Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts

Monday, March 20, 2017

First Day of Spring 2017


Above, left to right: Reed Tomita, 5, with his cousin, Connor Stephenson, 4 ½, and Alexander Kahn, 4, had a blast creating and chasing bubbles on the first day of spring at Percival Landing in downtown Olympia.

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood

Folks aged four to ninety braved uncertain weather to welcome the first day of spring at the 25th annual community bubble blow. 

Held near “The Kiss” statue on Percival Landing in downtown Olympia, the celebration goes on, no matter what the weather - come wind, rain, hail, sleet, snow, high tide, sea-level rise, or maybe even sun. 

Luckily, the rain held off during the noontime event and a good time was had by all.

Several batik windsocks from the nearby Procession of the Species studio added to the festive frivolity. Bubbles and bubble wands are provided.


Above: Connor Stephenson, 4 ½ , with his mom, Susan, is amazed by a monster bubble.

In contrast to the frenzied energy of several children, first-time bubble maker Dawud Al-Malik demonstrated a calm demeanor. His strategy served him well, earning his bubbles several ooh’s and aah’s from supportive bubble makers.

“The technique that I use to create the bubbles is being in harmony with the forces of the wind, he explained as he held his arm high. 

I was fortunate enough to get the right angle with the wind, turning the wrist slowly,” he added with a smile.

Above: First time bubble maker Dawud Al-Malik of Olympia was in harmony with the forces of the wind on Monday.

The annual event is sponsored by People-Who-Know-We-Live-In-A-Great-Place. 

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Breathing Spaces: Mt. Rainier National Park


Above: Mt. Rainier National Park at Paradise is a winter wonderland this week. In celebration of the centennial of the National Park Service, master storyteller and author Terry Tempest Williams spoke on Tuesday at Paradise Inn about her new book, The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks. She calls our national parks,“breathing spaces.”

By Janine Gates

MT. RAINIER NATIONAL PARK – TUESDAY…SHOWERS…CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS IN THE AFTERNOON. SNOW ACCUMULATION OF 4 TO 8 INCHES. SNOW LEVEL NEAR 4500 FEET.

PEOPLE CLIMBING THE MOUNTAIN TODAY SHOULD EXPECT BLIZZARD-LIKE CONDITIONS WITH ZERO VISIBILITY AND BLOWING SNOW ABOVE CAMP MUIR. TEMPERATURES WILL BE BELOW ZERO ON THE SUMMIT. IT IS EXTREMELY DIFFICULT TO MOVE AND NAVIGATE IN ALPINE TERRAIN IN WINDS THIS STRONG.

The official National Weather Service bulletin posted earlier this week at the Henry M. Jackson Visitor Center services desk at Mt. Rainier National Park is clear.

Despite these warnings, unprepared visitors arrived this week thinking they would see alpine flowers, all because the calendar marks this coming week as the beginning of summer.

Dressed in shorts and flimsy footwear, they soon turn back when they realize that the snow indeed continues the farther they go up the 14,411 foot mountain. The weather changes by the minute. 

Tuesday evening, snow is falling as predicted.

Inside Paradise Inn, the fire roars, pops, and crackles in one of the historic, massive fireplaces while pianist William Powell plays romantic pieces, as he has for seven seasons, May through October.

The music fills the Inn while folks from all over the United States and the world relax, often with their favorite beverage, sitting deep in cozy chairs and couches, reading books, chatting quietly, or playing games.

Above: The original parts of the Inn were finished in 1917, built without nails from dead standing timber of Alaska yellow cedar harvested near Narada Falls. It took a little less than a year to build. It is designated as a National Historic Landmark and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. 

Cellphone reception is non-existent or sporadic at the Inn. Thankfully, one has to get some elevation and climb the mountain to send a message or check email, so making new friends, without the isolating distraction of electronic devices, is easy.

I went to Mt. Rainier this week for a few days of much needed rest, relaxation, reflection, and rejuvenation. I met individuals from Ft. Meyers, Florida to Olympia, Washington and everywhere in between.

The faces of individuals, families, and staff became familiar as we traipsed past each other in pajamas and robes and serious mountain gear, going to and from our rooms, the dining hall, the gift shop or the mountain. It became a little village.

