actually worse. First, it came over Maryland and just sat there for 4 days raining almost constantly! Not as hard as Irene, but for over twice as long. Second, the rain bands were heading directly north the last 2 days. The strongest ones kept going directly through my county. It was depressing, as if the rain bands were following the highway through town! I had to empty my good rain gauge twice! The total for Lee here was 10.5"! The airport 15 miles west only got 5.5" and to the east they got only 7". That made 17.5" of rain in 13 days... Third, the ground was completely saturated from Irene, so the rainfall had nowhere to go but across the surface seeking low spots.
One of those low spots was my patio! The entire yard slopes gradually from the far back to the street front. Part of the patio has cinder block walls to hold the slope. The non-cinder block entrance is at ground level. The patio was never built properly. The house builder didn't properly slope it slightly toward the lawn to prevent water collecting there. And over the years, the lawn has risen slightly, enough so that prolonged rain can lap against the sliding glass basement doors and seep in. I have occasionally had a slight problem with that.
Well, after the 3rd day of rain, it finally started seeping in again. I tried the wet-vac, but it was too prolonged a rain to stop seeping in. I finally had to go out in the pouring rain at Midnight and dig a 6" deep and wide ditch 10' to a more downslope spot at the fence gate. Happily, the water collected in the patio started rushing out! I was relieved. In only 10 minutes, the collected rainfall was a foot away from the doors and I knew I wouldn't have any further problems in the basement.
It finally stopped raining very early this morning...
One odd note about the storm. The County came by just before Hurricane Irene and cleaned the collected debris of several years from the primary storm drain. It worked fine for Irene. But Lee covered it back up again. That shows how much more forceful rainfall drainage there was from Lee. And not only tree debris; there are golfball size stones covering the woven tree debris covering the storm drain! AND, it appears that the brick storm drain has been broken by the force of the debris and stones. The back bricks appear all loose and tilted, and the metal grate at an angle. I will have to call the County about that. I'm sure they will be thrilled!
Can I please have a break from earthquakes and hurricanes for a while? Please?
Well it sure has been an interesting few weeks. First an earthquake on Aug 23rd, then Hurricane Irene Aug 27th/28th, and then Tropical Storm Lee Sept 5th-9th!
It was the 1st earthquake I ever felt, and while it was nothing like West Coast earthquakes, it was certainly more of a surprise. My first thought was "It CAN'T be an earthquake, they don't happen here!", but after a few seconds, it was obvious it wasn't a tree falling on the house. And then we had to wait to see if there would be aftershocks.
Hurricanes aren't terribly common here. They tend to either make landfall south and approach over land, weakening rapidly, or pass by further off the coast. But we do get serious ones occasionally. I remember Hurricane Agnes in 1972. It came right up the Chesapeake Bay and sank the family boat (a complete loss). Then there was Hurricane Floyd in 1999. That one dropped so much rain so fast that my street was flooded, half my front yard was flooded, and I stayed up all night wet-vacuuming water from the basement. It is the only time I've ever seen the 2 storm drains next to my yard actually completely covered with standing water!
So then we had Irene. Fortunately, the ground was very dry and basically absorbed all the rainfall and there wasn't even standing water afterwards on my low front lawn. Still, 7" fell here, and it was the strongest wind I have experienced in my 25 years at this location.
Tropical Storm Lee was actually worse. First, it came over Maryland and just sat there for 4 days raining almost constantly! Not as hard as Irene, but for over twice as long. Second, the rain bands were heading directly north the last 2 days. The strongest ones kept going directly through my county. It was depressing, as if the rain bands were following the highway through town! I had to empty my good rain gauge twice! The total for Lee here was 10.5"! The airport 15 miles west only got 5.5" and to the east they got only 7". That made 17.5" of rain in 13 days... Third, the ground was completely saturated from Irene, so the rainfall had nowhere to go but across the surface seeking low spots.
