Catching some rays amid stormy skies

A different kind of ray appears during stormy situations, one that I think is far more beautiful than simple sunlight. The dark clouds form a perfect contrasting background for the light rays escaping the gaps therein. Any humidity in the air gives more life to those rays as they punch through the gloom, and then there are always birds sitting around staring at it and tweeting. That’s where I come in.

For the vertically oriented, here’s another take. These birds sat still for me for several minutes, finally scattering when I turned the truck around to head back toward home. The stoic tree, however remained.

Ronald Reagan Minuteman Missile Site (updated)

I took an amazing trip this weekend – to beautiful Cooperstown, North Dakota for a tour of the Ronald Reagan Minute Missile State Historic Site! I’d been waiting for this trip for years, since I heard there was a possibility that one of the decommissioned missile launch facilities would become a historic site. I wasn’t able to make it to the grand opening on July 31st because I was at the National Minuteman Missile park in South Dakota, but this turned out to be even better. I’ll post some pics here, but you really need to go take the tour and hear details about the site for yourself. I can’t be emphatic enough about how important this site is.

We got to tour the above-ground part of the facility first, including this security office. The guys in here determined who goes where, if anywhere, on the facility grounds.

I imagine riding out a North Dakota winter here was made a little easier with the presence of a game room! The books and magazines on the racks are from the time the facility was decommissioned.

Pretty cozy for a military chow facility, isn’t it? After this and a tour of the bunk rooms and facility commander’s office, we went down the elevator to the really cool stuff.

This gigantic steel door leads to the capsule containing the environmental control equipment which provides power, air, and water to the missileers. I say “capsule” because it really is shaped like a cold medicine capsule. Now I know how those little dots of Contac feel.

This is the doorway to the launch control capsule. Yes, that hole is small. You have to duck through it. This is a small door compared to the one leading to the equipment building, and it weighs eight tons. The other one must be four times as heavy, but they needed to be able to get big equipment in and out of that capsule.

This is one of the control panels, giving status indications of the ten missiles under Oscar Zero’s control as well as other important data. This facility can also control missiles at another facility in case those other personnel or their facility are incapacitated.

The contents of these rooms are on suspended floors, stabilized by pressurized shock absorbers. If I recall correctly, they’ve got three feet of travel available. The chairs are on rails and have five-point harnesses to hold the crew in place in case of bomb attack. This would keep the equipment and personnel in place and operational in the event of an attack.

I’m guessing artwork has been an Air Force tradition since some guy painted the nose of the first airplane. This is no exception. Here we see a painting from the inside of the launch control capsule, depicting an Oscar Zero crew. The tour guide explained that yes, everything in this painting means something.

The last guys to serve in this capsule memorialized the end of the day with this note in black marker. “In aquilae cura” means, “In the care of Eagles.”

There is a companion part of this trip, a deactivated and empty missile silo. I didn’t have the time to fly out there and check it out, even though it isn’t far away; I took time from my wife and little boys to make it to Oscar Zero at the last minute, and needed to get back to them. This photo is from the silo at the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site in South Dakota. It’s an older missile than what North Dakota has (I don’t believe the November 33 site has the glass cap and “missile” in it, however).

One thing I’m curious about is whether the face of the doors at Oscar Zero are decorated in any way resembling this door in the South Dakota facility. There were railings and chains that I wasn’t about to cross, so I didn’t get the opportunity to peek on the other side of the open doors.

Naturally I bought one of the souvenir coins available at the facility. The proceeds go to help the site and I like souvenirs of stuff like this. Suitable for framing, or laying on your scanner for a blog post. Mine’s staying in the plastic and going in my prize souvenir box.

I’ve got a LOT more photos thanks to the hospitality of the site staff, who accomodated my enthusiastic geekdom for most of the afternoon. I’ll throw up a gallery and post a link here shortly. When I got done with the tour, the day was over. I was able to sit with three of the guides and converse with them for a long time until it was pretty much quitting time, and they were absolutely friendly and fantastic. Go meet ’em!

One thing you absolutely must do before visiting this site: visit the NDSHS web page for this facility and click on the MP3 link titled “SHSND Podcast: The Atomic Age in North Dakota: Interview with Mark Sundlov” to listen. I was enthralled by this podcast when it was released a long time ago, and then pleasantly surprised to find out that Mark Sundlov is the site supervisor for Oscar Zero.

You’ll also want to check out the Friends of Oscar Zero website for information about the site and the surrounding area. I’m told there’s a Cold War interpretive museum in the works in Cooperstown. Your experience at Oscar Zero will be greatly enhanced by listening to the Atomic Age podcast MP3 and doing a little bit of homework on these sites.

My wife was pleased to see how giddy I was when I got back from this trip, and you can be sure I’m going back again. I also plan a gallery of photos, and when I do there’ll be a link here.

Come see what all the buzz was about

I was at a friend’s house the other night when I noticed that they had some of the most unblemished flowers that I’d ever seen, just sitting there beside the garage waiting to be photographed. I had some time this afternoon so I stopped by with my camera, caught a fleeting bit of sunlight between the clouds, and snapped away. Bonus: the flowers were crawling with various species of bees.

