Just Another Day in the Ozarks…..Not!

The day started normal enough.  It was a very windy morning.  I had to take the trash out to the storage bin.  I noticed that there were some old potatoes that needed tossing, so I decided to find a spot away from the house to set them out for the critters that always seem to be in the area.  As I was doing this, I noticed an old dead tree that had just been knocked over from the wind.  Of course, the tree landed on a barbed wire fence in the horse pasture, bringing it down too, which meant that my morning chore was to be sawing up a dead tree, and re-stringing some barbed wire.  Otherwise my horses would be in my neighbor’s pasture, and his cattle would eventually find their way into mine.  No big deal – I did my work, and a couple of hours later headed back to the house.  Here’s what I saw:

The valley begins to fill with smoke

Smoke – and with the strong wind blowing it directly towards the house and barn areas.  I jumped into the utility vehicle and headed in the general direction of the smoke, and determined that it was coming from an area we call “the mountain”.  Climbing half way up the mountain, I eventually came across smoke blowing across this pasture:

Smoke appears half way up the mountain

I then tried to take one of our fire lanes up to the top of the mountain, but was blocked by a large oak tree which had been destroyed by lightning not long ago.  The tree just exploded about half way up the trunk, and a good portion blocked the lane.

Lightning destroyed this tree

Working my way towards the top along another trail, I came upon this scene, which was not a very pleasant experience:

Fire burning the brush

I had brought a shovel and rake along with me, in case I could do something to help contain the blaze, but that was futile.  Just me, and the blaze had already consumed a large area.  I returned to the house and called 911, who dispatched the local volunteer department.  Meanwhile, our weather alert radio began wailing.  It seems the National Weather Service had just issued a tornado watch for our area – great, as if fire weren’t enough. 

The fire department response was pretty quick, given the nature of a rural volunteer firefighting force.  Because of the nature of the terrain involved, they summoned the Arkansas Forestry Commission, who sent a bulldozer and personnel to construct a containment ring around the blaze.

Forestry Commission bulldozer at work

While this was going on, the local firemen stood guard near the house and outbuildings with equipment ready, should the fire manage to jump the fire lines and approach the house.

Local firefighters stand guard

By the time the fire was extinguished (by rain, incidentally), approximately 50 acres had burned and now looks like this:

Aftermath of fire

Eventually the rains came and doused the fire, and thankfully, we did not experience any tornadoes in our immediate area.

The complete set of photos that I took can be found in our photo galley, which can be found by CLICKING HERE

Is It Dead Yet?

I ran across this article on DPReview.com- Kodak’s digital sales overtake film.  Here is my recent film experience.  I have decided to Ebay my underwater camera equipment while it still has value.  My Nikonos V cameras have not been used for 6-7 years, so I thought that it would be a good idea to shoot a roll of film through each to test them out.  Since I have shot digital photos for years now, it has been some time since I attempted to buy film.  I went into my local Walmart Supercenter to buy a couple of rolls of 35mm film.  They stocked 4-packs of Fuji ISO 100 print film.  That is all.  No Kodak film, no slide film, no choice of film speed, no B&W film, nothing.  Just 4-packs of Fuji ISO 100 print film!

I looked at the camera display while I was there, and counted 47 digital cameras verses 2 film cameras.

It looks to me as if traditional film has died except for a few specialty niches, the largest of which are probably professional photography and one-time use disposable cameras. I suspect that Kodak’s film/digital sales ratio will continue its’ decline, and probably at an accelerated pace.

I had better sell those Nikonos cameras while potential purchasers can still obtain film for them!

Just Coincidence?

Back in 1992, my wife and I opened up a barber shop in Houston called Captain Nemo’s.  We decided to place a small advertisement in the local paper to attract more business.  We told the ad designer to provide us with something nautical, and this is what came out of it:

Nemo Ad

Fast forward to 1996.  My wife and I were now living on a trawler in Channel Islands Harbor in California.  We wanted to dress up a couple of portholes on board the vessel, so we contacted a local stained-glass overlay company.  We gave them the same instructions – provide us with a nautical design of some sort.  Here is what they produced for us:

Porthole

Kinda wierd, huh?