The Zilwaukee Bridge

The Zilwaukee Bridge

The Zilwaukee Bridge, photo by Mario.Q.

This photo is part of Mario’s Zilwaukee Bridge set (slideshow). He writes:

The Zilwaukee Bridge carries northbound and southbound I-75 125 feet over the Saginaw River at Zilwaukee, MI with a total length of just over 8,000 ft. This high level bridge replaced a drawbridge at the same location that caused major backups on I-75 with frequent openings for ship traffic going from Saginaw, MI to the Great Lakes. With a major and widely publicized construction mishap and huge budget overruns this is one of the more widely know bridges in the State of Michigan.

You can read much more about this star-crossed bridge in Wikipedia’s Zilwaukee Bridge entry, but the best resource is michiganhighways.org. There you can find The Zilwaukee Bridge: From the Beginning by MDOT. This details the whole story including “The Accident“. There’s also a bunch of photos of the bridge including an aerial view and an annotated aerial view.

There used to be blue skies at General Motors…

There used to be blue skies at General Motors...

There used to be blue skies at General Motors…, photo by Derek Farr ( DetroitDerek ).

This photo is part of Derek’s great Detroit set of photos (slideshow). Derek writes:

A view out of General Motors World Headquarters, located in the Rencen Building in Downtown Detroit. There was a time that even thinking of General Motors running out of cash would be laughable … not anymore.

Indeed. This morning I’ve read editorials in the leading papers on both sides of the aisle that show a rising sentiment against the Detroit car companies. In Bailout to Nowhere in the New York Times, David Brooks suggests that it’s a bad idea to try and manage the economic jungle that claimed PanAm, ITT and Montgomery Ward and replaced them with Microsoft, Southwest Airlines and Target.

In the Wall Street Journal Robert Hahn and Peter Passell suggest that we should Stimulate Car Buyers, Not Car Makers:

Since a big fiscal-stimulus package for fighting the recession — some combination of tax cuts, extended unemployment compensation, infrastructure grants and assistance to states — is coming soon, why not stimulate consumers to buy cars? Why not offer eye-popping rebates — say, $3,000 — for a limited time to buyers of cars and light trucks? It would probably make sense to phase out rebates for the most expensive cars, and as a treaty obligation, it wouldn’t do to discriminate against foreign makes.

How much downstream benefit this would generate and for whom is hard to predict. Still, it is a fair bet that most of the money would be quickly recycled in the form of demand for everything from auto parts to car mechanics’ salaries — just what you want to happen in a recession.

What do you think? Are we watching the sunset of the Big Three … and will the sun rise for them and for the Michigan auto industry?

Ercy posted a link to GM Facts & Fiction. It’s by GM, but I think that GM has a part of the story to tell too. Found an interesting column in the Freep through their links by Susan Tompor titled Where’s the love? I never knew Detroit was a dirty word (please go read it). She makes a lot of great points including:

We’re watching one huge disconnect here.

We have the worst financial crisis that most of us have ever seen. Automakers sell big-ticket items that generally require financing. Michigan has been in a recession for years — not just a few months. We are on the edge. And somehow, still, no one here deserves any help.

General Wesley Clark suggests that aiding the American automobile industry is not only an economic imperative, but also a national security imperative in What’s Good for GM is Good for the Army.

What’s the forecast Mr. Wooly Bear?

What’s the forecast Mr. Wooly Bear?, photo by reddeviltj

Wikipedia says that the banded woolly bear caterpillar is the larva of the Isabella tiger moth. As every schoolchild knows, the wooly bear is the Farmer’s Almanac of insect kingdom:

Folklore of the eastern United States holds that the relative amounts of brown and black on the skin of a wooly bear caterpillar (commonly abundant in the fall) are an indication of the severity of the coming winter. It is believed that if a woolly bear caterpillar’s brown stripe is thick, the winter weather will be mild and if the brown stripes are narrow, the winter will be severe. In reality, hatchlings from the same clutch of eggs can display considerable variation in their color distribution, and the brown band tends to grow with age; if there is any truth to the aphorism, it is minimal.

While the wooly bear may not be pushing Al Roker for a job, the wooly bear does produce its own anti-freeze (page also includes some extreme closeups – of the caterpillar, not Roker). If you’re interested in detailed instructions for how to keep wooly bears over the winter, check the Michigan Entomology Society. If you’re interested in simple instructions for how to keep wooly bears with a soundtrack, check here.

This photo is part of Susan’s Bugs set (slideshow).

Piglet says: Don’t sleep on the Exposure.Detroit show!

Piglet, photo by Aaron Fortin

Aaron took this photo of the newborn piglet at the Miracle of Life Exhibit at this summer’s Michigan State Fair. You can see it bigger in his Pets & Animals slideshow (full set).

The next Exposure.Detroit show opens tomorrow night (Friday, November 14) from 7-10 PM at the Bean and Leaf Cafe in Royal Oak. In addition to Aaron, the photographers are:

Brett Lawrence

Niki Collis (Luna.Nik)

Rebecca Gutierrez (Luna’s Eyes)

Ken Jacoby

Poster designed by Ajit.

Detroit from metroDevious

Untitled, photo by metroDevious.

Check out the Detroit gallery at metroDevious.com or his mDv DETROIT slideshow on Flickr.

