Cell phone photo stream part 2

Bold Witness. This driver has Bible verses all over the truck. I didn’t look, but I suspect even the top of the trailer declares the gospel!

Someone had the right idea, setting up this old chair beneath the lone tree up along Promontory Point in north Bismarck. It’s a perfect vantage point for sunset viewing. The chair has since been removed.

Classic sodas on sale at Mac’s Hardware on south 26th Street.

Norwegian Pride on display at the Kirkwood Mall. Ole Wan Kenobi?

Another fresh batch of magazines for the AR-15 arrived, ready to get stuffed full of ammunition. They’ve got plenty of company.

Slugbug. Slugbug. Slugbug. Slugbug. Slugbug. Slugbug. No slugbacks!

Waiting for the first (west) span of the old Liberty Memorial Bridge to go BOOM. Cappuccino from the B&J Tesoro on 6th Street helped keep things warm.

I didn’t know the First Lady was in town, but I recognized this plane from all the way over on University Drive.

Of all the times to be walking out on the sandbar. This was a very fast moving cell. My wife and I were able to walk back to the truck, however, before the rain came upon us because we were on the south edge of the storm.

This church is one of about three or four deserted buildings that make up the ghost town of Arena, North Dakota. It sits to the northeast of the Bismarck-Mandan area.

Cell phone photo stream part 1

I back up the little card in my cell phone regularly, as with my wife’s phone (and my GPS, and everything else). I had a lot of neat photos in there, so I figured I’d share a bunch of them.

Spotted back behind St. Alexius Medical Center, near the Emergency Room entrance. I used to be a frequent flyer there back in my extreme sports days. I always had a regular bed, the one along the east wall by the phone. They spelled “toweth” wrong.

My camera all set up to take a time lapse of bugs climbing all over my polarizer filter (oh yeah, and a wind turbine being assembled).

I spotted this miniature dragster in Mandan.

I went out riding after church one evening and took a brief opportunity to look up something in my Bible. I have some friends who are going through quite a setback with their little baby and I needed to seek some answers as I watch them going through it.

One reason why I quit racing, although I’m not saying I won’t start up again someday. No, this isn’t my wheel. It was sent to me by a racing pal.

Ah, the river at sunset.

Finishing up with sunrise photos at the old Occident elevator at Almont. I left a tripod in the shot for my friend Watson (inside joke).

I spotted this mongrel on the Minot Air Force Base. Note the old front end on the truck with the newer model back end and tail gate.

This is the foot bridge across Hay Creek (I believe) at the Game & Fish OWLS site in east Bismarck, beside the NDG&F office.

Two key tools in getting neat photos of rural North Dakota: knobby tires and a good GPS loaded with trail maps and section line roads.

Lots more to come…

Forgotten stories lie south of Mandan

It’s telling that this stone stands within sight of the capitol grounds. I’d bet only a handful of people know it’s here, or that it’s one of only a few remaining at the old Greenwood Cemetery.

I wrote before about this cemetery, located south of Mandan near my boyhood home. Now the city is expanding southward and encroaching upon it; in fact, the entry to it in my original post doesn’t even exist now. A new water tower is being constructed nearby, and it’s got a few back yards adjacent to it.

It’s pretty much abandoned, although Morton County takes care of it. A few stones from the 1800s remain, but there were some pretty big surprises outside of what would seem to be the cemetery grounds. Last year, crews working on the new water tower uncovered some unmarked graves. The news reports were written to give the impression that there were only a couple, but that’s not the case. There were over FORTY. Law enforcement personnel worked extra shifts to protect the site from grave robbers until the situation could be handled. This article gives a little bit of detail on that process.

This hill could tell a lot of stories if it could talk, to be sure. At this point there probably aren’t any more unexpected graves, at least not any more groups of forty-two. There are, however, a few remaining stones like the one pictured above. I’d like to let the markings on it tell that story for you:


JOHN S. MANN
NOV 30, 1815 TO SEPT 22, 1891

ELIZABETH D
MAR 6, 1811 TO NOV 12, 1874

ELLA
SEPT 28, 1882 TO OCT 8, 1891

OUR DARLING
DIED SEPT 14, 1883

You can find out more about the history of this cemetery in this book at the state archives at the Heritage Center.

