Thursday, February 28, 2013

Winter of our discontent




Where the capillaries rise
up into the skies
to scrape at the low grazing clouds.

In ordinary times, the moisture would draw
through the capillaries and veins down below.
But in a time of drought
rules of weather and life are broken.
The bare oaks and maples and sycamores, too,
will take a drink where they can get it.

It’s a gray on gray day,
a wintery day, but dry,
only if one flake would start,
perhaps others would join in.
But in between heaven and earth
the gulls beat their wings
in a stream of feathers
to bed in the diminishing lake.

The drifting of leaves is all over,
although blankets tucked into winter whitened hosta remain.
We could happily live with some white on white
and then let blue skies break through again.

Dense fog would be tempting,
frost would wet our whistle,
but a blizzard is what we’re all needing.

The gray branches are speaking,
their desperate scratching pleading,
hoping against hope for water.
But though they’ve been here before
and some have made it through -
some have not.

Will this finally become the true winter of our discontent?
So far the drought remains unbroken.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Passing through South Park at Sundown




The bare black branches do not keep pace as I walk along the street. The closer to me, the faster.  The nearer the horizon, they appear about to turn and watch what I am seeing. Through this irregular moving fireplace screen, a spherical fire, hardly moving to my naked eye, reflects on the undersides of dull gray clouds, glowing as sweet as fresh squeezed orange juice. But I cannot pause, I have carrots and potatoes to cut for a stew, and this man cannot live by astonishment alone.

The bare black branches
do not keep pace
as I walk along the street.
The closer to me,
the faster. 
The nearer the horizon,
they slow and appear about to turn
and watch what I am seeing.
Through this irregular moving fireplace screen,
a spherical fire, hardly moving to my naked eye,
reflects on the undersides of dull gray clouds,
glowing as sweet as fresh squeezed orange juice.
But I cannot pause, I have carrots and potatoes to cut for a stew,
and this man cannot live by astonishment alone.

The bare black branches do not keep pace as I walk ...

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Sitting on a bench

It's a matter of complete simplicity...


 







It a matter of complete simplicity.
You walk.
You sit.
People walk by.
Sometimes you merely look
with your eyes open.
You see,
or you don’t see.
And yet,
you sit there.
The earth spins.
Other lives walk through their paces.
It’s a matter of complete simplicity
or not.

Click on any photo
for a full - sized  slideshow.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Inside Bowersock North


The Bowersock north unit, on an idle Saturday morning, January 26, 2013.



The Kaw has been flowing recently at a rate of about 700 cubic feet per second. Average flow is about ten times that, although much higher rates and lower rates are normal. Normals are changing, but check back in fifty years for specific information. For power generation at Bowersock, 5,400 cfs would be ideal.

Because the river belongs to everyone, Bowersock can only take water as the Kaw gives it. That is, it operates some combination of the seven turbine/generators at the South unit, and the four much larger turbine/generators at the new North unit so that the flow of water downstream is not diminished. Lawrence drinks from this river. So do people downstream. It will likely be some time before the North unit sees river levels that will allow it to generate the power it was designed to produce.

The power plant is also designed to let high water pass through and around the plant so as not to exacerbate flooding. Where people are walking on the open level below the generator floor, will likely be underwater one day, and then, too, the plant would be idle.















Click on photos to see them full-sized 




Bowersock welcomes visitors. For more information: http://www.bowersockpower.com/
For US Geological River Data: USGS Kaw River at Lawrence
Blogpost on Construction of Bowersock North: Photos on Walk to the River


We are not a people only taking a bison at a time from the prairie for our needs. The Kaw is not the river it once was.

Wild is not an option, although you don't have to look far beneath the surface of the area I walk around on to see wildness - and the evidences of deep power and mysteries beyond our relatively simple ability to harness falling water and to wire a magneto. We have achieved mastery over some things, but not everything. The Bowersock dam and power plants represent a cleaner, more responsible way of doing things. Certainly, in the long run, it is a better way than the coal-burning plant upstream.

But we still must learn to generate more respect for ourselves and our planet. We still can't fool Mother Nature.

As I walk, I am trying to find my rightful place - looking for the places where I belong. I think that Bowersock is a pretty good fit, for now, and likely, long after I am gone.