The Junk Drawer

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Thanks. Looks pretty rural in the pics but a few degree rotate either way there's large urban areas. I can be in the largest forest and still hear the cars on a freeway or highway nearby. Just a short 20min or so drive from my place and there's peace and quiet at the river. Good place to have dinner.

Some chicken tikka on a Swedish (but actually Finnish) torch at the river
View attachment 5371730View attachment 5371732

Got my wife - which I manifested after being inspired by Weird Science - emerging from the river like she's in a Bond movie.... Life’s pretty good. Would be nice if people like Putin would stop to try and fuck up a good thing.


That sure does looks spectacular. As a flatlander I become very mindful when I see mountains irl ”There's a mountain!”, "I’m looking at a mountain”, “mountains are huge“, “I wish we had mountains too”. Heck, even a big hill gets me excited. First thing that stands out when I go east into Germany or south towards/into Belgium or France is that the road isn’t entirely level anymore. Way more fun driving.

Last summer I was standing on a cliff of the coast of France after driving through some Van Gogh painting looking landscapes and I was genuinely cranky I didn't bring my drone. Missed opportunity. I have flown drones in mountainous areas abroad and may or may not have exceeded all legal and moral and some by standard software imposed height limits (it would run out of juice before it could get up this high with standard max speed, while it needed enough to get back). Lots of crap coming out of China but DJI drones don't belong to that category. If they can make EVs like that someday, DIY might be right after all about us all driving Chinese cars.

View attachment 5371709
Turns out it's just NL, the rest of the earth is not flat. (NSW, Australia)

Barely a good place left where I can fly drones nearby now since new EU regulations. On the grander scale of things not a biggie, but an example of EU over-regulating. The main goal was to have the same rules across EU, not actually solve an existing problem. Best nature areas are now off-limit and have to be a certain distance from urban areas and roads, and of course not near airports and helicopter landing pads. Basically leaves little interesting.
Not sure how EU laws are with UAV's, but US laws are pretty strict as well, but not well enforced at all. We were supposed to all be RID (Radio ID) ready last Sept., but the FAA suspended that until April of this year. I went ahead and bought a transponder (RID), and I don't really see what good it does. I had my wife download a drone detection app on her phone, and the signal is just bluetooth. She lost track of me about 300 yards out on flat land..what a joke. A RID module is about $300. I occasionally have to get Class D airspace clearance to fly and film. It doesn't' cost anything, just an online form to fill out for a request to fly, altitude, GPS coordination, etc. They'll clear me in a week, but can't fly for 4 months after getting clearance. It's stupid. But!. so are the fines if you get caught ..... especially near an Air Force Base.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Crazy story, but that Air Force Base that I get clearance from had thier security on point!. On of my clients acquired another Ford Dealership near an AFB, and before I got clearance, I drove over to check out the Dealership, and get ground footage. I drove towards the Gate and there was a turn around point there. I got out of my car on the drivers side, pointed the telephoto lens towards the gate to get a shot, and immediately left to head home. On the way, I got a call from the AFB stating "Sir this is XXXXX from AAFB Security. We observed your vehicle at out gate at 13:31 hours with a telephoto lens. What was your business there, and did you take any pictures".... First of all, how the hell did you know it was me 1/2 mile from the gate?... they told me I couldn't use any photos of the gate, or any pics of planes, etc. They said that IF I needed any photos to contact Public Relations for AAFB at XXX_XXX_XXXXX... I said "With all due respect sir, Im driving home right now, can you text that number to me?"... He said "We know".
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Thanks. Looks pretty rural in the pics but a few degree rotate either way there's large urban areas. I can be in the largest forest and still hear the cars on a freeway or highway nearby. Just a short 20min or so drive from my place and there's peace and quiet at the river. Good place to have dinner.

Some chicken tikka on a Swedish (but actually Finnish) torch at the river
View attachment 5371730View attachment 5371732

Got my wife - which I manifested after being inspired by Weird Science - emerging from the river like she's in a Bond movie.... Life’s pretty good. Would be nice if people like Putin would stop to try and fuck up a good thing.


