Friday, July 8, 2011

DUST STORM

OUR DRIVE TO WORK CUTS THROUGH THE MOHAVE INDIAN RESERVATION.  BEAUTIFUL IRRIGATED HAY FIELDS OR COTTON FIELDS, IT’S A NINE MILE TRIP.

THE OTHER NIGHT AFTER WORK WE WERE HAVING A MONSOON EVENT AND ADMIRING THE LIGHTENING OFF TO THE SOUTH OF US.  SUDDENLY THE WIND PICKED UP AND THE TUMBLE WEEDS WERE CUTTING ACROSS THE ROAD IN OUR HEAD LIGHTS.

AS WE MADE A LEFT TURN HEADED DUE EAST BETWEEN THE FIELDS, THE WIND REALLY PICKED UP, WITH THE WIND OUT OF THE SOUTH.  ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF THE ROAD WAS AN OPEN FIELD THAT HAD JUST BEEN CHISEL PLOWED AND WORKED UP FOR PLANTING.

IN THE BLINK OF AN EYE THE VISIBILITY WENT TO ZERO AND I SWEAR THE WIND MOVED THE HONDA HALF OFF THE ROAD ONTO THE SHOULDER. I HAVE NEVER IN MY LIFE SEEN SUCH A DUST STORM.  THE FIELD WAS LITERALLY BLOWING ACROSS THE ROAD!

WE COULD NOT SEE OR MOVE.  WE JUST SAT THEIR HALF OFF THE ROAD WAITING FOR THE NEXT CAR TO COME ALONG AND PLOW RIGHT INTO US. WE LITERALLY DIDN’T KNOW WHAT TO DO?  WE COULD BOTH TASTE THE DUST AND ALL THE WINDOWS WERE CLOSED TIGHT.

AFTER A LONG 10 OR 15 MINUTES AND TWO OTHER CARS LINED UP BEHIND US HALF OFF THE ROAD, WE MANAGED TO SLOWLY DO A U-TURN AND HEAD BACK THE WAY WE CAME AND WENT THE LONG WAY HOME.

IT WAS OUR FIRST DUST STORM, AND A SCARY EVENT.

I UNDERSTAND THAT UNCLE HANS WILL BE ALONG IN THE NEXT FEW DAYS WITH A STORM STORY OF HIS OWN FROM WISCONSIN.

BE SAFE OUT THERE !

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

SUMMER TIME

THE RED BELLY SNAKE BLOG BY UNCLE HANS MADE ME THINK BACK TO OUR LAST TWO SUMMERS AT WATERFALL MOUNTAIN NEAR OATMAN.

GEEES, THE RATTLESNAKES, THE RED RACER SNAKE INSIDE THE CAMPER, THOSE PESKY GROUND SQUIRRELS, TRYING TO DUMP THE SHITTER UPHILL, THE MICE WARS, A NEW CAT, OH THE GOOD OLE DAYS.

THIS SUMMER HAS BEEN  MORE RELAXED, WITHOUT ALL THOSE PROBLEMS. WE HAVE INTERNET, THE LAUNDRY ROOM IS A SHORT WALK, IT’S A CLOSER DRIVE TO WORK, AND WE HAVE THE NEW PORCH. HELL, WE EVEN HAVE FLOWERS ON THE PORCH, (AND RENT TO PAY).

 LIFE IS STILL INTERESTING,  A COUPLE OF WEEKS BACK THE A/C UNIT IN THE BEDROOM WAS RUNNING AND JUMPED OFF IT’S STAND AND LANDED SIDE WAYS AT THE END OF THE BED IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT. WE BOTH JUMPED UP IN UNISON AND DIDN’T KNOW IF WE SHOULD BE RESUCING THE A/C UNIT OR LOCATING THE HAND GUN BY THE BED?

THE A/C UNIT LIVED, BUT NOW PISSES ON THE FLOOR, SO WE’VE GOT IT STANDING ON A PLASTIC TUB TO CATCH THE WATER DRIPPINGS.

WE BOUGHT THE NEW KITCHEN CABINETES AND COUNTER TOP YESTERDAY WE WILL HAVE PICTURES AS WE TRY TO INSTALL THEM.  SO FAR THE PROJECT IS ONLY $100 OVER BUDGET.

