Warm photo for a cold day

It’s going to take a while to get used to this skyline when heading west out of Bismarck! I never realized how much that bridge seemed like a “door across the river” until it was gone. Having nothing overhead while driving across the river is really weird, especially with the roof open. There won’t be any more of those days until Spring, however…unless I get cabin fever and turn stubborn (like THAT ever happens…)

This was taken during the warm weather of the first weekend of November. What a difference a few days make!

Fallen Farm #37611

I lost track of how many Fallen Farm posts I’ve done in my series, so now I’m just going to use the photo number. This is a barn near Baldwin, just a stone’s throw north of Bismarck. My friend Tony was back home from sunny Alaska for a little while to visit family, and he and I took our cameras to go poke around the outskirts of town while our wives had other things to do.

This is a really cool barn, and I couldn’t help but notice some old equipment in the field thereby. It was a perfect shot, a different angle than I’ve had on this spot before. It’s even better when shared with one of my closest friends ever. I’ve got more to post from the day, but that’ll have to wait for another time. I have to go shovel my sidewalks now!

Bismarck-Mandan homeless numbers skyrocket in late October

With the old Liberty Memorial Bridge gone, and the last of the debris being cleaned up and removed, hundreds – maybe thousands – of pigeons which called it home are now…well, homeless. Granted, they’re pigeons and could probably find a perch nearly anywhere; however, pigeons have called that bridge home for decades! In fact, the acid in their poop was a significant contributor to the bridge’s deterioration.

Not much goes through the mind of a pigeon. They are, however, attached to the bridge and are still congregating on its wreckage. I’m a bird lover, so I can’t help but feel sorry for these birds whose world got turned upside down last week. They don’t know any better. These birds will continue to cling to the bridge while it lies in pieces just like they did when it spanned the river.

The columns don’t provide much solace for a pigeon, but they’re all that’s left. Soon they’ll be gone, too. Don’t these poor guys just look like they’re wondering what the heck happened to “their” bridge? I suppose that’s the bird lover in me trying to empathize with them.

This sandbar has become a sort of pigeon refugee camp, as has the sandbar just south of the new bridge. They can’t stay here forever; soon the river will freeze, and may even rise above this sandbar. They need some sort of bird “community organizer” to come up with a game plan to relocate!

Progress brings bad along with the good. In this case, it’s the pigeons who got their world rocked, especially when those explosives went off! I’m told the crew attempted to scare the pigeons away before blowing the bridge, but there’s really nothing you can do. Even with the bridge reduced to a few remaining beams strewn about the ground below, you still can’t drive those pigeons away. Naturally there was some collateral damage during the explosions. The birds who survived need to find another place soon, as winter is bearing down on us!

Don’t forget to vote! Plus, a suggestion…

It’s time! Actually, it’s been time for a while, since early voting centers have been open. I voted last week, for example. You can scroll down a little bit if you want to hear what a goofball like me thinks about the measures and the Presidential candidates.

One thought crossed my mind, though. If you wouldn’t mind indulging me in a little experiment, please write me in for Burleigh County Commission. It would be interesting to see if we could make a statistical showing.

If you don’t know when to vote, please visit the North Dakota Secretary of State’s Office at www.nd.gov/sos to find your polling location. You may even get a sample ballot in PDF format that you can print and use to practice. You can weigh your choices, fill out the sample ballot, and take it with you. Nobody can cast your vote for you, but you can use the sample ballot to help remember the choices you wish to make. It’s not like you’re taking the SAT in there; you can bring notes or a completed sample ballot in to assist you. Make your choices on the sample ballot, take it with you to the poll, and copy your well-considered choices to the actual ballot. That’s perfectly legal and a good idea if you have a shaky memory.

I know the media has carried Barack Obama through this election, and they may well push him over the top; but with the worship he’s been given by all the mainstream newspapers, broadcast news outlets, and cable news stations, he should be up by thirty points in the polls. The fact that he isn’t gives me a little bit of optimism. The fact that ACORN has managed hundreds of thousands of fraudulent voter registrations is worrisome, however. We’ll let it all shake out and see what happens.

Even if the Obamessiah lost in a landslide, you know there would be weeks of caterwauling about voter fraud. If he wins, we’re in for a bumpy ride; however, if he and his ilk take the country where they want to, the backlash could seal their party’s fate for decades. Now is not the time to worry; it’s the time to call all your friends who don’t want to be socialists, rally ’em up, and get them out to vote. Regardless of the result, we’re going to have a big mess to sort out come Wednesday morning. The difference between the two candidates will be the nature of the hangover.

I’m going to be too busy Tuesday to pay much attention to the coverage until evening. To torture one’s self with a constant barrage of news all day isn’t worthwhile anyway. See y’all tomorrow night, then.