One of those low spots was my patio! The entire yard slopes gradually from the far back to the street front. Part of the patio has cinder block walls to hold the slope. The non-cinder block entrance is at ground level. The patio was never built properly. The house builder didn't properly slope it slightly toward the lawn to prevent water collecting there. And over the years, the lawn has risen slightly, enough so that prolonged rain can lap against the sliding glass basement doors and seep in. I have occasionally had a slight problem with that.
Well, after the 3rd day of rain, it finally started seeping in again. I tried the wet-vac, but it was too prolonged a rain to stop seeping in. I finally had to go out in the pouring rain at Midnight and dig a 6" deep and wide ditch 10' to a more downslope spot at the fence gate. Happily, the water collected in the patio started rushing out! I was relieved. In only 10 minutes, the collected rainfall was a foot away from the doors and I knew I wouldn't have any further problems in the basement.
It finally stopped raining very early this morning...
One odd note about the storm. The County came by just before Hurricane Irene and cleaned the collected debris of several years from the primary storm drain. It worked fine for Irene. But Lee covered it back up again. That shows how much more forceful rainfall drainage there was from Lee. And not only tree debris; there are golfball size stones covering the woven tree debris covering the storm drain! AND, it appears that the brick storm drain has been broken by the force of the debris and stones. The back bricks appear all loose and tilted, and the metal grate at an angle. I will have to call the County about that. I'm sure they will be thrilled!
Can I please have a break from earthquakes and hurricanes for a while? Please?
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Hurricane Irene
Well, it's been an interesting week. First an earthquake, then a hurricane! Hurricanes aren't too rare here, but this was the most direct hit I've experienced as an adult (and the eye was still 80 miles east). But it was clear there was going to be major rain and wind.
So I was prepared the evening before. Aside from the usual emergency supplies (flashlights, crank radio, batteries, water, food, etc), I made sure to have a good supply of comfort foods...
Before I went to bed that evening, I noticed my 5" rain gauge was at 4.75", so I went out and emptied it. I took a quick look around the yard for any tree damage and found none. But the most intense part of the storm hadn't arrived yet. The lights dimmed a couple of times, but I never lost power. I'm very glad all the electric and cable lines are underground here!
This morning I found another 2.5" of rain in the gauge, for a total of 7.25".
There was some tree damage, but nothing serious. I haven't driven out yet, but I did hear a chain saw in the neighborhood, so someone had some larger damage.
I found some medium branches fallen.
And a few smaller ones, but those were from my favorite saucer magnolia tree.
I have some repair work to do in that tree! There are a couple of breaks like this.
Two of my tomato cages blew over in spite of being staked. One stake was bent over at ground level, the other was simply pushed over in the soaked garden soil. I was able to raise the cages without any apparent damage to the plants. I put 2 stakes on each cage for better protection.
So I came through the hurricane in good shape.
So I was prepared the evening before. Aside from the usual emergency supplies (flashlights, crank radio, batteries, water, food, etc), I made sure to have a good supply of comfort foods...
Before I went to bed that evening, I noticed my 5" rain gauge was at 4.75", so I went out and emptied it. I took a quick look around the yard for any tree damage and found none. But the most intense part of the storm hadn't arrived yet. The lights dimmed a couple of times, but I never lost power. I'm very glad all the electric and cable lines are underground here!
This morning I found another 2.5" of rain in the gauge, for a total of 7.25".
There was some tree damage, but nothing serious. I haven't driven out yet, but I did hear a chain saw in the neighborhood, so someone had some larger damage.
I found some medium branches fallen.
And a few smaller ones, but those were from my favorite saucer magnolia tree.
I have some repair work to do in that tree! There are a couple of breaks like this.
Two of my tomato cages blew over in spite of being staked. One stake was bent over at ground level, the other was simply pushed over in the soaked garden soil. I was able to raise the cages without any apparent damage to the plants. I put 2 stakes on each cage for better protection.
So I came through the hurricane in good shape.
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Earthquake
Well, I have experienced my first earthquake. It was quite interesting. My first thought was that one of the 2 huge trees near the house was falling on it an breaking through the attic in stages. But I realized immediately that the shaking was too frequent and sudden. So I guess it was about 5 seconds before I knew it had to be an earthquake.
