Good morning, It’s a Tuesday

Good morning, we’ve made it to a Tuesday. 60 days from now it will be Memorial Day Weekend. Going to warm up to the 40s by mid-day but still below average for late March. Might reach the mid-50s for the drizzle expected on Thursday.

That said, the snow appears to be in terminal decline. We might get more snow but it doesn’t seem like it will last. The sun simply is too strong.

Once the snow is gone I look forward to getting back on the road. While I recognize that we still have two months before the roads in the Adirondacks reopen, it really won’t be that long. Winter is ending.

Roadwork season has resumed on I-787 which promises to make commuting fun for the rest of the summer. The bus will get me through it. The ice is mostly off the river, south of the Dunn Memorial Bridge. I’ve been known to go kayaking on May 1st on the Hudson River.

Lobby day traffic. That’s all I will say, with a few nasty words on the side. We live in a democracy, so I guess people have a right to flood Albany with traffic and buses on Tuesday.

Why I love to walk every day

Why I love to walk every day : TreeHugger.

Most mornings I walk 8/10th a mile down to the Park and Ride lot. Then I walk 6/10th a mile each way to the library in the evening, then a 2 1/2 mile walk around the High School.

I've done somewhat less lately due to the cold, but I still really enjoy getting out and walking around. It beats driving, and you feel so much better after going for a stroll.

Good morning, Happy Monday

Good morning, Happy Monday. A cold one to start out the week with temperatures around 14 degrees. Not record breaking cold but still cold for late March. The weather is expected to warm up by later in the week.

Nice walk down to the bus stop although a bit hurried as I was running a few minutes late. But I always build in 5-6 minutes extra time as I don’t want to miss the last bus of the day from the Park and Ride.

Had a pretty bad sinus infection on Sunday morning but I took some Tylenol and was feeling mostly better than afternoon.

Some years I get out camping the first weekend of spring but that was not to be this year with the cold. Most years it waits until the first week or so of April but with this winter it might be much later than usual.

Winter blog revisions are almost done, with final testing underway now. Most of the changes will be invisible to the reader with the exception of the forecast disappearing and the daily twitter round up going away. A big portion of the goal of the revisions is to reduce the amount of code that I have to maintain and present relevant information in a more convenient way with less clicks.

World Water Day

Today is World Water Day.

Many people think that the majority of costs in providing clean drinking water comes from the reservoirs, filtration, piping and provision of water to homes and businesses. That is not the case in the water rich northeast. Most water is pressurized by gravity.

In contrast, disposal of waste water (sewage) is the main cost driver in providing water. Waste water is generally not gravity fed, at least once it leaves a neighborhood. It must pumped uphill, and that’s very energy intensive. Sewage pumps often clog from things like paper towels, baby wipes, and grease.

The Town of Bethlehem maintains 32 wastewater pumps but only 5 fresh water pumps. The waste water pumps use vastly more energy to pump the sewage than clean water pumps.

When wastewater reaches the sewage treatment plant, it has to be pumped again and agitated with electric motors to settle out grease and solids, and encourage natural bacterial to convert organic matter into carbon dioxide. Waste water has to be heated to 70 degrees, regardless of the outside temperature so bacteria can be effective at eating the waste. The dried sludge and solids (using energy) not digested by bacteria have to landfilled, although some cities like Albany incinerate it or compost it and sell it to farmers as fertilizer.

There is a lot of talk these days about consumptive water use β€” water bottling plants, trains and trucks hauling water for the oil and gas industry, agricultural use, and power plants. The argument is that those uses permanently consume a lot of fresh drinking water out of a water basin.

That argument isn’t totally false, but ignores that the cost (both in money and energy) to non-consumptive uses of water. When water is used for consumptive purposes, it doesn’t have to be disposed of later on. Consumptive users if water subsidize sewage treatment for everyone else. This money helps improve the often inadequate existing sewage treatment infrastructure, especially in our older cities.

The biggest user of clean fresh water in the Town of Bethlehem is the SABIC plastics plant. They use town drinking water to generate steam which is used to power the plant and generate electricity for the process. All that drinking water is turned to steam and is ultimately released into the atmosphere. But in purchasing that consumptive drinking water, they subsidize everybody else’s waste water treatment and help control pollution in our rivers and creeks.

The Greatest Good

"From the timbered shores of the Pacific Northwest to the marble halls of Washington DC, the choices about how we use our rich natural heritage are filled with controversy. Whether it is the protection of endangered species or meeting the needs of a growing public, the fate of public lands is constantly challenged by the constraints of democracy. Visionary foresters Gifford Pinchot and Aldo Leopold shaped the debate over land stewardship for a hundred years. Their journey from the β€œwise use” of resources to the idea of a β€œland ethic” has defined the evolution of the Forest Service and the management of National Forests and Grasslands."

Clouding up

The weather looked so nice today for a while before the clouds came back. Nice hike in the Pine Bush this morning, but soon it’s supposed to rain.