Flash Flood Warning

It’s expected that heavy rains on the burn scar will cause flooding since there’s no vegetation to slow the water down. I live nowhere near where the fire was so it’s probably good that the heavy rain on Sunday was around my house instead of in the mountains, but there was still cause for concern here.

This is the stormwater channel normally (little to no rain):

This was Sunday afternoon:

The water actually was up into the edge of the parking lot down the hill, but I couldn’t see that from my door to get a good picture and it was still raining.

This is what happened just downstream on the channel that goes behind my house:

That last picture sure makes me glad that I live back from the channel a bit, though that’s not obvious since it’s all downhill so you don’t see much ground between where I took the picture and the channel.

Waldo Canyon Fire

Last Saturday a fire started near Colorado Springs. I first heard about it on the airplane back from vacation on Sunday night, but all day Monday it didn’t seem all that close:

The picture (like most of the following ones) was taken through the window at work, so you can see reflection of the metal ring around my phones camera as well as possibly some blurry shapes reflected.

There were C130s out dropping slurry starting on Monday, but we only saw them flying around since we didn’t have a direct view of anything relevant at that point. Tuesday morning I actually got to see the ends of a slurry drop on the far side of the ridge that’s in the first picture, but I wasn’t quick enough and my phone camera doesn’t have the zoom to have made it visible in a picture anyways.

Tuesday afternoon the wind picked up to gusts of 65 MPH blowing towards Colorado Springs. A few people were listening to the radio scanner online and someone announced that they’d seen fire on the ridge. In the short time it took for us to get to the window to look we could already see huge flames well down the slope. This picture was taken a just few minutes later (from outside this time):

Everything was quickly obscured by smoke since the wind was blowing it toward us, but about ten minutes later flames broke out in sight farther north:

The picture didn’t really turn out, but there were flames visible from where we were at the bottom of the column of black smoke.

Just another couple minutes later I finally got a shot where the flames are visible in the picture (bottom left edge of the smoke – faint but you can see the glow of it without even looking at the full sized image):

Shortly after that our view was completely blocked by a low cloud of dense smoke. I took a picture but it really doesn’t do it justice. Basically the sky was significantly darkened and we completely lost sight of the ridge where the fire came over, but looking north it was clear and sunny.

Tuesday night listening to the scanner it was clear that the fire was actually down in neighborhoods burning houses, so I registered my phone/address with the local 911 system in case they started making evacuation calls for my area and packed some small stuff in my car.

By Wednesday morning the fire wasn’t really moving my direction, but it sounded like there were still structure fires going. For a while late afternoon the wind was mostly calm and all we could see was smoke:

Thursday and Friday the weather was good for fire fighting and they made a lot of progress containing it, but it’s still expected to burn for about another two weeks according to the last estimate I saw.

News sources:
News
Fire/evacuation map

Furmination

I started this post back in May but didn’t have my phone cable handy to add the pictures so I never posted it, then I got busy with other stuff and forgot about my blog entirely.

I borrowed a furminator from a friend at work to see if it would help thin out Dash’s undercoat so he wouldn’t be too hot and might not get as many knots in his fur. The answer is yes for thinning out, yes for not as many knots, and it seems like yes for not as hot:

He didn’t really want to be brushed at first, but after a few times where I followed him around the room with the brush he came and curled up in my lap so I could brush him. This was with the short-hair furminator I was borrowing, so it was doing great at loosening his undercoat but wasn’t getting it out, but alternating brush stroke and petting rolled it into nice balls of fluff. Brushing Talore just produced a bunch of loose hair drifting around so I didn’t take a picture, but I got a good bit off her too.

Several weeks later I got a furminator of my own (the long hair version), and even though Talore has short hair it works quite well on her:

Despite how much fur I’ve gotten out of her coat it doesn’t look or feel any different. The long hair furminator works much better on Dash with his longer hair too.