Neat things attached to Bismarck-Mandan vehicles

I’ve seen a few things lately that caught my eye, and a few of them have one thing in common: they’re attached to vehicles. Let’s start with this bumper sticker, which made me smile.

Amen to this one. As you know, I’m a cheerleader for our men and women in military and law enforcement service. I have the opportunity to run around with my camera and post drivel on the Internet because there are people stateside and abroad willing to put their lives on the line for my safety.

As far as humor goes, I probably saved the best for last. This inventive chap found one way to haul his extension ladder on the ol’ Merc: roll the windows down and strap it to the side!

I have quite the collection of oddities and cool stuff bouncing around in my cell phone, maybe I’ll throw a few more up here from time to time. Even though I have my big camera with me most of the time, the cell phone cam turns out to be pretty handy when time is short.

One more time, without the bugs

Bummer that I have to resize these photos and videos to 500 pixels wide, because they’re really cool full size! For instance, yes, there IS a guy standing next to the hook on that crane. Someone has to guide things into place. Naturally the crew takes lots and lots and LOTS of safety precautions for their workers and innocent bystanders like me. Which reminds me, I’ve got a new hero: the guy running that big white crane. The precision of this crew was amazing, and when time is compressed their work on these wind turbines becomes apparent as clockwork that it is. I took some HD equipment with me from work so I could grab a time lapse video Too bad I don’t have room here to show it at 1080p!

Again, that crew was amazing to watch. I wanted to applaud after they got that second unit assembled; it was in such a cramped position that the crane operator actually had to roll the crane back a little bit on its tracks! I bet that made him nervous. In any case, both of the assemblies that I watched appeared to go without a hitch, and I’m sure it’s due to good planning and a talented crew. It was a real joy to be along for the ride, even at a safe distance. I stayed along the main road and chatted with the landowners whose land I was parked on. A representative from the company doing this work told me that these sites and the access roads leading to them are off limits to the public. Take note of that if you decide you want to see any of this action for yourself.

I hope to see one of these on each side of the bridge soon

I remember hearing a long time ago that the memorial area on each end of the new Liberty Memorial Bridge will contain a chunk of the original historic bridge in addition to the other interpretive features. This may be one of those pieces.

Each memorial area (the Bismarck one is nearing completion now) has an area that would be perfect for a piece like this, which leads me to believe that the placement of the pieces will be the “cherry on top” once the rest of the memorials are finished.

Work continues under the Bismarck side of the bridge, presumably on the park that I heard would be placed there. Just because we drive over the new bridge every day doesn’t mean that it’s finished. I can’t wait to see what the area looks like once all the features of the bridge and its ancillary features are complete!

Some bug removal required

I took an HD video camera and my still camera up to the wind farm north of town Thursday to capture a time lapse of some turbine assembly. Look down a couple of posts and you can see that I knew there were a few ready for the final stages of construction, so I was confident that leaving work to hang out up north would be productive. I wasn’t counting on the pests, however. Here’s one of the time lapse clips (roll over the bottom of the image if you don’t see the playback controls):

There were little gnats or something swarming me from time to time, so early in the day I applied some insect repellent and felt confident the day would be hassle free. I hadn’t counted on them swarming my cameras, however. I haven’t had the opportunity to review the video time lapses I did, but the video above is my favorite time lapse from my still camera and I’m pretty ticked that it has bugs all over it.

Being in the video business, I’m no stranger to artifact removal; in fact, I did a bit of that earlier this week. I had some videos where the second camera operator poked the front of their camera into the shot a bit, and the boom operator (me, in one case) ducked the boom pole into the corner of the shot a couple of times as well. It was a hostile shooting environment, where that kind of thing happens. Anyway, I spent part of my week removing those kinds of things as well as some wire removal and even a pen that someone dropped right in the middle of the video. So removing a few bugs can’t be so hard, can it?

Actually, in this case, it’ll have to be a frame-by-frame job. I’ll do it, but I’m not sure when. Perhaps my stubbornness and the fact that I’m really tweaked about this will step up the timetable. I have to review the HD footage tomorrow, which I shot at 1080p resolution, but I still think the sequence above is my favorite unless I find a better one in the rest of my footage. If not, I’m in for some aggressive Photoshop. After I go through the rest of my photos and the HD video I’ll be posting some of it here…along with that Memorial Bridge thing I teased about earlier this week!

