Saturday, December 30, 2006

Santa Fe Plaza "Live" Web Cam

http://photos.freenewmexican.com/webcam/plaza_475x356.jpg?1166546064?1167540655447
Live Web Cam

October 25, 2005


View from Shiprock Trading Company, corner of Old Santa Fe Trail and Palace Avenue. New view every ten seconds. The Plaza Cam stops streaming live images of the historic Santa Fe Plaza each evening at 7:00 pm Mountain time due to darkness but will begin streaming each morning at 6 am. After 7 pm the Plaza Cam will display the last image uploaded that evening.

http://www.freenewmexican.com/info/34167.html

Storm blankets New Mexico

7:31 pm: Storm blankets New Mexico; closes roads; Governor declares disaster

By The Associated Press
December 30, 2006

The latest storm to hit New Mexico shut down roads throughout the state, canceled numerous airline flights, prompted police to discourage travel and forced state officials to activate New Mexico's Emergency Operations Center.

[Use the comment link at the end of the story to report your own snow totals and stories.]

By 10 p.m. Friday, Albuquerque's airport reported 10.5 inches _ a record. The National Weather Service said it was the most snow to fall during a single calendar day ever, beating the previous record of 10 inches on Dec. 15, 1959.

The snowfall also was the largest amount recorded at the Albuquerque airport in a single month, even through December isn't quite over and snow continued to fall Saturday. Snowfall for the month totaled 14.8 inches by Friday night; the prior record was 14.7 inches in December 1959.

The storm _ which the National Weather Service labeled as "dangerous winter weather" _ dumped up to 2 feet of snow on the Albuquerque metro area and more than a foot in Santa Fe County from Friday into Saturday.


Gov. Bill Richardson on Saturday declared a state of disaster due to the heavy snow, and said the Emergency Operations Center was continuing to monitor damages and coordinate state, local and volunteer agencies.

New Mexico has suffered widespread damage, and the emergency disaster declaration will make money available for counties to recover some costs, Richardson said.

State police warned people not to travel, but said those who did venture out should have the latest weather information and road closure bulletins to avoid being stranded, and should let someone know where they were going and what route they planned to take.

Roads throughout the state were snow-packed and icy with intermittent closures. The state Department of Transportation said driving conditions were difficult throughout most of New Mexico.

Interstate 25 was closed from Santa Fe into Colorado on Saturday, with blizzard conditions and zero visibility reported at Raton Pass in the afternoon. I-25 was open between Santa Fe and Albuquerque, but was snowpacked and icy.

Interstate 40 east of Albuquerque to the Texas border was closed most of Saturday, but reopened late in the afternoon. However, police said the road remained icy.

Snow-packed highways stranded many motorists, including drivers of countless tractor-trailer rigs. Shelters were set up at schools and churches, including Moriarty High School and the Clayton Baptist Church.

Department of Transportation crews were sanding major highways. Department spokesman S.U. Mahesh said more than 1,100 plows and sand trucks were working around the state, and had been for two days.

"The problem is we can't keep up," Mahesh said. "We keep clearing out and it keeps building back up."

The storm closed city government offices in Rio Rancho and state, county and city government offices and businesses in Santa Fe on Friday, sending thousands of people home early. Employees of many businesses in Albuquerque and Santa Fe didn't make it in to work Friday and Saturday.

Lisa Harris, owner of Video Library, a Santa Fe video store, said people leaving work early turned out to be good for her business.

"It's amazing how many people are in here getting movies," she said. "We've been busy all day. ... The more snow there is, the more people should stay home, the more they come and get movies. So, I'm wearing a big smile today."

The heavy, wet snow sent tree limbs sagging onto power lines or downed the lines themselves. Late Saturday afternoon, Public Service Company of New Mexico crews were still trying to restore electricity to 4,100 customers in Albuquerque, Belen and Sandoval County.

PNM spokesman Jeff Buell said crews were gaining on the outages, but expected more to occur as temperatures dropped at sundown. Crews were remaining on the job overnight, he said.

Some airlines canceled flights in and out of Albuquerque. Daniel Jiron, a spokesman for the Albuquerque International Sunport, advised travelers to call ahead to see if their flight was delayed or canceled.

Some snow totals, as of noon Saturday, included 3 inches at Gallup, 4 inches at Laguna Pueblo, 10.5 inches at White Rock, 10.5 to 14 inches at Rio Rancho, 14.5 inches at Santa Fe, 20 to 27 inches at Las Vegas and 12 to 20 inches in Albuquerque, including 15.6 at the airport.

Winter storm warnings remained in effect through Saturday night for much of northern and central New Mexico and a blizzard warning was in effect through Saturday night for the northeast plains, with strong winds and drifting snow dropping visibilities to near zero.

The weather service said conditions should start improving Sunday, with clearing skies and decreasing winds statewide, leading into a mostly clear but cool New Year's Day.