That sure does looks spectacular. As a flatlander I become very mindful when I see mountains irl ”There's a mountain!”, "I’m looking at a mountain”, “mountains are huge“, “I wish we had mountains too”. Heck, even a big hill gets me excited. First thing that stands out when I go east into Germany or south towards/into Belgium or France is that the road isn’t entirely level anymore. Way more fun driving.

Last summer I was standing on a cliff of the coast of France after driving through some Van Gogh painting looking landscapes and I was genuinely cranky I didn't bring my drone. Missed opportunity. I have flown drones in mountainous areas abroad and may or may not have exceeded all legal and moral and some by standard software imposed height limits (it would run out of juice before it could get up this high with standard max speed, while it needed enough to get back). Lots of crap coming out of China but DJI drones don't belong to that category. If they can make EVs like that someday, DIY might be right after all about us all driving Chinese cars.

View attachment 5371709
Turns out it's just NL, the rest of the earth is not flat. (NSW, Australia)

Barely a good place left where I can fly drones nearby now since new EU regulations. On the grander scale of things not a biggie, but an example of EU over-regulating. The main goal was to have the same rules across EU, not actually solve an existing problem. Best nature areas are now off-limit and have to be a certain distance from urban areas and roads, and of course not near airports and helicopter landing pads. Basically leaves little interesting.
I believe they're bringing in more restrictive rules here too. Will have to mark the drone with a registered ID number is one thing and something about broadcasting an ID which has lot people up in arms for privacy things and drones like mine that are rated 249g won't be able to add anything so it can do that without going over 250g requiring taking the flyer course which I was going to do but don't want to bother with.

DJI already monitors every move the drone makes and you can't fly higher than about 30m or further than 100 unless you're logged into the site before you take off. Last time I used it to go have a look at the dugout to make sure the aerator was working I could barely make it over the water from my back porch but good enough to see what I wanted.

DugoutOct23a.JPG

Went to visit a buddy in the little town of Falher and played around with the drone in front of his apartment at the south end of town. 2 stop signs on main street and you can see how flat it is up here. That's looking due north but would look the same in any direction as this area was once part of the inland sea that divided north america. Lots of oil and up to a mile of clay under us.

falher01.JPG

This is also looking north about 10 miles south of Falher. Unused old granaries in a field of canola. All hazy from wildfire smoke last summer. I should have got down there a couple weeks earlier when it would have been a carpet of solid yellow flowers. I had the drone do one of it's built in fly around videos and took a few pics. Before the area was settled by french Canadian catholics in 1910 it was all muskeg forest but they still clear more land every year. A few thousand acres of trees was cleared on the low hills close to my place causing flooding when the snow melted fast in the spring but shouldn't have that problem this year with no snow out there. Rarely have deer or moose wander thru my property now since they did that.

OhCanada02.JPG

Those earlier pics of mountains are part of the coastal range and hills compared to when you get deep into the Rockies headed east. I lived in Calgary, Alberta many years ago and when you drive west from there going to Banff about half way, 60km, you drive up a long hill and as you reach the top you can suddenly see the eastern flank which is all some of the tallest snow covered peaks in the world. When it's really clear toy can see 50 miles at least in each direction of a wall of those peaks. I used to drive out to Banff to party with friends that lived there in my taxi and would pick up hitchhikers almost always from back east who had never seen the Rockies. They would totally freak out when we got up there. I know I have a few pics of that somewhere.

I just stole this one off a tourist site as a .webp pic I converted to .jpg. Not as good a spot but basically what it looks like.

RockieMountainsEastFlank.jpg

:peace:
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
For all you dronies... here's my website.....I rarely find the need to go above a few feet. I just do it for the flow of the video. Some are just hand held gimbal camera footage, but I hardly ever go above ~60ft for commercials.
www.drone1aerial.com
 
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printer

Well-Known Member
Scientists fear 100% fatal ‘zombie deer disease’ will mutate to infect humans: ‘There are no contingency plans’
Scientists are sounding the alarm over the spread of “zombie deer disease” amid fears it may evolve to infect humans.

Late last year, experts confirmed Yellowstone National Park’s first case of the infection — officially known as chronic wasting disease — after a deer carcass found in the Wyoming area of the park tested positive for the highly contagious disease.

Now, cases have been reported in deer, elk and moose in 33 states across the US, as well as in Canada, Norway and South Korea.