A man from the San Francisco Bay area of Walnut Creek, California sat down in front of the fire one morning with a new book called, Jesus Called, He Wants His Church Back: What Christians and The American Church are Missing by Ray Johnston.

The catchy title provided the impetus for a friendly, brief discussion.  

Earlier, I had sat down in front of the fireplace near a man and a woman who were sharing some cinnamon rolls.

The simple, inclusive question of, “Where are you from?” lead to finding out that the woman was from Michigan, here to summit the mountain on her third try.

The man said, “Olympia.”

Quickly drilling down to the Eastside, “near Ralph’s Thriftway,” to specific streets, it turned out, absurdly, that we live less than 10 houses away from each other. We listed off our mutual neighbors who bridged the gap between our homes and gladly exchanged contact information. 

Above: Crevasse and sky on Mt. Rainier.

Breathing Spaces

What is the relevancy of our national park system in the 21st century?

Congress passed the National Park Service Organic Act in 1916, creating the National Park Service under the U.S. Department of the Interior.  It manages 59 parks and 84 million acres, 78 national monuments and 407 other sites. The first national park was Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.

The spiritual and recreational need for designated wilderness and our parks is increasing despite the pressures of population growth, development, usage, and budget shortfalls. 

Mt. Rainier National Park is not immune to these pressures inside and outside its borders.

Created in 1899, the park had 563 recreation visitors in 1904, the first year of recordkeeping. In 2015, there were 1,237,231. Centennial or not, that number will likely be topped in 2016.

The meaning and definition of wilderness has been debated for years but is defined by law as an undeveloped landscape retaining its primeval character. 

Development regulations in national parks vary, with some allowing ski lifts and mining. While real estate development pressures just outside Mt. Rainier’s borders continue, the park has improved the internal conditions seen by past development.

Rope tows and skiing in the Paradise area lasted from the 1930s until the 1970s, nearly 300 cabins and a nine hole golf course were built in 1931, and car camping was allowed in the 1960s in the Paradise meadows. All these are gone and the areas are still being restored.

On Tuesday evening, Mt. Rainier National Park Superintendent Randy King introduced master storyteller and author Terry Tempest Williams, who was speaking as the first in a series of speakers at the park to celebrate the centennial of the National Park Service system.

“It’s a different June today, but it is Paradise,” he laughed.

Several inches of snow was dumped on Mt. Rainier and access roads, as promised, making it look like a mid-winter wonderland instead of the week before summer. But everyone knows that the mountain makes its own weather, and King said it was not unusual.

Terry Tempest Williams, the author of the environmental classic Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place, and When Women Were Birds, An Unspoken Hunger, The Open Space of Democracy, and many more, continues to eloquently share her life experiences and latest research in her new book, The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks.

In The Hour of Land, Tempest Williams weaves her personal stories and experiences about 12 national parks - some were new to her, while others were old friends, like Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.

She said she approached each park profiled in her book with a beginner’s eye, even those that are like her “second skin,” like Grand Teton. Not a year of her life has gone by, she said, without her being at the park.

She spent five years researching for the book, and calls our national parks “breathing spaces.” Her voice warm and soothing, Tempest Williams read passages and invited the audience to discuss their thoughts about and experiences within our national parks.

Mt. Rainier National Park is not featured. Indeed, this was her first visit to the park and Tempest Williams said she was overwhelmed by its magnificence and sense of scale. 

“Whether we see the mountain or not, its presence is felt,” said Tempest Williams.


She told the story of seeing, outside her cabin, a doe and her two little fawns “the size of chihuahuas,” looking as though they had just been born. 

She wants to come back.

Tempest Williams said that when she set out to write the book, she thought it would be joyous, easy, and not complicated. A celebration of love.

“…(The book) is joyous, and it is a celebration, and it is about love – we’re here because of love – but what I didn’t realize is how complicated our national parks are ….and how much I didn’t know....It’s been an exercise in humility, as there is so much more I don’t know. My authority is one of love, and I come to you as a storyteller.”

Above: Grand Teton National Park, 2014. “Our national parks are memory palaces where our personal histories reside....What are we searching for and what do we find?” writes Terry Tempest Williams in her new book, The Hour of Land.

Our national parks have special meaning to Tempest Williams for many reasons. She described her first memory at Canyonlands National Park in Utah and met her husband, Brooke, who was a park ranger, at Zion National Park.