Yow!

Veterans Day at the Great Lakes National Cemetery in Holly

holly 107

holly 107, photo by jmbarclay.

Today is Veterans Day and I hope everyone gets a chance to to take some time to remember those who have served and are serving our nation.

I’m pretty sure this photo is from the Great Lakes National Cemetery in Holly, Michigan. The Holly cemetery is the second national cemetery in Michigan. Michigan’s other national cemetery is the Fort Custer National Cemetery.

Michigan Veterans and Veterans Day on Absolute Michigan has a lot of good information and resources and you can get some good photos & articles about veterans on Michigan in Pictures.

You can view this photo larger in Jim’s Art slideshow and see more veterans photos in the Absolute Michigan pool.

Fall floating away

Fall floating away

Fall floating away, photo by ahannink.

Snow fell across the state yesterday, and it looks like our long, glorious run of fall weather is coming to a close.

View it larger in ahannink’s Nature set slideshow.

Rain on My Sunset at Isle Royale

Rain on My Sunset

Rain on My Sunset, photo by yooper1949.

Take a trip to Isle Royale National Park with yooper1949 (slideshow) and be sure to check this beauty out bigger.

Isle Royale National Park is one of our state’s true treasures. You can see more photos from this beautiful Michigan island in the Isle Royale National park group. Two cool ways to explore the pics is through this group slideshow and the Isle Royale group Flickriver.

Hope you all have a happy weekend wherever you may be.

The (Snowy) Owl on the Roof

The Owl on the Roof

The Owl on the Roof, photo by .jowo..

Joel writes:

When Joan opened the curtains this morning she found this fella sitting on the telephone pole. An hour or so later, it moved to the top of the house, where it stayed for a couple more hours.

This shot from the back yard. The bird kept its eye on me, but obviously wasn’t concerned about me. Never had an owl in our yard before. Very impressive.

Be sure to check it out bigger, this other view and Joel’s Birds slideshow.

The Owl Pages’ page for the Snowy Owl (Bubo scandiacus) has great info on the Snowy Owl, which was classified in 1758 by famed Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus (the guy who laid the foundations for taxonomy & ecology). The “scandiacas” is a Latinised word referring to Scandinavia. Other names include Arctic Owl, Great White Owl, Ghost Owl, Ermine Owl, Tundra Ghost, Ookpik and (my personal favorite) White Terror of the North. The average female weighs 5 pounds and is 26″ tall with a 50-60″ wingspan, making it one of the larger owls.

The Call of the Wild Museum page on snowy owls says:

The Snowy Owl is a beautiful, majestic Bird of Prey. It is one of the most
recognized birds to visit Michigan in the winter – they actually fly south
from Northern Canada and Alaska in October and November, then fly back
north in March and April – just as it starts to warm up. Only the males will
be completely white, the females are generally larger, but their feathers
are white with dark spotting or barring. These large white, tuftless owls
are found primarily in wide open inland spaces – this includes farmlands,
marshlands and even airports! Any of these habitats in Michigan resemble
their northern tundra homes.

Being a bird of open land, some of their favorite resting spots are on the
ground, a lamp post, or a rooftop; they hardly ever sit up in a tree. In their
breeding grounds, found far north, the lemming are their primary food
source. When the lemming population is on a decline in the tundra, the
snowy owl flies further south to supplement their hunger. This leads to an
occasional influx in the number of birds in Michigan, in fact studies have
shown that this happens every 4 -5 years. the most recent invasion
happened during the winter of 1991-92. More than 100 owls were reported
seen from over half of Michigan’s 83 counties!

Also see the Snowy Owl from All About Birds (has some sounds of the snowy owl too), Nyctea scandiaca (snowy owl) from Animal Diversity Web and Wikipedia’s Snowy Owl entry.

Finally, here’s a cool YouTube video of a snowy owl in Wayne County!

Tumbledown on the Keweenaw Waterway

n2c_101-0545

n2c_101-0545, photo by sgowtham.

Gowtham writes that thanks to not so good winter, scorching summer and lack of rains, water level in Portage Canal (near the dredge) was observably low (without that, he probably wouldn’t have gotten this picture).

Wikipedia says that The Keweenaw Waterway:

… is a partly natural, partly manmade waterway which cuts across the Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan. Parts of the waterway are variously known as the Keweenaw Waterway, Portage Canal, Portage Lake Canal, Portage River, Lily Pond, and Portage Lake. The waterway connects to Lake Superior at its north and south entries with sections known as Portage Lake and Torch Lake in between. The primary tributary to Portage Lake is the Sturgeon River.

Originally a small river used by natives for transportation and fishing, the waterway was dredged and extended in the 1860s in a joint venture between the United States Government and several mining corporations. The expanded canal allowed freighters to haul copper from the rich copper mines of the Keweenaw Peninsula out through Lake Superior to larger cities. It also enabled supply boats and freighters to reach the cities of Houghton and Hancock, which supplied goods to most of Michigan’s copper region. The local mines’ stamp mills dumped large quantities of stamp sand (containing traces of copper and chemical leaching agents) into the waterway, causing significant environmental damage near the sand dumps.

It’s part of the Keweenaw Water Trail.

He has many more great photos at sgowtham.net and you can also check out his Flickriver.