Monday, December 31, 2007
Florida Mussels Get a Reprieve - It Rained in North Georgia
Now if I could do the goal on an insurance year, my first ride in 2007 was not until the end of January. If my effective date was 01/28/07 to 01/28/08, I might be able to get in the 124 miles. But, I'll keep it on the 2007 year and start sooner this time to do the 2008 in 2008.
Fog shot off my back deck followed by the best news of the weekend which was 2.5 inches of rain on Friday and Sunday combined. Lake Lanier is up about 6 inches this morning but it is still not enough to rescue the mussels.
This is a view of the mountains from one of the roads in north Hall County. Rough life for the folks who live here to have to look out their back windows and see this view everyday. Or, when it snows in the mountains, see the snow on the peaks.
Shoal Creek was running at a good rate at the crossing on Hwy 52 east of Brookton. Last couple of weeks, it only had a trickle. At the point the creek disappears is a 200 to 300 foot or so drop. Good news for the Florida mussels - this water will end up in Lake Lanier and then most likely be released to keep the river level up south of the Florida state line.
Monday, December 24, 2007
Lake Lanier Mussels No Longer Endangered - They're Dead
While water continues to be released downstream for the sake of the Florida endangered mussels and the Gulf oysters, millions of dollars are being lost by local businesses on Lake Lanier. Boat ramps are closed which is costing the bait and tackle shops along the lake a lot of income. The 1996 Olympic venue is high and dry and may well not have the water level necessary for the spring training trips made by many of our northern colleges to this area.
The pictures below (it was a dreary day as all days are now that the water level is so low) shows the water level at the Clark's Bridge boat ramp and the Olympic scoring tower as well as some of the poor mussels that have been left high and dry.
My real questions is: Prior to the mid-50's and early 60's when Lake Lanier, West Point Lake, and others on the Chattahoochee and Flint Rivers were built, what did the Florida mussels do when there was a drought and what did the oysters do when the water flow was so low? Or, did we never have droughts in the southeast and the rivers always ran full? I grew up in Texas and remember droughts there but have to feel that the southeast was never without ample supplies of water based on the reaction from our southern neighbors.
For a bit of history about droughts and the river system feeding the Appalachicola, visit the websites below.
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/drought/drght_history.html
http://www.sam.usace.army.mil/op/rec/acf/history.htm
http://www.rivercenter.uga.edu/education/k12resources/basinsofga2.htm
And the moon continues to come up over Lake Lanier as viewed through the trees from my back deck. And, as surely as the moon rises, rain will come again and refill Lake Lanier. But, it will be too late for the mussels of Lake Lanier. Maybe we can import some from Florida to restock when we once again have a full pool.
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Its Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas
Anyway, got up this morning, went downstairs, and looked out the window to discover that it had snowed toilet paper during the evening and that icicles were hanging off most of our trees, covered our bushes, and been able to wrap around 0ur cars. Will give whomever credit, they even made a pattern across my camper top which is off the truck right now and had it looking like ribbons had been tied over it.
We do not have a clue who did this and wonder if it was the wrong house since we have a high school teacher living nearby. With no teenagers or college students living at home, it was just a bit weird but exactly like something I would have done or might do again just for fun. Whoever tossed the big roll over the powerline which is about 30 to 40 feet above ground should be recruited by the Falcons since they could use someone with an arm.
Now for the big question. How do you clean this stuff our of the trees? It is simple. Take one each lighter and light the end of a stringer. Stand back and watch it flame like a fuse and disappear. It had rained last night so could not do this immediately but did a few of them tonight and it is almost as much fun as setting off fireworks. There are no leaves left on the trees and the paper burns so quick that it can't catch the bark on fire so there is little to no danger.
We were able to recover the plastic back that the paper was brought to the house in. I have given that to a good friend in the local police department who is going to have it scanned with the new technology using laser and infrared that makes it easy to identify fingerprints on materials that are otherwise difficult to lift prints from.
Monday, December 17, 2007
Debbie's Birthday Weekend - Windy and No Riding
The day started with a beautiful sunrise as we looked off the back deck. Hard to believe that downtown Gainesville is a short 3.5 mile drive.
She spent Thursday with a good friend from high school eating and shopping in Dahlongega, the Dawsonville Outlet Mall, and locally here in Gainesville. On Friday night, we went to Zanzo's in Clarkesville. This is one of our favorite places to eat and once again, we had a great meal.
There was no bicycle riding this weekend. It was wet, it was cold, it was windy. So I did the sensible thing! I went with Debbie while she got a massage and I got my feet worked on. The reflexology seemed to help so I am willing to do that some more.