It was odd; the house felt like it was being pounded rather than shaken. There was no vertical movement sensation. I think I was being moved back and forth laterally about 6 inches. I kept on my feet, but after a few more seconds it became visually disorienting because the house and I were not moving in the same way. So I had to put a hand on the kitchen counter.
It felt as though it lasted about 15 seconds, but everyone on TV later agreed it was about 25 seconds. The center was about 90 miles away, in central VA, 5.8 magnitude. Apparently there was one major aftershock and several minor ones in the following hour, but I did not feel any of those here.
The range of detectable shaking was very large; from Atlanta GA to Ontario, to Ohio (as best I've heard). It was so widespread because the US east coast is old solid ground; few faults to absorb movement.
I went outside immediately when the shaking stopped, mainly in case one of those trees DID decide to fall. It was another minute before the first neighbor came out. It was hilarious. The first 3 neighbors to come out all asked "Did you feel that?". DUH! I assured them that everyone for many miles around had surely felt it. I said, "for all we know at the moment, New York is in ruins or the New Madrid fault opened up again" (none of my neighbors had heard of New Madrid).
I went back inside to look for any damage and check CNN for details and likelihood of aftershocks. All the cats were STILL poofed up after 10 minutes and now, 3 hours later are demanding more attention than usual (making it hard to type). The only consequences were some fishtank water had sloshed out (no fish), a framed photograph had shaken off a bookshelf, and one tippy samurai figurine had fallen over (undamaged).
It was interesting, but I won't mind if it doesn't happen again...
It was odd; the house felt like it was being pounded rather than shaken. There was no vertical movement sensation. I think I was being moved back and forth laterally about 6 inches. I kept on my feet, but after a few more seconds it became visually disorienting because the house and I were not moving in the same way. So I had to put a hand on the kitchen counter.
It felt as though it lasted about 15 seconds, but everyone on TV later agreed it was about 25 seconds. The center was about 90 miles away, in central VA, 5.8 magnitude. Apparently there was one major aftershock and several minor ones in the following hour, but I did not feel any of those here.
The range of detectable shaking was very large; from Atlanta GA to Ontario, to Ohio (as best I've heard). It was so widespread because the US east coast is old solid ground; few faults to absorb movement.
I went outside immediately when the shaking stopped, mainly in case one of those trees DID decide to fall. It was another minute before the first neighbor came out. It was hilarious. The first 3 neighbors to come out all asked "Did you feel that?". DUH! I assured them that everyone for many miles around had surely felt it. I said, "for all we know at the moment, New York is in ruins or the New Madrid fault opened up again" (none of my neighbors had heard of New Madrid).
I went back inside to look for any damage and check CNN for details and likelihood of aftershocks. All the cats were STILL poofed up after 10 minutes and now, 3 hours later are demanding more attention than usual (making it hard to type). The only consequences were some fishtank water had sloshed out (no fish), a framed photograph had shaken off a bookshelf, and one tippy samurai figurine had fallen over (undamaged).
It was interesting, but I won't mind if it doesn't happen again...
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Free Mulch Again!
For years, the County collected lawn and tree debris, shredded it, and aged it. Then gave it back to county residents for free. On Saturdays, they would even load it in trailers or pickups for free. It wasn't big pieces like commercial mulch, nor aged enough to be compost. I used to get 2 trailer loads each Spring. One to use for mulch and the other to set aside to compost further.
Then they stopped for 2 (3?) years. I kept checking their website only to see "No Mulch Available". I figured they were either using it for county maintenance, or lacked the funds to keep processing the raw debris.
So when I had a landfill load of trash, I asked about it. I was told the mulch had become available again all this year. I would swear the website said "No Mulch Available" just last month. But the imporatant thing was that the mulch was available again!