Improving conditions could be short-lived as another northern Pacific disturbance is headed toward New Mexico. The weather service said that suggests another blast of winter by midweek.

Santa Fe

landsat_santafe.jpg

http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_rec.php?id=16965

Santa Fe, New Mexico, sits nestled in the foothills of the southern end of the Rocky Mountains at 7,000 feet above sea level. Here, the chain of mountains is called the Sangre de Cristo Range—the Blood of Christ— a name given by the early Spanish colonists because in the setting sun, the stone of the mountains turns deep red. In this image, the Sangre de Cristo Range appears in the background (top portion). The image is shown from a western viewpoint, as though you were standing on a ridge on the west of town looking toward the east. The most densely developed area of the city is located just above center, and it appears lavender, as does Interstate 25, which runs toward the bottom right edge.

The city is located in a valley below the mountains in the drainage basin of the upper Rio Grande, one of the most important waterways in the area. Rivers and stream run down the western slopes of the mountain and flow into the “Big River,” which would be at your back as you overlooked Santa Fe from this perspective. The mountains around the city induce snowfall in winter, making this an unusual ski destination in the midst of the desert. Snowmelt is a critical component of the water supply for the city, as well as for downstream communities on the Rio Grande.

The city was founded as a capital by Spanish explorers in the early 17th century, but has been run at times by the local Pueblo tribes, Spain, Mexico, and even, briefly, the Confederate States of America. The city’s name means “the City of Holy Faith,” reflecting its role as a center for attempts to convert the local population to Catholicism under Spanish rule. It now is the political center of power for the state of New Mexico, and a cultural and artistic nexus that draws people from all over the world.

This visualization shows the city as seen by the Landsat 7 satellite’s Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) instrument. Data shown here use shortwave-infrared, near-infrared, and green wavelengths (ETM+ bands 7, 4, and 2), which have been pan sharpened to enhance the resolution and color balanced to simulate a natural-color appearance. The data were obtained from a collection of cloud-free scenes over all of North America collected by Landsat 7 in 2000 and stitched together by EarthSat Corporation for NASA. The subsection of the mosaic around Santa Fe was draped over a digital terrain model with realistic terrain (i.e., the differences in elevation among land surface features has not been exaggerated).

Quick snaps from my driveway







Here are some Photos from my carport of the snows progress since I returned from dreamland.
These were taken about 4:30 PM on Saturn Day, December 31 2006.
This storm has been insane, shutting down alot of activity, Airports, Roads and all the fun that these things enable.
I will take more and post them soon.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Bioregional Animism

Animism * Shamanism * Deep * Ecology * Bioregionalism. Bioregional animism is the rediscovery of our collective origins and the rebirth of our past for a permaculture. It has been said that animism was our first religion and that it will be the last. This project is focused on assisting others who are committed to living as one with their bioregions and creating a spiritual and cultural expression of the land and sky that we are but an expression of.

http://bioregionalanimism.blogspot.com/

The goal of this project is to allow the land to express itself through us again. To reincarnate the old traditions and lost tribes, to see that new traditions are being born as new expressions of the land & skies consciousness, to commune with the land and sky and celebrate our oneness with it.
To help support a diverse system of developing ecological and spiritual cosmologies much like indigenous minds have always done, through the act of communion!
The dream is to establish a body of work that can be shared with others to promote bioregional animist communities around the world, and to establish a network of sustainable earth communities based off the
bioregional animist principles of acknowledging that we are one with our environment, that we are surrounded by other than human persons which we are related to, that we must live in a respectful way with these other than human persons, and last but not least that we can establish respectful relationships through communication with our other than human relations.
The main thesis of Bioregional animism will soon be spelled out more clearly and an open invitation of animists world round to share their perspectives in the hope of establishing a healthy and diverse perspective.

Please share your thoughts on Bioregional Animism. Share your experiences with communing with the land and sky, and the other than human persons that are our relations.

This work is part of the bioregionalism movement, the new animism ( as described by Graham Harvey and indigenous people around the world) movement, the reclaiming movement, the DYI movement, the new shamanism movement, and many, many, many, movements to just live and be in harmony with our natural surroundings. Because bioregional animism is focused on personal and communal relationships with the land and sky and the other then human persons that inhabit land and sky, the bioregional animist tribe does not attempt to find one way for every one, it does not attempt to adopt or culturally appropriate any existing cultures, but instead asks that we do as our ancestors have done, begin anew, go directly to the source or culture and animism and shamanism, and find our own way. The project asks that wee become native again and put down roots in the psychic soil of the place that we live. The project asks that we stop out sourcing our traditions and adapting practices from out side of our own bioregion and find the spirit of shamanism and animism in our back yard. The project asks that we think globally and act locally when it comes to our spiritual practice and life ways.

http://tribes.tribe.net/bioregionalanimism