Sunday, July 25, 2010

......Busy/Lazy lol

Hi all,
Sorry I haven't been updating the blog in a while. As you may or may not know, after traveling with VORTEX2 for 3 and 1/2 weeks, I went home for pretty much a day and a half and then returned back to the Plains to get back to work at my internship. It's cool that I get to do some work related to VORTEX2. My research this summer involves verifying the Weather Researching and Forecasting (WRF) model 3-km forecasts using sounding data (environmental profiles of the atmosphere) collected from VORTEX2. I am examining the pre-convective environment (before storms occur) to see the differences in what actually occurred in the pre-convective environment to what we see in model forecasts. This will aid in discerning model issues for bad forecasts. Also it will help with good forecasts, letting us know what the forecasting model is doing right.

So this was just a little update to let you guys know I'm hard at work. In 2 weeks I will back to the East Coast. I will definitely have some more stories to upload as I get some more free time to do things. Right now, we are in the most hectic portion of the internship. We are finishing up our papers, working on final presentations, and posters.

Stay Tuned

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Dodger Strikes Again: Part 1


I have been assigned the nickname "Dodger" by my coworkers out here in the Vortex 2 field. The reason is because no matter where I am relative to the supercell, I always end up having to dodge storms to get to the hotel. So here is a storm that I eventually ended up dodging near Madrid, NE.


Monday, June 7, 2010

Busy Busy Busy...


The following blog is a blog I tried to upload via text message but was not able to due to the fact that the message was too long. I was trying to give you guys a pinpoint update of what I was doing at the time and where I had been the previous night. Anywho this update was while I was leaving Sioux City, IA. We were there I believe two nights ago. I can't remember the days anymore. Enjoy.


Hey everyone, it's been a while since I last posted. There is a good reason for this. Reason is because we have been kind of busy with Vortex 2 operations. I have been getting up early and back to the hotel late. Once we get a down day, I will give yall a recap of some of the Vortex 2 events along with things that I've been doing out in the field. Also I will have some videos and pictures for yall soon. My next blog probably will be a video.


I wanted to do a day by day type of blog but being that we get to the hotel so late, I usually just hit the bed as soon as possible. At any rate, I knocked off another state off my list when we stayed in Sioux City, Iowa at the Stony Creek Inn. The hotel was a very nice place and had it's own theme to it as it was something kind of like a lodge out in the middle of the woods. It also had a no frame t.v. in the bathroom mirrors for the public to use downstairs. The T.V. wsa like a computer screen on glass. Anyway, I'm on the road right now leaving Nebraska, Take Care.


P.S. The image is above of the T.V. in the bathroom. Yes I took a picture of it. Don't judge me, you would have too.






Sunday, May 30, 2010

50 Cents! I want my 50 cents back, I need to do Laundry!

Below is a video that I took while visiting The Wall Drug store in Wall, South Dakota before touring the Badlands National Park. The Wall Drug store has been famous for a long time and is known for it's western style. The video in particular is a of a monkey playing the piano. I put 50 cents in to see what happened. HIGHLY DISAPPOINTED. Check for yourself.




"Only those who search for its' light, will find the true power of its glow"


G. Boone

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Trees, Trees, and more Trees: Black Hills National Forest


In the Vortex realm, we operated on Wednesday May 26th where we spent the night in Loveland, Colorado. The next day was a travel day and we were instructed to move to our next location with a potential target area. The place for the hotel that evening was Spearfish, South Dakota. In order to get there it would take about 6 hours with us traveling from Colorado through Wyoming to Spearfish. By the way, Loveland is Northeast Colorado and Spearfish is in Northwest South Dakota. On the way to Spearfish, we got the chance to drive through the Black Hills National Forest. The next paragraph gives you some knowledge about the Black Hills. I took this directly from wikipedia, the link will be at the bottom of the page for your on viewing purposes. All in all you can probably skim through these next couple of paragraphs. I just put it there for the sake of having some explanation.

Black Hills National Forest is located in southwestern South Dakota and northeastern Wyoming. The forest has an area of over 1.25 million acres (5,066 km²) and is managed by the Forest Service. (Directly from wikipedia).

The Black Hills (Pahá Sápa in Lakota, Moˀȯhta-voˀhonáaeva in Cheyenne) are a small, isolated mountain range rising from the Great Plains of North America in western South Dakota and extending into Wyoming, USA.[1] Set off from the main body of the Rocky Mountains, the region is something of a geological anomaly—accurately described as an "island of trees in a sea of grass". The Black Hills encompass the Black Hills National Forest and are home to the tallest peaks of continental North America east of the Rockies.

The name "Black Hills" is a translation of the Lakota Pahá Sápa. The hills were so-called because of their dark appearance from a distance, as they were covered in trees.[2]

Native Americans have a long history in the Black Hills. After conquering the Cheyenne in 1776, the Lakota took over the territory of the Black Hills, which became central to their culture. When European Americans discovered gold there in 1874, as a result of George Armstrong Custer's Black Hills Expedition, erstwhile miners swept into the area in a gold rush; the US government re-assigned the Lakota, against their wishes, to other reservations in western South Dakota. Unlike the rest of the Dakotas, the Black Hills were settled by European Americans primarily from population centers to the west and south of the region, as miners flocked there from earlier gold boom locations in Colorado and Montana.