Reading excerpts from her stories, she spoke of the many animals that live in our parks.

“We are not the only species who live, love, and breathe our parks….and I’ll tell you right now, my heart is being broken. The national parks are underfunded and overcrowded. Forty of our parks are threatened by oil and gas development, 12 have development already inside of their boundaries, and 30 more are pending. What do we want our public lands to become?” she asked.

Listening to the stories told to her during her book signing opportunity, she said she heard stories of love.

One couple was celebrating their 36th wedding anniversary and had spent their honeymoon here. One man is on a quest to visit all national parks. So far, he has visited 52. One young man said he was a ranger in Arches National Park.

Another couple in the audience, Bill and Mary Jane Brockman, of Centralia, has a long, personal history with Mt. Rainier National Park, and of volunteering for the park service. It too is a story of love.

Mary Jane Brockman, 88, an early member of The Mountaineers, said she first summited Mt. Rainier when she was 17 years old. She was amazed that her mother allowed her to do so. She recounted her vivid memory of that first summit.

“There’s a sound of the mountain that’s awesome...it’s so vast. It’s silence,” said Mary Jane.

Bill Brockman, 89, was on that same climb and they have been together ever since. 

He and Mary Jane spent the first ten years of their marriage working together in the parks, the first one at the Walnut Creek National Monument in Arizona, the last one at Glacier National Park in Montana. They worked it out so they worked northern parks in summer and southern parks in winter.

Above: The Longmire Museum in Mt. Rainier National Park


Bill Brockman’s father was C. Frank Brockman, one of the first original naturalists for the national park system. He became Mt. Rainier’s chief park naturalist in 1928 and finished out his career at Yosemite and the College of Forestry at the University of Washington. 

The elder Brockman also saved the Longmire Museum, which served as the park’s headquarters from 1916-1928, from demolition and created many of the exhibits that are still in use today.  

Born in Spokane, Bill Brockman came to the park as a two year old and lived as a child in the 1920s in the building that is now the Guide Services building and dormitory for staff. The family then settled in several places at Longmire from1933 until his father was transferred to Yosemite in 1943.

Bill Brockman joined the Navy in 1944, and later became a high school biology teacher. He and his wife operated a ski school for 35 years in Snoqualmie, with 70 instructors at one time, serving hundreds of students. He was a board member of The Mountaineers and REI.

The Brockman's continue to contribute to the park by sharing their experiences, knowledge and stories.

Tempest Williams asked each of us to think about how we can contribute to our parks.

“The national parks are made up of many stories. Think about what you can do to contribute to make sure our national parks continue. Visit them with an open heart to remember what it means to be human….”

Above: The Nisqually River from Mt. Rainier, in June 2014. There are 25 major glaciers on Mount Rainier that support several major river systems, including the Nisqually. The rivers and their tributaries drain down the flanks of the mountain directly to Puget Sound. 


Editor's Clarifications, June 21: The name of the national monument the Brockman's started volunteering at was the Walnut Creek National Monument near Flagstaff, Arizona. Also, the Brockman's did not own the ski school at Snoqualmie, but operated it. For more information, see Mary Jane Brockman's comment under this story.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

High Tide in Downtown Olympia


Above: Areas of downtown Olympia experienced minor flooding due to a high tide in Budd Inlet and low atmospheric pressure early Thursday morning. Favorable weather conditions created a tide lower than expected, but still put some infrastructure under corrosive sea water. This view looking southwest was taken about 6:58 a.m. from Percival Landing behind the Oyster House restaurant near Sylvester Street. 

High Tide a Dry Run for Sea Level Rise

By Janine Gates

Starting at about 5:00 a.m., City of Olympia's Rich Hoey, director of public works, and Andy Haub, director of water resources, and staff were busy monitoring a potential 18 foot tide in Budd Inlet and flooding in downtown Olympia early Thursday morning.

Luckily, favorable weather conditions created a tide lower than expected, and flooding was relatively minor.

“It’s helpful that it’s not raining. It’s great for the crews to see how this works so they can get ready for the real thing...imagine six more inches on top of this....” said Haub, near the Oyster House restaurant on Sylvester Street at 6:46 a.m. 