Bye Bye, North Dakota Economy – Obama plans to “bankrupt” the coal industry


Let’s not start spending those trust fund dollars yet! In an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, the Obamessiah promises a global warming agenda so aggressive it will bankrupt the coal industry. We get 49% of our nation’s energy from coal-fired power plants, so you can imagine what his policies will in turn do to the rest of the nation as well. Listen to his own word:

“If someone wants to build a coal power plant they can, it’s just that it will bankrupt them.”
How a North Dakotan could vote for Obama can only be explained by: dementia; habitually voting Democrat; getting their news only from the Bismarck Tribune or NBC/ABC/CBS/CNN. This guy will wreck one of the largest industries driving our state’s economy (one which helps insulate us from economic troubles in other parts of the country) while thumbing his nose at North Dakota’s mainstream opposition to things like gun control and abortion.

North Dakota boasts its “Energy Corridor” to attract new people to our state, as a reason for new industries and businesses to come to our state, and as an integral part of North Dakota’s strong economy. Want to make life in North Dakota miserable? Enact the Obama global warming plan.

Don’t forget to vote!

I received the word Wednesday that I’d be needed to join a documentary film crew coming in from California on Monday and Tuesday, travelling all over North Dakota. Two things immediately came to mind: babysitter and election day. No worries; North Dakota provides for Early Voting!

I edited the voter and pollworker education videos being used by the state, so I’m no stranger to voting procedures and equipment operations. My boss closed our office on Thursday, saying that it was too nice for everybody to be stuck in the office, so I used the time to saunter down to the City/County Office Building on north 5th Street to vote. Then I took my little boy down to the sandbar to watch the machines tearing apart the bridge debris and to throw sticks into the river.

I was surprised to see how many people were there! I had no problem strolling right in and getting my ballot, but by the time I had left the line of eager voters ran all the way out into the hall. Because early voting locations serve multiple precincts, there were multiple optical ballot scanners in the room. Each scanner and ballot was color coded to make sure that ballots were counted for the proper precinct. Since I did the training video on the M100 Ballot Scanner too, I watched the display on the machine as I fed it my ballot. I was number 477 for that machine for the day. I think that’s pretty decent turnout!

Then I saw an AP story this morning that indicates a quarter of North Dakotans may have already voted! More than two thirds of the vote-by-mail ballots have been returned, nearly three quarters of the absentee ballots have been submitted, and nearly 20,000 people had taken advantage of the six Early Voting centers provided in our state. Wow!

After working on all those videos, I pay particular attention to pollworkers and equipment. I must say that the pollworkers at the Bismarck location were very professional, friendly, and obviously knew what they were doing. Handling a voting center serving multiple precincts complicates things, too. Hats off to the folks running the voting center!

If you have any confusion about the measures, I’d like to point out a couple of things that may help in your decision.

Measure #1 puts oil money away into a “rainy day” fund. There are some questions about the way in which it does it, and government types are moaning that getting money OUT of the fund is too difficult. But look at it this way: North Dakota’s government budget has SKYROCKETED in the past few years. Governor Hoeven is a big spender, and nobody in the state legislature wants to argue with him. When they start instituting all these bigger budgets and new expenditures, they’ll never go away. What happens when oil revenues level off or decline? Let them have the money now and they’ll spend it. Put it in a trust fund, and it will indirectly help control state budgets and spending now.

Who’s against Measure #2 (the individual and corporate income tax cut measure)? It has only one opponent: a group of PUBLIC EMPLOYEES’ UNIONS dumping hundreds of thousands of dollars, mostly from outside of North Dakota, into fighting lower taxes for North Dakotans. I’ve met North Dakota residents fighting to get this measure on the ballot and see it passed. I’ve posted pics of them from the motorcycle show, for instance. But the only people trying to run ads against it and putting money into fighting lower taxes for North Dakotans are a unions trying to keep those taxes as high as possible so their members benefit from your money. Think about that before you vote.

Measure #3 looks like a good thing, fighting tobacco use. But the part that really caught me was the funding. After to tobacco money runs out,”If in any biennium, the tobacco prevention and control trust fund does not have adequate dollars to fund a comprehensive plan, the treasurer shall transfer money from the water development trust fund to the tobacco prevention and control trust fund in an amount equal to the amount determined necessary by the executive committee to fund a comprehensive plan.” Marrying the tobacco program dollars to a Dept of Health water program raised a red flag in my book. No mention of any water trust fund is mentioned on the ballot itself; you should click here for a PDF of the full text of all ballot measures to get the full description of the measures.

Measure #4 wants to make the head of WSI a political appointment, rather than someone hired by the board. I don’t think this is necessarily a good idea, and I don’t think WSI’s problems were on the part of its leader. I have good inside information that there were a few other disfunctional people lower down the ladder causing the problems. But the bottom line on this measure is the fact that WSI management is not broke enough to “fix.” We don’t need governors installing friends or supporters in that position; we need people who the WSI Board feels are qualified. Let them continue the hiring.

There you have it. Remind everybody to get out and vote on Tuesday! Try to be as informed as you can. If you can’t decide who to support for a particular office, write me in. I wrote myself in for one of the County Commission positions, for instance. It would be interesting if I got enough write-in votes to actually show up statistically!

Oh, I didn’t get an “I Voted” sticker this year. I recycled that photo. Maybe they save those for election day, not early voting centers.

