Showing posts with label Arlington County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arlington County. Show all posts

Saturday, July 7, 2012

A week after Derecho

Last Friday, June 29th, I returned from a week spent in Paris.  Great to be home, despite the amazing heat.  Being quite tired, I went to bed early and, it seems, slept through the incredible storm that messed up the subsequent days for a lot of people.  Joe and I were among the very fortunate; we lost no power and no damage to our beautiful maple tree.  The butterfly bush was cut in half.  That was all. 

Discordant circumstances in my Westover neighborhood (in Arlington, VA):  the Post Office was lit and it was cool, but they could only sell stamps; the system for calculating postage, processing passport orders, and so forth were impossible.  Ayers General Store had lights but no air conditioning, its register was a bit balky and no credit or debit cards could be used.The Safeway had no ice and very little bottled water; at the checkout, only cash and credit cards could be used, no debit cards, and NO cash back for anything.  On Lee Highway, of the four gas stations between George Mason Drive and Lexington Street, only one was open and its line stretched back to Lexington Street.

Having heard and read reports of the tempest, I expected to see lots and lots of damage in my heavily-treed neighborhood.  This is an old suburb (my neighborhood was platted in the 1930s.  Nearly every street has utility poles and a confusing web of lines).  I was surprised to see less damage than I expected.  Still, there were some whole trees that by some miracle fell only in yards, on fences, into the street, and very few on houses.   In the 1700 block of Longfellow, one tall poplar lay across the front yard and had brought down lots of wires and a utility pole; yellow "caution" tape stretched across the road because, I assume, the wires were hot.  Farther on, along Patrick Henry Drive, another section had yellow tape stretched across the road - - more downed wires along with trees and branches.

By Sunday morning, many many people had cleaned up the downed branches (except where they entangled with utility wires) -- how do you tell which wires are electric and which are cable and which are phone - - and are all dangerous?  I drove to the C &O Canal's Swains Lock (where I'm the Canal Steward), and saw that the Park Service has cleared the towpath there.  There were many large branches that had fallen along the campground's perimeter.  In the parking lot behind the lockhouse, what appears to be several small trees fell from the hillside across the gravel.   Our Canal Stewards plan to clean that up on Friday.

Back home, one very large tree on No. 11th Street is now doomed.  Joe and I used to walk past it frequently, and we'd marvel that its double trunk leaned far over the road, casting the road into deep shade.  And, I admit, we'd walk a bit more quickly past, fearing that its great size would bring it down.  No longer will we do so.  It's now about one-third the size it was last month.  And the remainder will be removed shortly.  
The Washington Post article yesterday described this as having an 18-foot circumference and an age of 250+.  It was a huge tree squeezed between the sidewalk and the street.
The larger part of the trunk broke away and fell across the road, damaging some fences on the opposite side.  A portion of it damaged the roof of a nearby house.  Below is an image of the tree pre-derecho:

Rest in peace, beautiful tree. 


Friday, February 12, 2010

Finally, the sun has returned

Snow on Feb. 3d. Much more snow on Feb. 5 and 6. And then again on Feb. 9 and 10. But yesterday the sun came out. We are tired of digging our way out of the stuff. The front steps. The back steps. The driveway. The two cars. My car was finally set free yesterday afternoon.





Looks good, right? But look at the house and the piles of snow.













I took a walk around the neighborhood. The table and chairs? Outside Scoops Beauregard, but not really set up for sidewalk dining.





I do like the pic of these folks climbing back up the sledding hill. It's between Lexington Street and the newly-rebuilt Walter Reed School/Westover library building.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Dull, duller, dullest

Monday and no meaningful or non-meaningful work has crossed my desk for hours now. I have had 3 phone conversations with clients, read one email rant against another title company's shortcomings, had 2 face-to-face talks about inconsequential matters, and eaten my lunch. The sun is shining briefly and I should be outside walking in it. But I am waiting for an anxious client to phone me for a "closing via telephone" - - she has the documents, and wants me to stand by so that she can be sure of what she is signing. After that, I'm free to wander off and be happy.

3:26 p.m. - phone closing was late but is finished, so I'm off for a bit - the sun is hidden - too bad. But I'm still off for a bit.

Back 20 min later - great grey clouds with small openings edged with bright sunlit white opening to blue blue. But windy & not warm.

Shortly thereafter arrived the documents from anxious client - faxed 8-9 to loan processor. Once the fax went through I was out of there, just before 5 & hoping for 30 min. drive home - foiled on Whitehurst Fwy because up on Key Bridge, outbound, were the flashing lights of police and first&rescue in the outside lane. So 3 lanes squeezed to 2 and looky-looks drove slowly by. Big raindrops splatted on the windshied as I sped up past the last police car, and hard rain quickly followed - all the way home. Pork chops & mashed potatoes & mushy peas made for a good hearty dinner, with some red wine for me.

Tuesday: my day off. Joe said there's a big truck & crane putting something up on the roof of the library. I went to see, and it's a large stone carving of an acanthus leaf(?) hoisted onto the brick/concrete platform at the library streetcorner. A young man videoing the procedure said the sculpture is from the Abbey Mausoleum which was on the grounds of land Arlington County bought from ?Ft. Myer in 2004. There's also 2 pair of Tiffany windows from same place going into the library sometime soon. The young man and I like the way the county is reusing architectural elements as amenities to new construction. (Have some photos to post).

The Abbey Mausoleum I had never heard of. Best information came from a United Daughters of the Confederacy article about moving the remains of the widow of Confederate General George Pickett from the long-abandoned Abbey Mausoleum. It was located adjacent to Henderson Hall, the US Marine Corps. facility at the south edge of Arlington National Cemetary. It seems to have been a prestigious site for interrment of prominent persons (politicians mostly?) but was abandoned in the 1950s to vandalism and deterioration. The county purchased the property after the Corps had removed the remains to other burial places.