View from laying on the sidewalk…not bad

This past weekend I had the idea to take my 10mm wide angle lens and attempt to capture the Veterans’ Memorial, located on the west side of the new bridge, from the lowest point possible: on my back upon the sidewalk. The skies were somewhat dramatic as the sun tried to punch through the morning clouds. Not bad, I thought…not bad.

Then came the blue skies, and I was out & about anyway, so I figured it was worth it to take another hike up the curved sidewalk and try again, this time with some bright blue skies, the brilliant sun, and the lens flares it brings. Once again…not bad.

Soon the Bismarck side of the bridge will have its memorial completed as well. Then there’s going to be a surprise added to each park! I wonder how many people know what it is. I may have a sneak peek photo tomorrow.

Little boy, big blades

Update: I’ve been told by the company which assembles these big wind turbines that they don’t want people approaching the work sites, even if nobody is there working, for safety reasons. While the roads to these sites weren’t marked with any warning signs when I was there, they are not for public access. If you want a look at these sites, you must stay on the public roadway and do so from there.

My two year old wanted to go see the big windmills this weekend, so off we went. I never need much urging to hop in the truck and go careening off into the wilderness. Once he saw how big these things are in person, and heard how loud they are, he decided he didn’t need to get very close. But there was a surprise awaiting us, one which turned me into a little boy for a little while.

There are more wind turbines under construction out there, and it’s a pretty cool process. They assemble the tower, put the turbine building atop it, and bolt the blades to their hub before lifting the whole rotor assembly up in the air. That means you can see how big those things are in person. Very.

I looked around to make sure that there were no signs forbidding a closer look, then followed a section line road to get a peek. A few of the turbines’ blade assemblies were perched on the ground, weighted to keep them from being damaged in the wind. We didn’t go close enough to touch anything, just taking in the sheer size of everything from a short distance. In some cases, I stood on the top of the truck to take the photos, which PJ found amusing.

How’s this for a sense of perspective? I didn’t whip out a tape measure or anything, but I read somewhere that 80 feet is a typical length for one of these blades. With a radius like that, imagine how fast the tips are travelling as the blades rotate!

Here is a set of blades ready to be installed. Note the wild curvature to them. They’re very big and made of lightweight material. They’re so long that the roads out here have to be upgraded to accomodate the wide, sweeping turns of the trucks hauling them in. They travel one to a truck.

How would you like to be the guy who has to spin on and torque the nuts onto all those bolts? There’s a similar ring of them on the hub, which attach it to the turbine atop the wind generator structure. These have a very large diameter at the bottom; in fact, a short person could probably stand up inside that diameter. You know who you are.

It would be really fun to watch them lift one of these assemblies into place! It can’t be done on a windy day, which means that they’re going to have to be ready to go at the drop of the hat. Breaks in the wind don’t come very often around here.

Little boy, big world. I love taking my boys to go see things: airplanes, trains, big construction equipment, boats, cars, you name it. I’m going to help them to see all the cool stuff I write about here on the ol’ Blog, and in doing so I get to share in the joy of a little boy taking it all in. Boys, Daddy, camera, and world. What a combination.

Signs of the season

Yep, this was the weekend that rummage sale fanatics wait for. The Folkfest Parade kicked off the morning, the Pow Wow ran all weekend, and the rummage sales were going full blast through it all. I, of course, used it as a perfect opportunity to get as far away from any residential neighborhoods as possible! The rummage sale traffic is characterized by zoned-out gapers who think nothing of coming to a complete stop in the middle of a busy street. I’m not an angry driver, but these people try my patience. Therefore, my camera and I spent the weekend shooting photos in the periphery.

I did see this sign near downtown Bismarck. I thought it was kind of inventive, even if it wasn’t even remotely true. While it made me smile, it wasn’t nearly as outrageous as the first photo above, taken at a street corner in Mandan. Most of the signs posted thereon were unreadable because of the more recent arrivals! It summed up the weekend pretty well, that’s for sure.

I had such an amazing weekend with my camera, and you can expect the results of my adventures to trickle in from day to day. Stay tuned!