“Say, do you mind? I’m working here.” This fella didn’t look particularly thrilled at my nectar interruptus. This is perhaps my favorite shot of the day.

I caught this bee coming in for a landing along one of these pale yellow flowers. I don’t know what plant species it is, but it’s handy that they are as tall as I am. For the shots on the orange flowers I was pretty much laying in the grass and on the sidewalk.

Even bugs stumble sometimes, and this was one of those rare occasions where I was in the right place to catch it. Oops. “I meant to do that!”

“It’s coming right for us!” This was pretty trippy through the viewfinder. I took most of these at a distance of approximately six inches, the closest my fancy macro lens is able to focus.

Bring your own straw and drink up good, because the forecast was calling for a 50% chance of thunderstorms this weekend. Yuck. I’m glad I was able to share this little window of sunlight with the bugs. Maybe this weekend will contain some thunderstorm or lighting photography!

This year’s Perseid meteor shower

Earlier this week I was able to go out in the middle of the night and deprive myself of sleep in order to observe – and attempt to capture – the Perseid meteor shower. Despite the overwhelming light of the moon, I think it was a success.

Balancing a camera for long stellar exposures gets a bit more complicated when the moon is visible and bright; it brightens the sky considerably, drowning out many of the meteors and putting more light into the camera than one would like. While I was able to perform that balancing act ok, it did affect the kind of pictures that were possible.

I’d hoped to catch a brilliant, sparkly meteor painting a broad, sweeping arc across my camera’s field of view. Sadly, that didn’t happen this time around. I did, however, have a really nice time with my best friend and get to drink some ice cold Dew out in the middle of nowhere with my camera. I even had some pro HD video gear with me from work, but it simply wasn’t sensitive enough for the task.

Lots of Bismarck-Mandan residents were “in the know” about the meteor shower; I spotted many of them in my trek out of town to escape the city light. Hopefully they got as good a show as we did. There are more meteor showers coming up this year; if you missed this one, look out for more! Central North Dakota is a great place to go for watching these events, so be sure to take advantage of our location.

Shocker: Bismarck Tribune discovers Kent Conrad is under investigation…after his VIP loan cronies drop it

While ambling through my favorite discount retailer this weekend, the front page of the Bismarck Tribune caught my eye. Actually, it was the headline seen above: “Conrad cleared, scolded”. Amazing…Senator Conrad has been under ethics investigation for months but our ever vigilant sycophant media in this state has refused to investigate it! Any reluctant acknowledgement of the affair, while a rarity indeed, mostly consisting of reprinting a Conrad press release as fact and dutifully moving on.

Apparently the fact that the Democrat-controlled committee in charge of such matters has let him off changes the game. Now instead of having to print that one of their beloved Democrats is under investigation, they can print that he’s no longer under investigation. That’s how “journalism” works in the modern day, folks.

You want to know how difficult it is to research this stuff, that apparently seems to escape the unwilling North Dakota lapdog media? Easy. I did a little poking around, and look how much I found:

These apartment buildings are actually one complex despite different mailing addresses (note the shared driveway). They’re up on Central Avenue, behind Sta-Mart. In one of these apartments “lives” Senator Kent Conrad, and I believe his brother has a place there too. In the other one “lives” Byron Dorgan. I have to put “lives” in quotes for these guys because I too lived in one of these buildings. I never saw either one of them even a single time. You’d know it if your Senator passed you in the hallway.

Each building has a meager mailbox (let’s face it, they’re meager apartments – my appliances were olive green) in the entry way. This composite shows the glamorous mailbox of Sen. Conrad and wife as well as Sen. Dorgan and wife. Do you think that if a US Senator actually lived in a shoebox apartment, he’d have his name hand-written on a crappy stick-on label? That doesn’t exactly seem like “the trappings of office” to me.

While doing some other work in the county recorder’s office, I decided to have a look-see at this piece of property. Among other things, I found this piece of documentation where Senator Conrad sold the building to his LLC for $1 in a quit claim deed. The Senator’s full name is Gaylord Kent Conrad, thus the GKC (and the fact that he goes by “Kent”). Notice that while there are two buildings with separate mailing addresses, it is listed as one parcel of property.

That’s where part of Senator Conrad’s problems occur. Not only does this debacle point out that he and Senator Dorgan have a nifty arrangement to remain North Dakotans on paper cheaply in order to be eligible for re-election, it also points out that he got special treatment from Countrywide, a financial institution under the purview of his Senate committee! In fact, Countrywide was trying to get the federal government to buy up to $400 BILLION in bad loans, something that would certainly require Senator Conrad’s and Dodd’s approval.