THE SUMMER MONSOON SEASON IS UPON US AND WE HAD OUR FIRST RAIN OF THE SEASON.  IT’S A MIXED BLESSING AS THE RAIN COOLS DOWN THE TEMPS, BUT THE ADDED HUMIDITY MAKES IT JUST AS UNCOMFORTABLE.

JUST ANOTHER SUMMER ON THE DESERT FOR THE HAPPY CAMPERS!






Monday, July 4, 2011

Timothy E. Wilkinson

September 12, 1959-July 4, 2011 

My nephew Tim passed away this morning.  He had Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease or CJD for short.  This disease was diagnosed less than a month ago.  If you have any interest you can google CJD to see what it is all about.


Tim is the first baby I remember.  I used to take  care of him and  his brother all the time when they were little.  It was easy, they were on the farm next to ours. 

Tim was a life long farmer, in fact he operated the farm that grew I up on.  He had a wife, one daughter, and two grand daughters. 

You know, if he had died of cancer or in a car accident or some means of death we are familiar with it would be easier to accept and understand.  But CJD, which is practically unheard of, is just too, too bizarre.  Especially since there are NO answers as to how he got it.

Tim, you will be missed and you are gone way too soon. 

Monsoon season is on the way

 

By JAMES CHILTON/The Daily News

Published: Thursday, June 30, 2011 1:19 AM MDT

BULLHEAD CITY — Monsoon season in Arizona officially started on June 15, but more than two weeks later, residents in Mohave County still haven’t seen a drop of the famous (and in some cases, infamous) monsoon rains.


That could be set to change soon, however. According to the National Weather Service, the Tri-state will begin to see the first vestiges of monsoon season as early as next week, though it could still take another two weeks before enough moist air from Mexico arrives to begin forming any major storm systems here.


“I wouldn’t call it like an onset, more like a ‘slosh’ of monsoon,” said Faith Borden, a meteorologist with the NWS in Las Vegas. “The high is not exactly where we want it, but we are starting to see some moisture coming in from Mexico.”


According to the NWS, the monsoon occurs when intense heat from the sun causes the local air pressure to drop, which in turn causes the winds to shift direction from the west to the south and southeast, beginning to bring moist air from the Gulf of Mexico into the area. The sudden influx of moist air, combined with the heat, causes it to become unstable, eventually forming scattered thunderstorms. As the rains fall, the air becomes even more moist, sparking additional thunderstorms that typically last through the end of September, when the air temperature finally cools off to the point that the winds resume their regular flow.

While meteorologists had speculated about a monsoon “season” in North America for decades, it wasn’t until 2008 that the NWS finally pinned down the June 15 to Sept. 30 calendar it now uses to track the monsoon. Before that, Borden said, monsoon season was determined whenever the average dewpoint rose to 54 degrees for three days straight.


Borden did acknowledge that this year’s monsoon is coming a little later than usual, adding that the real rains might not begin until mid-July. Typically, she said, the Tri-state region gets between three and six inches of rain during the monsoon, though as much as half of that can come from a single powerful storm system.


“It is very fickle, even in a good year,” Borden said. “Typically we look for mid-July in our area, maybe early-July for the Mohave area. However, this year we’re looking for it a couple weeks later — what we’re seeing this next week is what we normally see around the beginning of June.”


All the same, she said, the NWS is calling for scattered showers and thunderstorms as early as Independence Day, meaning the monsoon may not be far behind.


“We’re looking for hot temperatures this weekend, and then next week some gradual shifting of moisture and for the Mohave area, probably some isolated-to-scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms,” she said.


While the monsoon season gets its name from the torrential rains that soak the Indian subcontinent every year, Borden said that name can be a bit misleading for residents of the high desert.


“Just because we’re in a monsoon pattern doesn’t mean it’s going to rain every day,” she said. “Really, if you get one area that has a pretty good rain event one day, the atmosphere is what we call ‘worked over,’ so you’re not likely to see the rain the following day.”

Friday, July 1, 2011

Red Belly Snake

By Uncle Hans

A local bar owner, Shane, asked Renee to "step out back" of the bar to see something last week.  He had a Red belly snake.  I have no idea what that is, but they are harmless...............

hans5

..............now Renee is scared of a few things, like mice, arithmetic, not having lipstick, but she is not afraid of snakes.............

hans6

.............no, she does not like them like that!

hans7

By Uncle Hans