Wings In The Sunrise

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The time is 7:48:47 am, February 9th of a year gone past. It is bitter, bitterly cold. And it is the exact moment that the conditions are just right for the thousands of Snow Geese wintering here at Bosque del Apache to lift into the air en masse. The rushing noise of their wings punctuated by their coarse honking calls creates a sound unique to this moment. As they lift and try for altitude they will pass overhead so closely you can feel the downward force of the wind from their wings, perhaps only a dozen feet or more over your head.

It is a mesmerizing sight to see, with sometimes 30,000 birds clustered together on long rafts that nearly fill the ponds they spend the night in suddenly, at some unknown cue explode into the air. They rarely circle the pond as they ascend, instead the various family groups, or tribes, or however they relate to each other begin to separate and choose the course to their day’s feeding area. Soon in mere seconds it seems, the pond is empty and quiet. Perhaps there may be one or two stragglers left on the ponds flat surface, those who have decided that they’re going to take the day off today, or perhaps the floating bodies of a few who have given up the ghost during the night, due to age or injury or just plain fatigue, but quiet. The silence is deafening.

This event takes place every morning the Snow geese are here at Bosque del Apache until one morning, again on some unknown cue,  they rise once more but instead of returning they head North to their summer range and the ponds are quiet and still until the coming Fall. Then each morning without fail you can take part in the wings in the sunrise experience. It is truly an unforgettable moment.

First Light

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Its been a while since we visited the canyon. The sunrise was so beautiful his morning that our image selector here at *The Institute would not even consider any other picture but a sunrise. The Image selector is a tricky beast. It is actually a small device that sits on the desk of our Image Selecting Department head and chooses the images we use here on the blog by a complicated method utilizing algorithms, coin tossing, electroshock, and a gut feeling of what you the viewer would like to see. The Department head uses a selection method based on Eeny Meeny Miney Mo.

Consequently many times there have been heated arguments over which image to use. The Department head, a wizened little gnome with only one eye, will insist on a particular image while ” the Selector” the little black box with the flashing led’s on the front of it will want another one. There is little compromise between a heartless electronic device and a heartless, mean little man. When it gets right down to the nitty-gritty the Department head will often hit the Selector stoutly about its flat back surface until it yields, or as a really last resort yank its little plug out of the socket. This is very effective, however it has its downside. The next time the department head turns on the selector it will send a spike of 440 volt electricity through the keyboard out of spite. It has a long memory. After losing the first department head they rapidly learned to turn the selector on wearing those heavy, made to avoid electrocution, thick rubber gloves. Since 440v is the same electricity that is used to run hotels, huge electric locomotives, and the setting on the coffee machine at McD’s, it is very dangerous stuff.
The Selector chose this image, the department head signed off on it and there  you have it. Beauty for you and for me. This might just be a good day.

* Note: For those of you unfamiliar with The Institute and what it does, please see the page labeled The Institute on the Menu Bar above. That should explain everything. You shouldn’t have one single question remaining regarding The Institute after reading it. None. For those of you favored few who already know about the Institute, Nevermind.

November Monday

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This is the first Monday in November. In years past today would probably be cold, windy, probably a few inches of snow on the ground. But today wasn’t like that. It stayed warm over night, kept in the mid 40’s and the sunrise was gorgeous. Lots of yellows this morning. Usually we have an extended period of reds, rather like the color of the leaf above, then a brief period of yellows until the sun comes over the horizon. And then it’s day.

It’s funny how you can remember small things from a long time back. What color the sunrise was, how an eagle looked against the clouds. So far away that the only way you knew it was an eagle was because you had seen so many of them, and could tell them just because of the way they looked against the sky. Sounds too. Like the wind in the morning if you weren’t having a force 5 gale. How it would rush through the pines, each needle on the bough vibrating just in the range of hearing, rushing upward towards loudness as the wind raced harder through the trees, building to a crescendo before abruptly returning to silence. Leaving you to wonder if you had heard it at all or just thought it.

. One of my favorite quotes is this one by Faulkner.

“Memory believes before knowing remembers. Believes longer than recollects, longer than knowing even wonders.”

It’s kind of hard to follow that, so I won’t. I’ll just return you to your day.

Life in A Cloud

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For those of you new to the blog you may not know that The Institute, the source of the many excellent but interesting posts you receive daily, sits high in the Rocky Mountains in Northern Colorado. Not Andes high or Himalayan high, but moderately high at just under 6500′.

So what, you might ask, if you were the rude type. Well, it means that at this altitude, 6500′, we get a lot more weather than folks living lower than us. What might be a rain cloud high in the sky to them may be a raging hail storm at this elevation. They’re looking at the bottom of a cloud and don’t see what’s going on inside it. Or a brisk wind down on the flats might be 70 mph up here and that will scatter your lawn chairs all over hell and back.

Lately we’ve been getting a lot of “fronts” moving in which brings clouds over and around us and often below us, usually all at the same time. I say fronts because we rarely get “backs” unless the clouds move backwards for some reason, which it does sometimes for reasons known only to itself. So I guess that could be considered a “back”.

