February is gone, one month more to go here. The birds are starting to leave, but we still have guests coming looking for them. There’s a lot of fishermen since it’s been warm. I think crappies are the fish most caught. Crabbing will be starting shortly. The weather has been great, up to 80 degrees one day. The rest of the month it sounds like it should be in the 50s and 60s.
You can click on any of the pictures to enlarge them.
We worked on two windows on our coach. They were starting to get hazy inside, so we took them apart and cleaned them and put them back together. Hopefully it works.
Curt helped clean out some duck houses, there were some owls inside of one.
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
A Tsunami Warning??
Curt received a weather alert warning on his cell phone this morning – a tsunami threat. We looked at each other; like, what in the world? Where would we go if there’s a tsunami? A couple of minutes later we both got alerts that there is no tsunami threat.
According to The Post and Courier, “ AccuWeather sent the tsunami push notification about 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, indicating there was a warning in effect for the next hour. Shortly after that, the Weather Service clarified that there was no threat and that the routine monthly test message had been misinterpreted by "at least one private-sector weather company as an official tsunami warning." This particular false alarm came on the heels of several high-profile notification snafus warning of imminent threats. A Hawaii state employee mistakenly sent an alert about a ballistic missile attack on Jan. 13. Almost a week later, a malfunction triggered sirens Jan. 19 at a North Carolina nuclear power plant.”
This is quite the winter!
You can click on any of the pictures to enlarge them.
We had a chili feed at work last week
According to The Post and Courier, “ AccuWeather sent the tsunami push notification about 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, indicating there was a warning in effect for the next hour. Shortly after that, the Weather Service clarified that there was no threat and that the routine monthly test message had been misinterpreted by "at least one private-sector weather company as an official tsunami warning." This particular false alarm came on the heels of several high-profile notification snafus warning of imminent threats. A Hawaii state employee mistakenly sent an alert about a ballistic missile attack on Jan. 13. Almost a week later, a malfunction triggered sirens Jan. 19 at a North Carolina nuclear power plant.”
This is quite the winter!
You can click on any of the pictures to enlarge them.
We had a chili feed at work last week
Labels:
National,
North Carolina,
workamping
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)