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sleepy
12th September 2013, 17:22
xxxxx xxxxx

toad
12th September 2013, 17:30
Just heard about this from a friend of mine in the area, hope all is well and everyone makes it out. Cheers!

Praxis
12th September 2013, 18:10
SLEEPY!
Where about in CO do you reside? Currently in FoCo myself. i never thought another person who comes here would like close to me.
Maybe a meeting of the minds is in order

sleepy
12th September 2013, 18:25
xxxxx xxxxx

sheme
12th September 2013, 18:26
Bess wishes and peace to you and your loved ones, may the angel of water leave your home in peace.

MorningSong
12th September 2013, 19:05
My thoughts are with you all in the flood zone. I've been watching the "news" as it comes in (with great sadness and concern).

http://www.breakingnews.com/topic/boulder-colorado-heavy-rains-september-2013

Sending more positive energy that way.

spiritguide
13th September 2013, 00:08
Request for mercy sent for those in the affected area. The earth elementals will balance and give way to those in harms way.

Peace!

Valle
13th September 2013, 14:37
is there a coming weather problem?
ZmnV59KmUmc

sleepy
13th September 2013, 14:51
xxxxx xxxxx

sleepy
16th September 2013, 13:59
xxxxx xxxx

Bob
16th September 2013, 17:28
Hi Sleepy, is it now bright blue over by you?

Some major changes, DooDah suggested a particular type of Love Light Column put in between the high and low pressure domes. It is beautiful blue here, bright white, with a lot of white, clear air - lots of the water excesses seem to be leaving. Lots of the little animals, birds, squirrels and chipmunks around. hugs, thanks Bob

sleepy
16th September 2013, 18:34
xxxxx xxxxx

MorningSong
16th September 2013, 18:47
This comes to mind...good work, folks!

wP_Avz2YC8k

toad
17th September 2013, 14:25
Lafayette-based anti-fracking activist Cliff Willmeng said he spent two days “zig-zagging” across Weld and Boulder counties documenting flooded drilling sites, mostly along the drainageway of the St. Vrain River. He observed “hundreds” of wells that were inundated. He also saw many condensate tanks that hold waste material from fracking at odd angles or even overturned.

“It’s clear that the density of the oil and gas activity there did not respect where the water would go,” Willmeng said. “What we immediately need to know is what is leaking and we need a full detailed report of what that is. This is washing across agricultural land and into the waterways. Now we have to discuss what type of exposure the human population is going to have to suffer through.”

A spokesman for the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission said the agency is aware of the potential for contamination from flooded drilling sites, but there simply is no way to get to those sites while flooding is ongoing and while resources are concentrated on saving lives.

http://www.texassharon.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/WeldCountyFloatingTank-e1379213713195.jpg
http://weldairandwater.org/2013/09/14/114/

sleepy
17th September 2013, 14:32
xxxxx xxxxx

sleepy
17th September 2013, 14:53
[xxxxx xxxxxx

toad
17th September 2013, 16:23
Early Saturday morning, Chris Miser was headed to the mountain town of Lyons, Colorado, to get a bird's-eye view of the devastation from recent and historic flooding. Miser, who owns Falcon UAV, a Colorado-based small-fry drone manufacturer, had been cruising Falcon's flagship glider on short damage assessment mapping flights over some of the most floodworn portions of the state, where over 1,000 civilians are now unaccounted for. He hoped to make a second pass over Lyons, a small town at the base of the Rockies and one of the hardest hit areas in Colorado.

Then the Federal Emergency Management Agency showed up.

The agency had caught wind of Miser's dronings, and contacted the Boulder County Emergency Operations Center, saying that it would be taking over aerial assessment operations, and that Miser's request to fly, in line with FAA Certificate of Authorization protocol, was denied. And not only that—anyone flying drones in the region would be arrested.

Why, in the largest emergency response since Hurricane Katrina, is the nation's foremost disaster mitigation group actively grounding services that advocates say provide valuable support in times of crises both natural and manmade? As of press time the agency did not get back to my request for comment. I'll update accordingly should I hear back.

For now, we're left with Miser's word that FEMA shut him down without inquiring into what exactly he was even up to.

"They didn't even bother to see if we could help," Miser tells me.

http://api.ning.com/files/vLjBZXSiTspUza3CQpKlZJKjaXl*cLOTHfFRZpMGEAhBer3I6ZGs4XA0vDiFNrNoJxkWCeD2YuIuj34*8eKt-SRFdSM4KEIv/flooding.gif
Back up two days.

On Thursday and Friday, as weather continued to ground National Guard planes, Miser was able to map part of Lyons and neighboring Longmont with the Falcon, which has an 8-foot wingspan, weighs in just shy of 10 pounds, and takes flight with a simple chuck start (seen at the top of this post). The above overlay of the intersection of the overflowing St. Vrain river and equally swollen Left Hand Creek gives you an idea of the sort of quick assessment capabilities built into something like the Falcon.

"In less than an hour," Miser wrote shortly after, "the imagery was processed and provided to the Boulder EOC."

By this point, Miser got an initial standdown order from the National Guard, whose helicopters would be moving in to survey washouts and aid in evacuation and search and rescue. Miser would head up to Lyons the following morning, anyway—not to fly, but to form a possible plan to do so in the near future. When he got there, a few "Civil Air Patrol and private aircraft" thumped above. To hear him tell it, they apparently couldn't do much of anything:

Unfortunately due to the high terrain around Lyons and large turn radius of manned aircraft they were flying well out of a useful visual range and didn't employ cameras or live video feed to support the recovery effort.

Meanwhile, he had no choice but to stay put on the Lyons High School football field and think about how his pair of Falcons could've "mapped the entire town in 30 minutes" and, provided a few more hours to parse through data, created a "near-real time map" of Lyons.

When I asked Miser why he thinks he's been grounded, he said it's "always ignorance based." And while he hasn't flown since the takedown order, he said he will should he get a request for support. For now, his "suspicion is that some bureaucrat at FEMA doesn't know how to deal with this sort of thing."

To think, his Falcon could've been sniped out of the sky just 100 miles to the south east, where residents in the town of Deer Trail are awaiting a special election to decide the fate of a proposal to allow the city to sell so-called drone hunting licenses. Oh wait, no it couldn't.

http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/why-did-fema-ground-a-flood-mapping-drone-in-colorado

sleepy
17th September 2013, 16:51
xxxxx xxxxx

Bob
20th September 2013, 18:15
I concur Sleepy

They have coordination teams, the national guard, the governor's teams - one could possibly volunteer with one of those and not try to do private stuff especially flying drones in the area.