The Institute buildings sit prominently on a point just below the summit of a world-famous mountain, it, the mountain not the Institute, being featured on many maps and even Google Earth, jutting out into space and consequently into the weather whenever it occurs. Visualize all the many imposing Schloss’s or castles you have seen in magazines, movies, and your imagination along with craggy rustic buildings set in high lonely places and mix them together and you have an idea of what The Institute aspires to look like and fails dismally at, and you have an idea of what we look like.

But getting back to the fronts we spoke of earlier. When they bring the clouds in to envelope us in misty darkness, they are loaded to the very gills with water in the form of suspended droplets completely filling the inside of that cloud. There is simply no room left for anything else. Not even lightning. It is packed tight. When the cloud moves back and forth due to some climatic reason it bangs into whatever happens to be there, like say, The Institute, and as it collides with our buildings the water inside the cloud just adheres to them. Sticks to the sides, saturating everything with impunity, and creates problems that are different than one gets in a rainstorm. The water doesn’t just fall downward and run down the sides like rain, it instantly saturates everything, walls, roof, under the eaves, into every single nook and cranny, sort of like running your house through a car wash. Think grabbing your house by its roof and plunging it into a vat of water until bubbles come out of its little chimney and you have some idea of what it’s like to live in a cloud.

Now before you think that that is a totally bad thing, it’s not. In fact it’s kind of cool. If you’ve done all your proper caulking and waterproofing that is. You can stay inside and light a fire in the fireplace without fear of accidentally burning down the forest from errant embers. You can read, pull your chair right up to the window and watch the cloud move back and forth. Drink hot tea. Think about stuff you don’t normally take time out to think about. Ponder, some. Call your neighbors and say “Hey, you got cloud?” They almost always do if you do. It’s a time to relax and say “Well I don’t have to mow the lawn today.” and just enjoy the weather.

There are other good parts too, like when the clouds move in and when they move out. If the movement happens at either end of the day, like sunrise in the shot above, you get a bonus of seeing morning in a different way. That alone makes up for some of the crap side of living in a cloud. Shortly after that image was taken the cloud moved backwards up the hill and we got wet. But for a brief moment you got to see paradise. Living in a cloud isn’t always a bad thing.

View To The West

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One of the reasons it is good to be back at The Institute is the early morning sunrise. We have sunrise at other times of the day too, but I like the morning ones best. You don’t get these kind of sunrises other places, you have to be here in the mountains, standing on the photo observation deck high atop the Institutes west tower, looking to the mountains on the far reaches of The Institutes border as the sun comes up to see these views.

Many new visitors to the viewing deck make the mistake of looking to the East as the sun comes up hoping to see the beauty of that brilliant red orb as it makes its first appearance of the day. What they get instead is half-blinded because that sun is really, really bright and you shouldn’t look right into it ever, as that is a dumb thing to do. Smacking into things all morning long because all you can see is a big yellow spot on your eyeball, is a pretty big price to pay for the brief glimpse of happiness you get. We even have signs posted around that side of the tower saying “Don’t look into the sun cause it will burn you in the eye so good.” but often they are just ignored due to the excitement of seeing these views for the first time.

The colors to the west are often muted and less intense than the gaudy light show you get to the east, and that is sometimes more satisfying if you’ve awakened in a more contemplative mood and don’t want to be jangled to consciousness like walking on to a carnival midway with a hangover. Many mornings I need the carnival and all its riotous lights and chaos as it helps jump-start my brain and gets me fired up to do a good days job of work. But if you’re someone who occasionally doesn’t even want the sound of the cat walking across the floor, stamping it’s feet, hearing the sound of it’s fur rubbing together making that crackling electrical sound as it builds up static electricity to shock your leg when it bumps up against you, then you want quiet. You want to stand there and just let the calm soothing colors wash over you. You want the backside of the sunrise. The side where the colors slowly change in a soft subtle way, running through the pastel range of the spectrum in a slowly moving kaleidoscope of calming beauty. You want to look to the west and save the Big Top show for another day.

A Quick Reminder

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Good Morning. This is just a quick reminder for you folks who forgot to get up this morning that the sun rose again in Monument Valley. Had you got your lazy carcasses out of bed and got over there this was what you would have seen.

It happened early which is why some of you may have missed it. It started with everything being initially dark and then there was a little light and suddenly this is what you saw. It was like this visual Ka-Blooey thing and if you weren’t pretty grounded when it happened there was a real possibility that you could have been knocked right on your keester.

That’s about it. One minute it was dark the next it was Holy Moly. Sorry you missed it. Since in another life I thought it was illegal to open your eyes before 11:30 in the morning I can understand that there may be a few of you who feel the same. This is just a reminder that there’s a lot of stuff happening out there before you rise. So you may want to reconsider and get up. Or not. Your choice.

Monday Morning Sunrise

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Sunrise in the Canyon. Does it matter that it’s a Monday when you can see this as the start of your day. When your week looks like it might be a replay of WWll and it would take herculean effort on your part just to yell at the neighbor because his dog has been rooting around in your begonias again, you always have the Canyon.

Standing on the abyss, feeling the bite of the cool early morning air, hearing the sound of a raven calling for its mate come up out of the depths, watching as the sun begins the daily unveiling of the shapes and colors of this magnificent place makes everything else seem trivial. Yeah I know, you got to get the kids off to school, there’s appointments to keep, the pressure’s starting but here at the edge of the canyon its quiet, and you can breathe. Take a moment, fill that place where you go to for calmness, the day will still be there when you get back.