I can’t wait to hike 4 days in the Rockies over 8000 ft. I am hoping for cool weather, limited snow and 67 miles. It will feel good not to strain my eyes looking at a computer screen. Straining to look at a bull moose or elk or furry coyote will be a welcome change. We all need these welcome respites. Our lives are busy. Pressure builds. Everyone needs an escape. I can hike four hours, see no one, hear no one, collect my thoughts, rest my brain, and get some exercise. Will share the fall photos!!
Colorado
Highest Risk States for Losses
As those of you who follow this blog know, we periodically touch on climate issues. Sea level rise is a particularly acute issue here at ground zero – southeast Florida. But as I have said for some time, this is not an immediate crisis, but a slow steady creep that gives us time to adapt to the changes related to sea level rise. I am optimistic that while we will spend a lot more money to engineer water management so we will need more engineers, there are solutions that will allow us to thrive here for a long time – probably a lot longer than we have been here, which is just over 100 years.
Our bigger, current challenge is the temporal but catastrophic impact of tropical storm activity that can create immediate consequences that last for years, much as Hurricane Andrew did in 1992 and Hurricane Wilma almost ten years ago. Of course there have been others, like Donna in 1960 which were worse. I mention this because the peak of hurricane season in Sept 10 – only two weeks away. We have been lucky for years now, and of course we are all hoping it remains that way.
But I found another interesting article this weekend hat talked about the states with the most weather losses since 2006 (and in a subsequent blog I will look back further for comparison). is New Jersey. OK, no huge surprise given the recent experience of Sandy. But who is number 2? Or for that matter 2-10? Would you believe that Florida is not on the list at all. Neither is California despite the fires. Or North Carolina another hurricane prone state.
No, according to the Tribune, the states (in order:after New Jersey) are: Texas, Tennessee, Missouri, Alabama, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Louisiana, Colorado and Arizona. The most common causes: thunderstorms, heavy rain, flash flood and tornados. And the impacts range from $24 billion in New Jersey to $3.5 billion in Arizona. An interesting factoid as we approach the peak of hurricane season. May Florida stay off the list.
Colorado Trip
So what would a vacation be without Chihuly glass, dinosaur tracks, trains, moose (and babies) and some chilly weather? Gotta love the time you can spend in other places and take in as much of what is there to offer as you can. So maybe my vacations are as frantic as the rest of life? Not really. Gotta relax to enjoy.
Colorado Connected
I read a recent article in Roads and Bridges on the reconstruction of the roadways to Estes Park. An excellent effort by state officials and private contractors to rebuild over 20 miles of roads that were wiped away in mid-September when unprecedented rainstorms cut Estes Park off from the front range. I actually had reservations in Estes Park as part of a plan to go hiking at Lawn Lake, among others. Lawn Lake was one the harder hit areas in the park. Went to Leadville. If you have never been, go. The early money in Colorado came out of Leadville – silver was the money-maker. I did a 12 mile hike thought the mining district as it snowed – note it is the 2 mile high City. Great hike in the am – the photos were fantastic as well.
But the point is that people expect government to solve problems like the roadways in Colorado. They expect we will solve water, sewer and storm water problems. We have done a great job of it because people take these services for granted. What we don’t want is to have a catastrophic failure, natural or otherwise.. ..






