Ridgecrest Blog – WOW

We have selected a fellow Bear Flag League member, Ridgecrest Blog as this week’s Weblog of the Week (WOW).

sleepingcomputer.gifQuoting David, the proprietor, it’s about “A South Dakota boy blogging about life and stuff in Ridgecrest, a small town in California’s upper Mojave Desert. Ridgecrest is not the end of the world. But when the wind blows just right… you can smell it from here.”

David writes about his family, twins and all, and mixes in enough political sage stuff to render a blend of anecdotal humor and perspectives on the world. Quoting his FAQ page, “I’m not writing this for you. I’m writing it for me. If someone else besides me finds some enjoyment from it – great. If you find it boring and mindless then I’m sorry you chose to waste your time here being bored.”

We haven’t been bored yet. We’re happy to name Ridgecrest Blog as our Weblog of the Week.

Sleeping computer nerd graphic shamelessly stolen from Ridgecrest Blog

UPDATE: Ridgecrest Blog Responds.

Cucumbers Know More than SCOTUS

cucumber . . . about Carbon Dioxide in the atmosphere, that is.

In April, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) ruled that the Environmental Pollution Agency must consider Carbon Dioxide (CO2) as an air pollutant!

Now, as you may know, the gas CO2, is critical to the growth of vegetation on our planet; plants ‘breathe CO2 and exhale oxygen’ as it were. Animals, including us, do exactly the opposite – breathe oxygen and exhale CO2. You know what happens when animals are deprived of oxygen, so you must have a clue what might happen to CO2-deprived vegetation.

The current editorial at CO2 Science addresses that scenario – that is, an actual scientific experiment that documents what happens when cucumbers are deprived of CO2 (The following has been excerpted from “Carbon Dioxide: A Vital Atmospheric Resource Under Siege“):

Continue reading…

Devil Winds

thermometer.jpgYesterday marked the 148th anniversary of an astounding weather event.

California, like other regions, experiences occasional hot, dry winds; that is, when the air heats up due to downslope compressional heating. In Southern California these are called “Santa Ana winds,” while in Colorado, “Chinook winds” and in Bavaria, “Föhn winds.” In the deserts of North Africa, the Arabic word “Simoon” applies.

What causes these winds? Short answer: insolation, advection and the adiabatic heating process. Sorry, Al, you can’t blame this event on SUVs or carbon footprints.

June 17, 1859 – The only ‘simoon’ ever to occur in the United States
is reported by a United States Coast Survey vessel off Goleta. A
northwest wind brings scorching temperatures of 133 degrees between
1:00 and 2:00 that afternoon. Birds fall from the sky, crops shrivel
and cattle die under the shade of oak trees.

The record 133° temperature has been discredited since that time due to the thermometer having been in direct sunlight. However this vivid description from A History of the Aguajitos Ranch paints a picture that the temperature must have come very close to that:

Continue reading…

Pink Eschevaria

We picked this up yesterday at the garden department in the local home improvement warehouse. It’s called Pink Eschevaria and is a succulent similar to the “Hen and Chicks” and to another unknown eschevaria we have in our garden. I know that the hen and chicks variety is native to the southwestern United States and Mexico, but some eschevaria are native to the African Continent.

pink-eschevaria

Nature Walk

Today, we drove down to the Palos Verdes Peninsula to take a nature walk along a path preserved in a rustic canyon. I snapped this picture of a honey bee browsing for nectar in a field of daisies.

honey-bee.jpg