The disease “damages portions of the brain and typically causes progressive loss of body condition, behavioral changes, excessive salivation and death,” according to the New York State Department of Health.

It is 100% fatal, and there are no treatments or vaccines.

“The bottom-line message is we are quite unprepared,” Michael Osterholm, an expert in infectious disease at the University of Minnesota, told KFF Health News earlier this month.

“If we saw a spillover right now, we would be in free fall. There are no contingency plans for what to do or how to follow up.”

Scientists say the most likely way humans could contract the disease would be through the consumption of infected venison.

However, there are currently no known cases of the disease in humans, even though up to 15,000 infected deer and elk are thought to be eaten each year.

But that does not mean the disease may not mutate.

CWD is caused by misfolded proteins known as prions — and another prion disease first found in animals has evolved to infect humans.

Sabine Gilch, a researcher at Canada’s University of Calgary, recently explained how mad cow disease, known officially as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, “jumped the transmission barrier from animals to humans.”

“During the BSE crisis, BSE was transmitted through contaminated meat or food products to humans and caused a new form of human prion disease, called variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease,” she explained.

While Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is not transmitted person to person by direct contact or airborne spread, scientists believe CWD could be.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Scientists fear 100% fatal ‘zombie deer disease’ will mutate to infect humans: ‘There are no contingency plans’
Scientists are sounding the alarm over the spread of “zombie deer disease” amid fears it may evolve to infect humans.

Late last year, experts confirmed Yellowstone National Park’s first case of the infection — officially known as chronic wasting disease — after a deer carcass found in the Wyoming area of the park tested positive for the highly contagious disease.

Now, cases have been reported in deer, elk and moose in 33 states across the US, as well as in Canada, Norway and South Korea.

The disease “damages portions of the brain and typically causes progressive loss of body condition, behavioral changes, excessive salivation and death,” according to the New York State Department of Health.

It is 100% fatal, and there are no treatments or vaccines.

“The bottom-line message is we are quite unprepared,” Michael Osterholm, an expert in infectious disease at the University of Minnesota, told KFF Health News earlier this month.

“If we saw a spillover right now, we would be in free fall. There are no contingency plans for what to do or how to follow up.”

Scientists say the most likely way humans could contract the disease would be through the consumption of infected venison.

However, there are currently no known cases of the disease in humans, even though up to 15,000 infected deer and elk are thought to be eaten each year.

But that does not mean the disease may not mutate.

CWD is caused by misfolded proteins known as prions — and another prion disease first found in animals has evolved to infect humans.

Sabine Gilch, a researcher at Canada’s University of Calgary, recently explained how mad cow disease, known officially as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, “jumped the transmission barrier from animals to humans.”

“During the BSE crisis, BSE was transmitted through contaminated meat or food products to humans and caused a new form of human prion disease, called variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease,” she explained.

While Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is not transmitted person to person by direct contact or airborne spread, scientists believe CWD could be.
Venison is ok. I like the jerky, or backstrap. I'll ask mine if they're heard any word on the woods about it. I feed them every night. I don't hunt them. I just like watching them. They're funny animals, especially when they fight over the corn. They come right up to the back patio.IMG_8119.jpg
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Venison is ok. I like the jerky, or backstrap. I'll ask mine if they're heard any word on the woods about it. I feed them every night. I don't hunt them. I just like watching them. They're funny animals, especially when they fight over the corn. They come right up to the back patio.View attachment 5371966
I live five houses from the river and we have the occasional white tailed visitors. Had a fox in winter eying up the rabbit hole going under my deck. Squirrels, you can have them.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I live five houses from the river and we have the occasional white tailed visitors. Had a fox in winter eying up the rabbit hole going under my deck. Squirrels, you can have them.
Mama volunteered for the Audubon Society when I was a youngster. Many was the litter of abandoned squirrel babies she nursed through to independence. I’m pretty fond of them. The opossum orphans, not so much.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Mama volunteered for the Audubon Society when I was a youngster. Many was the litter of abandoned squirrel babies she nursed through to independence. I’m pretty fond of them. The opossum orphans, not so much.
If they did not chew through everything in the shed and make such a mess I would not mind them. Have a chipmunk under my garage and unless I see it I would never know I had one.
 
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