Haub said the tide peaked at about 17.4 feet and the city had 17 people, a mix of stormwater operations and transportation staff, assisting in the field. 

Staff monitored the areas of 4th, 5th, and State Avenues between Columbia Street and the 4th Avenue bridge, Columbia Street between B and Corky Avenues by Budd Bay Cafe, and Thurston Avenue between Jefferson and Franklin Streets. 

There was no flooding on Water Street or at Capitol Lake as staff monitored the city’s stormwater shut off valve and pump located near the Waterstreet CafĂ©. 

Haub gets excited about atmospheric pressure dynamics and says he's going to look into putting a tide gauge near “The Kiss” statue on Percival Landing with an educational sign that explains how it all works.

“Tomorrow and future days look fine - barometric pressure is back up and tides are on the downward cycle,” said Haub on Thursday afternoon.

The Port of Olympia reported that it did not experience any backups or flooding. 

“Staff drove around and checked early this morning and have been on the property during the day,” said Port of Olympia communications and public affairs manager Kathleen White.

Two staff members of the LOTT Clean Water Alliance were seen out on bicycles checking for potential issues around or near the treatment plant and the Water Street pump station.  

“We did have some minimal overflow in the street in front of our building this morning, but nothing major. We have seen flooding there before….We haven’t had any problems with the treatment plant itself flooding as a result of these high tides. High tides combined with major storm events (do) put pressure on the outfall, causing our pumps to work harder than normal, said LOTT community relations and environmental policy director Kara Fowler.

Downtown Flooding - a Dry Run for Sea Level Rise

There are 112 known outfalls to Capitol Lake and Budd Inlet within the city limits. An outfall is the place where a river, drain, or sewer empties into the sea, a river, or a lake.

Of those piped outfalls, 36 are susceptible to backflow flooding. Twenty are city owned, nine around Capitol Lake are owned by Washington State, five are owned by the Port of Olympia, and two are privately owned, one near Bayview and one behind the Oyster House.

Above: Flooding creeps up Sylvester Street on Thursday morning looking south toward  the nine story Capital Center Building and the state Capitol Building. The Oyster House is on the left.

In January 2015, the city, Port of Olympia, and the LOTT Clean Water Alliance provided a coordinated presentation of their concerns and needs to a group of shoreline and coastal planners. Haub recently told Little Hollywood that his infrastructure needs, as he presented them to the group, remain valid:

Near-term Infrastructure (0.25 feet of sea level rise)
Install strategic tide gates, modify drainage system for the Capitol Lake to eliminate need to pump the 20 acre basin,  and investigate the permeability of downtown soils.

Medium-term Infrastructure (0.25 to 0.5 feet of sea level rise)
Modify elevations of Heritage Park, install permanent flood barriers on western shore of peninsula, consolidate peninsula drainage systems, disconnect flood-prone streets from the Moxlie Creek drainage system, and purchase pumps to handle downtown runoff during high tides.

After the sea level rise report presented to the city council on February 9, Little Hollywood asked Haub about Capitol Lake's stormwater system.  

“....As we learn more...we understand that the lake currently serves an important flood management function. However, the system and the topography around the lake could readily be altered to accommodate either a future estuary or lake. Sea rise will require change, regardless of the lake’s future....Our concern is that the long term projection for sea rise continues to increase, which will affect our infrastructure response.” 

He also said Percival Landing is about a foot too low to accommodate a very high tide or sea level rise.

“We expect the area around the southern portion of Percival Landing to over-top at 19 feet. The high tide on December 17, 2012 was a 17.6 foot tide. The estimate for a 100-year tide event under current conditions is 18 to 18.4 feet. When we rebuild it, we will need to evaluate the appropriate height and then how to incrementally increase it further as needed. That will be part of the design process. There are numerous options for combining flood barriers with public use and aesthetics…up to a point,” he said.

Above: By 7:10 a.m. Thursday morning, the tide was obviously receding, as indicated by this visible high water mark at Percival Landing.

For more photos and information and about downtown flooding, sea level rise, the Public Works report on sea level rise to city councilmembers on February 9, past high tide events, Capitol Lake, the valves that save a portion of downtown from flooding, the Oyster House, Percival Landing and more, go to Little Hollywood, www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com, and type key words into the search engine.