Big Audio Dynamite II

Hat tip to my favorite Mick Jones band for the title of this post. I hiked a long ways today, humping some very heavy gear all over the Bismarck-Mandan area to capture lots of photos. I also had a hand in shooting high-definition (HD) video of the area today too, but I don’t own that footage. Sorry. My personal camcorder was rolling, but the footage didn’t turn out as well as my footage of Span One going down. So I’ll stick to my primary objective: here are the pics!

People were lining the hills from above the railroad bridge all the way to the hill north of I-94. Doing so only provided a view of the middle span.

Speaking of the middle span, there was a lot of confusion as to why it came down in one giant piece. I’ll tell you what the explosives expert of the demolition crew told me. Before they install their shape charges, they cut the bolts anchoring the bridge spans to the pilings. They can’t be cutting them with a grinder and sending sparks all over their explosives once they’ve been placed, after all. They had the east span rigged as well as the bottom of the middle span, but then the winds came up. They didn’t want to risk their guys being on the top of the middle span if the wind blew it over, so they opted to drop it and finish cutting it on the ground with torches. Notice that in the days before the demolition, they pushed rocks and dirt out below the bridge. That allows the crews to have land on which to salvage the steel, much easier than hunting around the water.

Notice the piece on the right hand side, the top of the pier that underwent repairs in an attempt to help the old bridge limp along. The repaired areas served their purposes, keeping the old bridge in operation until the crews were ready to take ‘er down.

Thanks to the guys who let me poke around a little bit where the cleanup occurred. I liked the arch of this digger reaching over the pillars of the last remaining bridge support. In the background, the big nasty machinery is chewing up the metal as we speak. As of this evening, they pretty much had the east span cleaned up.

How about those jaws? This machine reminds me of that James Bond villain. This guy’s got a pretty fun job, I bet. Chewin’ up steel. I can see how a feller could derive a great deal of satisfaction from it.

By the way, I heard they’re saving chunks of the bridge like this in order to put them in the park on either end of the new bridge. Obviously they have a lot of work to do on those areas, and are making a lot of progress on the west end, but now that the other bridge is going away I imagine they’ll make quick work of the memorial park on the east end too. They just have a lot of rubble and debris to remove first.

Coolest souvenirs of the day: these are pieces of shrapnel from the shaped charges that brought down the mighty Memorial Bridge. I got them from the demolition crew that was doing the aforementioned cleanup. They appear to be copper, and I guess they flew away from the detonation at an extremely high rate of speed. Thankfully these two managed to land in my hands. I’ll keep them forever as a souvenir of the old humming bridge.

Coolest unexpected shot of the day: this guy was flying circles around the area reminding everybody to vote McCain-Palin next week. I’m not going to tell you who to vote for, but I suggest you vote against socialism. Against rabid gun control. Against infanticide. Against domestic terrorists. You get the picture. I Photoshopped this shot to bring the banner in closer to the plane…the drag line was actually a lot longer.

By the way, hats off to Brad Feldman for his coverage of this thing from start to finish. I was present videotaping at the symbolic groundbreaking with Senator Conrad way back when, and I think he was there as well…and he’s followed this project tirelessly. He had cool ideas like putting cameras in one of the houses next to the bridge blast, and loves Bismarck-Mandan as much as I do. I asked my wife to record KFYR and KXMB coverage on DVD here at the house, and can’t wait to go back and watch them both.

So…what’s next? Got anything else we need to blow up?

One more day with you


Yes, that’s right…one more day. The last two spans of the local landmark come crashing down Wednesday morning. Sad, isn’t it? The turnout was so amazing for the last one, I can’t wait to see how many people show up for this one! I’ve got my spot picked out…do you?

Thanks to Mike at the DOT for this map. It indicates the road closures as well as the Safe Zone. If anyone remains in that gray area, the crew can’t pull the trigger. So stay out!

If you want a copy of this map, click here for a PDF you can print and take with you. You’d better come early! There are a lot of eager spectators and the roads are closed before the boom. There were cars down there at 7:30am when I arrived last time!

Goodbye to a familiar texture

I posted this photo, the result of a Photo Club exercise at work, back in August 2006. Less than an hour later, Jason had already guessed the correct location: the bank on 4th and Rosser. Well, the familiar exterior of the bank is changing.

These workers are taking down that familiar jagged exterior and replacing it with some of those new blue-tinted mirrored windows. Jagged panels: old and busted. Blue mirrored: new hotness.

I’m sure they probably figured it was about time, and the new windows are probably more energy efficient, and the bank across the street is remodeling too. But it is sad to see familiar sights around Bismarck go away. That’s the price of progress, I suppose.

The Rain

The rain keeps coming down but it don’t bother me,
In fact it brings me back a favorite memory.
Of you laughing in the rain,
Your clothes are soaking wet…
Standin’ ‘neath the branches waitin’ for a kiss.

The rain is working very hard,
It’s got to water every little seed.
It’s beautifully ordinary,
Making life seem very good indeed… (whoa-oh, whoa-oh)
Beautifully ordinary,
Life with you is very good indeed… (whoa-oh, whoa-oh)

The rain keeps fallin’ down…

(“The Rain” – by the Subdudes, but best performed by my friends Tucker’d Out.)