There used to be hour-long lines to get the Saturday free loading, but yesterday, I was the only customer. I drove up, put a tarp on the bottom of the trailer (it has gaps between the floorboards) and set the edge of a larger tarp in the front so the mulch would hold it in place. ONE big bucket load later, the trailer was filled to overflowing! I folded the top tarp back over the pile and attached it down with bungee cords.
I drove it into the back yard, where I will scoop it out onto this beat up old tarp where the last of the compost mulch was used up this Spring. Unfortunately, the top tarp did not reach all the way to the back end, and with 3" of rain falling on it, the exposed mulch got so heavy it tipped the trailer back.
Now there is too much weight against the removable back upright, I can't remove it. So I'll have to shovel a foot or so clear before I can slide the mulch out.
This is how tipped it is. I removed the top tarp, in hopes that the rain forecast for tonight will even out the weight and let it sit level again so that I can remove the back.
I shot this picture crooked so that it would LOOK level. LOL! That's 2.75 cubic yards of free mulch! I hate to think what it would cost to buy it by the bag!
As soon as I get this unloaded and spread around the flower/garden beds, I'll go back and get more to leave aside to compost, then whatever more I can get, I'll use to cover my daffodil and hosta beds!
Then they stopped for 2 (3?) years. I kept checking their website only to see "No Mulch Available". I figured they were either using it for county maintenance, or lacked the funds to keep processing the raw debris.
So when I had a landfill load of trash, I asked about it. I was told the mulch had become available again all this year. I would swear the website said "No Mulch Available" just last month. But the imporatant thing was that the mulch was available again!
There used to be hour-long lines to get the Saturday free loading, but yesterday, I was the only customer. I drove up, put a tarp on the bottom of the trailer (it has gaps between the floorboards) and set the edge of a larger tarp in the front so the mulch would hold it in place. ONE big bucket load later, the trailer was filled to overflowing! I folded the top tarp back over the pile and attached it down with bungee cords.
I drove it into the back yard, where I will scoop it out onto this beat up old tarp where the last of the compost mulch was used up this Spring. Unfortunately, the top tarp did not reach all the way to the back end, and with 3" of rain falling on it, the exposed mulch got so heavy it tipped the trailer back.
Now there is too much weight against the removable back upright, I can't remove it. So I'll have to shovel a foot or so clear before I can slide the mulch out.
This is how tipped it is. I removed the top tarp, in hopes that the rain forecast for tonight will even out the weight and let it sit level again so that I can remove the back.
I shot this picture crooked so that it would LOOK level. LOL! That's 2.75 cubic yards of free mulch! I hate to think what it would cost to buy it by the bag!
As soon as I get this unloaded and spread around the flower/garden beds, I'll go back and get more to leave aside to compost, then whatever more I can get, I'll use to cover my daffodil and hosta beds!
Friday, August 12, 2011
Strange Rain
I had the oddest experience today. Something that hasn't happened to me since I was about 11. Those many years ago, we kids were playing outside and realized that it was raining in our yard, but NOT across the street!
Well, it finally happened again! I was watching the rain suddenly pouring down in the front yard, so I went to the back to watch the rain gauge fill up. Nothing! It WASN"T raining in the back yard. Not a drop.
Convinced I was just not seeing it, I went out on the deck. Dry! I even went out in the yard because sometimes the trees absorb a lot of rain at first. Nothing! It was several minutes before rain finally started falling in the back.
Talk about being on the edge of a cloud!!! Has this ever happened to you?
Well, it finally happened again! I was watching the rain suddenly pouring down in the front yard, so I went to the back to watch the rain gauge fill up. Nothing! It WASN"T raining in the back yard. Not a drop.
Convinced I was just not seeing it, I went out on the deck. Dry! I even went out in the yard because sometimes the trees absorb a lot of rain at first. Nothing! It was several minutes before rain finally started falling in the back.
Talk about being on the edge of a cloud!!! Has this ever happened to you?
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Daffodils, Trash, And Old Electronics
I finally got about 3/4 of the daffodils planted. I have a front yard island bed surrounding the Saucer Magnolia tree and a 3' boulder ...