Episode 26 – Traveling the Country in an Off-Road Camper with Mans Best Friends

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_R9Ig8v9Xs

On this episode of Dirt Every Day, Fred Williams of Petersen’s 4-Wheel & Off-Road heads out on a road trip with his dogs Batman, Baxter and Lulu in a 2014 GMC Sierra Crew Cab that he borrowed from Rancho Suspension and outfitted with their latest lift kit. The Rancho GMC Sierra sits taller than a standard Sierra, in fact tall enough to clear a set of 35-inch BFGoodrich Mud Terrain KM2Β tiresΒ which as you’ll see will give this truck way better capability in the dirt and since Fred’s plan was to mount a slide in camper in the bed, getting to remote camp spots off the grid should be easy as pie.

More onΒ Four Wheeler.com

I found this video from Four Wheeler.com on truck camping in the back country to be quite interesting.

Types of Wood to Burn in A Fireplace

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An interesting graph from the USDA Forest Products Laboratory, that tells the benefits of burning various types of wood. Good knowledge not just for home heating, but also for camping and back-country activities.

How Much Hillshade is Too Much for Choropleth Maps?

I recently did two maps of Northern Schoharie County’s Median Household Income. I did one with hillshade exaggeration set to 5x while the other one was the normal 1x that I use on both maps. I am divided on which is the prettier map.

Moderate Hillshade

42nd Birthday!

More Extreme Hillshade

I kind of like both maps, but I think the more extreme hillshade is distracting. On the other hand, the more extreme hillshade does bring out the terrain better, and make it easier to perceive the edge of each census blockgroup.

This may be terrain dependent. In a flatter part of the state, such as along Lake Ontario, it may make more sense to increase the amount of hillshade to better capture some of the details of the landscape.

Wondering what is the best level of hillshade for use in choropleth maps.

Storm Didn’t Break Any Records

1653676_851763521504607_467829938_nAccording to the Albany NWS and Upstate Weather:

The 14.4 inches measured at the Albany International Airport falls just short of the Top 10 Greatest February snowstorm list, although 16 inches was measured at the National Weather Service office on the University at Albany – SUNY campus.

It brings the seasonal total at Albany International Airport to 62.4 inches, which is now over our average seasonal total of 59.1 inches. (Image via NWS)

 

The Valentine's Day 2014 snow storm didn't break any records for February weather.