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Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2023 11:22 am
by grayman
arthwollipot wrote: ↑Thu Apr 20, 2023 1:07 am
There's a total solar eclipse today, visible from a remote town in Western Australia. We'll get a partial here, but it's heavily clouded.
Happens a lot here whenever there's an astronomical event; clouds and rain.
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2023 11:26 am
by grayman
Love the photos.
I miss travelling through the western states.
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2023 2:34 pm
by President Bush
grayman wrote: ↑Thu Apr 20, 2023 11:26 am
Love the photos.
I miss travelling through the western states.
FL and I are in Escalante for a couple weeks. Driven through this area before but never explored. Weather is looking good, don't want rain, makes things impassible.
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2023 11:45 pm
by arthwollipot
grayman wrote: ↑Thu Apr 20, 2023 11:22 am
arthwollipot wrote: ↑Thu Apr 20, 2023 1:07 am
There's a total solar eclipse today, visible from a remote town in Western Australia. We'll get a partial here, but it's heavily clouded.
Happens a lot here whenever there's an astronomical event; clouds and rain.
There are some nice pics from that remote town in Western Australia, where the weather was spectacularly clear.
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2023 5:09 am
by stanky
This doesn't belong here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49RHlVw ... ndthepress
(Norwegians make an ice track that rotates)
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2023 5:52 am
by Admin
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Sun Apr 23, 2023 4:47 pm
by stanky
The Red River Gorge is one of Kentucky's natural wonder places.
It's currently on fire:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/fire-kentuck ... 50994.html
meanwhile, we've had 3 perfect spring days in a row. Funny how that makes me nervous.
Well, after days in the 80's (F) it's due to freeze tonight and the next.
This only bothers me in that i see how it bothers my friends that aren't humans.
It's been a terrible year for birds, with the new avian flu killing record numbers of wild birds.
Add to that the insect collapse, and the lack of pollinators, and you've got trouble for plants. It's all so inter-wound (and right here) that i have to see it as a whole. The patient (nature) is suffering.
These wild temp swings have an impact. One we mostly don't notice at first.
A side-bar of the impact (climate change) is that certain species (generalists) gain an advantage with the dying of the specialists.
The trees that will likely move into the space once taken by the white ash trees are invasive and fairly useless (to humans).
Kentucky is in a crisis for white oak trees suitable for bourbon barrels. Bourbon is huge in KY and by law, requires barrels made of white oak. They are single use barrels. It takes a large tree to make the barrels.
oops.
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Tue Apr 25, 2023 4:18 am
by President Bush
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Fri Apr 28, 2023 4:10 am
by President Bush
Don't recall ever having seen a such a healthy-looking mushroom popping up out of deep sand. FL spotted this today, google image search indicates genus
tulostoma. There's a species
tulostoma utahense, the suffix
ense meaning in Spanish "from a place". And we're in Utah, go figure.
- thumbnail (81).jpeg (239.08 KiB) Viewed 7028 times
Re: nature boys part two
Posted: Fri Apr 28, 2023 3:50 pm
by stanky
somehow missed that post. Awesome, grayman.
can't tell if it's real.