Monday, February 23, 2009

When can we play in the snow?

Well vehicle problems have plagued the NASA project for a while. The luxurious Ford Expedition should be back in action this week! As a few of my work crews in the past have said, “she is wearing some new dancing shoes,” meaning she has new tires, nice deep ones that should help keep the high center of gravity going where we want it. Hopefully Wednesday we will be back up in the Dungeness with the possibility of fresh snow it if has been cold enough. Our servitude to the park may also be called upon as well; weather permitting, we are going to gear up for another little hike off Hurricane Ridge to tackle that snow survey on Friday. Here is a photo from our last survey up there...work sucks :)



The public outreach side of things is going well for the NASA project. Last week Dwight, Shea and I attended a Dungeness River Management Team meeting to get the latest news on the model. The following day we met with the model developer to discuss things on a more technical scale. Speaking of technical, here is the latest podcast creation, though it is at the draft stage. Any comments appreciated. It is meant to be a bit more nerdy, sorry about that.



GIS work is well…okay I am lazy. I have made some potential KML files, but need to get some descriptions attached to them so people know what they are looking at. Hope to accomplish a few of those soon. On the wildfire side of things, the progress is picking up steam, but still a bumpy ride…I am becoming very intimate with the various fire modeling platforms (FARSITE, FlamMap, BehavePlus) provided by our gracious federal agencies.

Finally, in an attempt to put some more fun into this blog. Do me a favor and check out the band Glasvegas. Their Pandora station is great and can’t wait to go somewhere and buy an album or two.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Rolling Up Into The Mountains

Hitting the snow sampling hard once again! Now that we have a weekly schedule outlined to hit all of our sites at least once every two weeks we have divided up into two crews. Rebecca and Shea take the Friday shift and Dwight and I take the Wednesday shift. The goal is to pay a visit to the sites that have been sampled the longest time ago.

Getting back into the groove of sampling didn’t take much. Last week, Dwight and I set out to attack the infamous BoJo snow course near Bon Jon Pass. This time last year we couldn’t have driven to the snow course without a snow machine or two, but we drove to the top with barely any slip in our Ford Expedition. The snow situation was dismal, BoJo gets the most snow of our intermediate sites and was nearly bare this go around, only getting a few points with measurable snow. Check out this graph of this year’s snow data compared to last year’s…not lookin’ so good.



On a sad note, the weather station at BoJo is down for unknown reasons. Dwight and I bench tested the HOBO there by swapping a couple of batteries, but the blinking lights that serve as the heart monitor were totally off…at this point I would be grateful for a blinking light next to the error indicator.

All other sites on the east side of the drainage checked out well, very little snow at all the other sites. Plus, the other four weather stations checked out okay and the roads were mostly bare and dry. Since we hit all of the low elevation sites before lunch, Dwight and I decided to hike up to Deer Ridge and get the rest of our sample sites, an unprecedented feat!

The inversion that Rebecca and Shea had was back and at the benches, I was sitting shirtless waiting for the sweat to dry from my clothes. Twenty minutes later, Dwight showed up huffing and puffing. Just after 1:00 we had a beautiful view of the Cascades so we decided to take a “safety nap” because we were way ahead of schedule. Trucking it up to Compensation point gave us no compensation…no snow there. However, Frozen Piggies had a few points with snow on them. The funny thing is that a deer has been tromping our sites up at Deer Ridge; how appropriate, yet a pain in the ass because it is reducing the snow at the site and creating holes that look similar to old sampling points.

I am currently reentering my hate phase of the love/hate relationship with GIS. I wish she would just leave me and make the pain go away, but that is another rant.