On Sunday afternoon just before sunset, I was able to get a picture that will impress some of my friends and cause others to wonder why I would take such a picture. Then, I got really interested in the history of this fine establishment which has provided the Loveless family several emergency meals on our trips to Florida during Christmas holidays or to Texas when it was late at night, we were in Vicksburg, MS and nothing else was open for starving children to find sustenance.
Thanks to Atlanta Magazine for the bit of info below.
W - Waffle House is as Atlanta as Coca-Cola, CNN, and Delta, only more demure.
A - Avondale Estates, the English-inspired planned city founded in 1924 just east of Decatur, is where it all started.
F - From urban strips like Buford Highway to interstate outposts, Waffle House beams right up there with the rest of commercialized America -- with the Exxons and Burger Kings and KFCs -- but with such a stripped-down unpretentiousness as to be almost invisible.
F - Forget about the drinks, though. Let's talk about money. Yours and theirs. You can still eat to the popping point for less than ten bucks.
L - Listen to how they do it. "All our food is cooked up front and right in sight," Tom Forkner said the other day.
E - Employees learn how to flip the burgers and scatter the hash browns, but more than anything else, Waffle Housers learn about customer service.
H - How does a Waffle House get born? How do they decide where to put it? Well, it's got little to do with elaborate studies and talk of paradigm shifts.
O - Other chains remake themselves - modernize. Waffle House recently added biscuits to the menu, and butterscotch waffles, and deli turkey.
U - Ultimately, Waffle House might end up in all fifty states, but for now most of its locations are in the South, and more than 200 of those are in metropolitan Atlanta.
S - Search the Internet and you won't get very far without coming across an international outpouring of Waffle House love.
E - Eggs lead the category of most-served menu items. Since 1955, Waffle House has dished out more than 1.5 billion of them - more than hash browns, more than waffles.
"You never lose a customer who is satisfied!" Don't we wish some of the WaHo competitors understood that.
This is the link for the entire Atlanta Magazine article - http://www.atlantamagazine.com/article.aspx?id=17916
This is a history link from the Waffle House website:
http://www.wafflehouse.com/whhistory.asp
Monday, December 10, 2007
Quillians Quickie 25 and the CCG 66 - Clermont - Cornelia - Gainesville
Special Message at the bottom of this post
Saturday started out like most Saturdays when the weather is nice. Decisions had to be made about where one should ride the bicycle that day. The weather was a little misty but that was not going to deter me from my quest to ride 2007 miles in 2007.
Should I ride from Murrayville since I had to go by the bank to get that stuff that stores require when you want snacks, drinks, end of ride food, etc. As I approached Murrayville, the mist got a bit heavier so I made an executive decision to move on toward Clermont. The mist got heavier the closer I got to Clermont. I decided to delay the ride and make a run to my favorite bike shop.
The scene below was just a nice view of a small pond that is down about 3 to 5 feet versus the level of Lake Lanier which is down about 20 feet now.
And then, it was time for Party #1 at Chateau Elan and compliments of Summit Consulting. A good time was had by all or so I've been told. Beautiful presentation on the chicken, steak, 2 spears of asparagus, 1 baby carrot, mashed potatoes, and a medallion of some kind of squash,
After dinner and an evening of Casino, it was time for the entertainment. We were provided a fantastic band (name unknown at this point - I'll ask). But, we almost lost an underwriter who really stole the show from the paid performer. Ciecily Thornton did a great job of singing Old Time Rock and Roll. The paid performer had to rip the mike out of her hand and we all think it was because she knew when she had met her match and might lose her job.
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Sunrise Over the Sautee-Nacoochee Indian Mound
The Legend of Sautee and Nacoochee is well documented. The first White settlers, coming up the Unicoi Trail, now known as Georgia Highway 17, heard the story as they stopped to rest in the shade of the giant white oak, still standing adjacent the Old Sautee Store. (Hwy 17 & 255) One among them, George Williams, a young lad at the time, retold this story in his memoirs. The Cherokees considered themselves to be a superior race, as indeed they were. Handsome, tall and intelligent, they even had an alphabet, the first in America. They were not nomads, they built log houses and tilled the soil. They had but one grievous fault. This superiority was allowed to show. Naturally, this did not endear them to the neighboring tribes. One of these, the Chickasaws, was constantly at war with the Cherokee. However, there were moments of relative calm. During one such truce, a band of Chickasaws was allowed to cross over Cherokee land, provided they stay on the Unicoi Trail and rested only at designated spots. One such spot was where two trails crossed at the junction of two lovely valleys, the same place where - a century later, a young George Williams stopped.