Today, the combined population of the nearby reservations and Ellsworth Air Force Base create a unique diversity different from that of the rest of Wyoming or South Dakota. As the economy of the Black Hills has shifted from natural resources (mining and timber), the hospitality and tourism industry has grown to take its place. The major tourist spots include Mount Rushmore, Custer State Park, Crazy Horse Memorial, and the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.

Anyway, that's enough for the historical background. At first I tried figuring out why they called them the Black Hills but I gave up. I wanted it to be something ridiculous like the trees were actually black, major crimes back in the days happened, ghost towns, or something to that effect, a hollywood type of feel. But from reading some stuff none of that seemed plausible but it still could be true. Look into it. Anyway here are some photos. I think they are pretty cool. I didn't know there was so much in South Dakota as in my next blog I will tell yall about another place with a "Bad" name that only makes you think of something exciting and dark happening there. Enjoy the photos, be easy.

Graylen


PHOTOS:






Sources:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hills_National_Forest
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hills


Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Travel America: The Journey to Vortex

First and foremost, welcome to my blog. I am new to this so hopefully it will get better as I go along. I will probably end up changing things around, making stuff look better once I get the hang of things so just stick with me.

Anywho, I wanted to start a blog for this summer since I would be doing some interesting work with Vortex 2. You can learn more about this here ------->http://www.vortex2.org/home/ and here: http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/vortex2/. Pretty much what my role in Vortex is to launch weather balloons and collect data referencing various environmental type things like (air temperature and such). I don't want to get to much into dropping meteorological terms on yall so I'll just leave that be and get to moving on to the good stuff----------->>>> DIALOGUE, PICTURES, and VIDEOS that everyone loves. I know half of yall don't like to read so we'll be getting to the more photogenic stuff here in a bit. Well right now actually.

As my professor and applicant approver Dr. Parker
( http://www.meas.ncsu.edu/mdparker/ ) would say , I'm going to give yall the "Quick and Dirty" version of my journey out to meet with the Vortex teams to begin chasing storms and launching weather balloons.

So, to get started, I had to leave my home at like 6am in order to meet up with the other new members heading out to Vortex. We met up in Raleigh to leave at 9am. The other two people were Nate Hardin and Katie Craven. Both cool peeps, Nate was a TA in a few of my classes at NCSU and Katie is a fellow classmate of mine. Anyways, we had to meet up in Raleigh to drive out to meet up with rest of the teams that were already out in the field. SN: Vortex started on May 1st so we're with the first crew swaps. But yeah, we drove from Raleigh, NC to Colby, KS. Let me tell you, it was long but fun.

So we drove pretty much cross country in this NC van which had ZERO acceleration compared to my nice 2001 Oldsmobile Alero lol. But at any rate, Nate took up the first leg which led us into the Virginia mountain area. I took over from there and ended up taking a wrong road, DAMN GPS but anyway it wasn't my fault but we still ended up good. I ended up driving from Virginia, I believe somewhere like Roanoke, VA to almost Lexington, KY. Man, those road were crazy curvy and I had to continuously slow down. Plus it was up and down curvy roads through the mountains. It was ridiculous indeed. Well while I was driving, don't judge me, I snagged some quick pics. The pic you see above was driving through those mountains. I wasn't driving fast so don't worry but I wanted to get some pictures. Here are the rest below.


So after my driving stint, I moved to the back of the van where Nate had laid our fortress of solitude. Sorry I don't have a pic but it was very comfortable. You can ask Nate, I did get the best use out of that back seat as I slept wonderfully and even snored a little bit every know and then but they didn't mind. So we traveled some more and were hoping to make it to St. Louis, Missouri so on the next day we could have less time to meet up with "ARMADA" or convoy of Vortex 2 teams.

To make it short Katie and Nate finished up driving and we made it to St. Louis by about 11pm after starting out at 9am. Here is proof:
That's the arch in St. Louis if you can't see it. Cross the Mississippi too so that was another thing that was cool or what not. We stayed in a pretty nice Hampton Inn that night so it was all good. So yeah I covered new states that I hadn't been through including Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana and Missouri.

Moving on to our meeting up in Colby, Kansas. It was pretty long drive on May 23rd. We drove across Missouri into Kansas along I-70 most of the way. A lot better than driving in VA and KY for me since it was more flat. I got some cool pics of wind farms, they may be hard to see but o well, you get the picture LOL pun intended.


Yeah so after that we kept on I-70 and we stopped at a famous place called Arthur Bryant's, known for their barbecue. Danny Glover and Steven Spielberg have eaten there. Peep out my plate. I tore this up the day after.



And also above is a picture of the authentic proof so no one can say I lied. The sauce they had was way different from back home in North Carolina but it was good.

So after that pit stop, we booked it to Colby, Kansas to meet up with the other teams. On our way we actually encountered a few storms and as we made it to our hotel, a tornado was seen about 10 miles to our west so we got our storm chase on a little early but not really. We didn't see it cause we were in the room. Someone, who shall remain nameless, seen a wall cloud but thought nothing of it. HAHA. I have few shots of Mammatus cloud but I will show those to you all in another blog for boringness sake.

After that, we pretty much had a normal night other than the evacuation of the hotel due to a possible fire that I showered through. Other than that we operated the next day, which was very crazy. I will have an update soon reviewing that. I will try to post as much as I can when I can but most of the time after operations I am ready to shower and hit the hay stack (Bed). Stay tuned.

Graylen