An executive from Countrywide has testified under oath that Senators Conrad and Dodd knew that they were getting “VIP” treatment. And it isn’t just about the interest rate. Remember the fact that I pointed out above, that the property looks like two buildings but is one unit? That makes it an eight-plex. Reports I’ve read on the case indicate that Countrywide Financial policy did not allow financing anything over a four-plex. It wasn’t just a matter of getting a lower interest rate, it was getting a mortgage that nobody but a Senator Conrad could have received from Countrywide Financial.

As the yellow journalism of the Bismarck Tribune illustrates, it’s all water under the bridge until election season. The fact that senators Conrad and Dorgan are sort of “inverse carpetbaggers” is even more infurating right now, since they are refusing to meet with North Dakota citizens to discuss government-run health care.

They don’t represent North Dakotans in their residency, they don’t represent North Dakotans in their voting records, and they don’t want to hear from North Dakotans on important issues. And one of them just got let off the hook by New York Senator and committee chairman Edolphus Towns, who also got VIP loans from Countrywide!

In very short order I was just able to connect the dots that are apparently too obfuscated for local newsrooms to send one of their “journalists” to investigate. That proves that the North Dakota media such as the Tribune guys are either too incompetent or too unwilling to actually collect some facts on this case. All they’re willing to do is cheerlead for the guy.

There you go, North Dakota. Keep right on voting for these two jokers. This is the kind of thing you can expect every time you cast a vote for Conrad, Dorgan, or Pomeroy. Hope™! Change™! And while you’re at it, support your local media. That way you can get thrilling stories such as dancing down the aisle at your wedding or quarantined bison from Yellowstone.

A break in the clouds

I see it’s supposed to be cloudy and miserable this weekend, so I thought I’d brighten up Friday a bit with a sunny scene from the Badlands. I took this photo last Friday. What a difference a week can make. Actually, considering the weather that blew in about twenty minutes after this photo was taken, I guess one could say what a difference a few minutes can make! That’s life in the Dakotas.

Today’s liberal double standard alert

Regardless of what you think about either President, you cannot be intellectually honest and yet think that this sort of thing is appropriate for one President and not the other. Either it’s appropriate for both or neither. Personally I prefer to have more respect for the office of President, regardless of who’s holding it…but the left seems to have skewered that concept long ago.

The argumentative part of me wants to say, “there you have it, lefties. You wrote books about assassinating President Bush, you called him Hitler, you made ‘art’ depicting him as a monkey, and every other demented thing you could think of. See how you like it when it’s your messiah getting the treatment.” Frankly, I don’t care to stoop to their level.

I see that some people are trying to make a buck off this.

While I’m not a frequent visitor of her site, I noticed today that Michelle Malkin has some examples of the tolerant left’s treatment of our 43rd President.

The funniest 8-ton door you’ll see all day

It’s larger than the door to my underground blogging bunker here at the ol’ BMB, and since it’s in a decomissioned missile facility it has fewer loaded weapons behind it. But it sure is funnier than anything I’ve got, since my wife won’t let me paint our doors! This is the door to the underground Minuteman II launch facility at the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site in lovely Cactus Flat, South Dakota. I made a trip there last week after encountering the site by chance en route to a video shoot much earlier. The door you see here goes to the hardened “capsule” that missileers would inhabit 24/7, ready to launch the missiles under their control. Not only does it weigh 8 tons, it also is lined by very large steel pins that lock into place when the door is secured.

If you have ever watched the movie War Games, and/or you don’t live in North Dakota, you may have the impression that nuclear missile launch facilities were hidden. Wrong. Travel central North Dakota and you’ll discover that neither are hidden or secret, there are signs pointing to them, and that people in the area find them rather commonplace. Even so, taking a tour of this park corrected a lot of misconceptions I had about life in the missile wing.

North Dakota has recently opened a state park Minuteman site, which I haven’t had the opportunity to visit. You can find out more about it by visiting the websites for it at either OscarZero.com or the State Historical Society’s page. Even cooler: our state site is called the Ronald Reagan Minuteman Missile State Historic Site. Chalk one up for the Gipper!

Forklift fail or forklift win?

Every time I pass this forklift at Honda Plus, located on Airport Road, I have to chuckle at the ingenuity of people. Not only does this counterweight serve an important purpose, it also shows that you CAN make Toyota and Nissan parts compatible…somewhat.

One of my favorite “daily visit” sites is failblog.org. It took off from the FAIL meme: You take an image of someone doing something dumb, making a hilarious mistake, or just generally failing at something. Paste the word FAIL on it in an Impact style font. Post and share the hilarity.

An alternate of it is WIN. While I question the means of attachment of this weight to the forklift, I have to admit it displays a certain innovation. While it would probably qualify for failblog.org, I wouldn’t put this in the “dumb” category. Thus I couldn’t decide if this was a FAIL or WIN, so I thought I’d make my own failblog.com-worthy image and let you be the judge:

Giant piece of metal strapped to a piece of heavy equipment: check. Toyota counterweight attached to Nissan forklift: check. FAIL text in proper font (Impact): check. All that’s left is to see if it’s a FAIL or a WIN. I may even decide to post it to failblog.org sometime, or you can if you’d like.