Thursday, July 25, 2013

Fun Facts About Head in the Clouds Amherst

Geographic distribution of Head in the Clouds Amherst readers
(darkest green for highest number of readers)
So which of these "fun facts" do you find the most surprising?
  • Currently, more than 2,000 individuals check out our site every month (2,019 last month, to be exact). The number has been increasing steadily since we started at the very end of October 2012 (just ahead of Hurricane Sandy).
  • Just about 70% of our readers are from the U.S., which means that 30% of our readers are from other countries.
  • After the U.S., we are most popular with readers in Germany, Russia, France, U.K., Indonesia, and China (in that order).
  • We have posted blog entries 144 times.
  • Our most popular post of all time is from January 8th, "UFO Sighting Early Evening (it's true)."
  • Our most popular post this month has been "Musings on a Hot Summer Night," from July 17th.
  • Of our "back pages," the most popular are About Us, Emily's House, and Weather Cooks, in that order.
And if you haven't visited all our pages or read our most popular entries, now's your chance. Enjoy and come back often!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Camille Seaman: Photos from a Storm Chaser

Photographer Camille Seaman has been chasing storms for 5 years. In this 3.5 minute TED talk she shows and talks about some of her most stunning, surreal photos. We don't usually get these kinds of vistas around New England - too many trees, hills and mountains and our clouds tend to be a little less dramatic as a rule - but even we have our awe-inspiring moments. The trick is to catch them (and be this good at it). To see more of Camille's work, which also includes more cloud photos and an incredible series on icebergs, visit her website here.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Heat Wave Relief Comes Saturday

NECN Heat Advisory Map, 7/18/2013
This week’s intense heat and humidity will last through Saturday. Excessive Heat Warnings and Heat Advisories are in effect today for much of Southern New England and will likely be reissued Friday and possibly Saturday as the heat wave continues.

As we get into Saturday, intense heat and humidity will then be followed by a cold front with scattered to numerous strong to severe thunderstorms on Saturday. In a somewhat rare move so far in advance, on Wednesday the Storm Prediction Center issued a “Slight Risk of Severe Weather” for Saturday for all of Southern New England (it is likely to become more than “slight” as we get closer to Saturday). Today and Friday could see an isolated to scattered strong or severe thunderstorm threat, but it’s more likely that widespread severe weather will stay north and west of our region until Saturday.

As we get into Saturday, the current heat wave will end as a strong cold front is expected to make its way into Southern New England. Models have been insistent out as far as 7 days that scattered to numerous strong to severe thunderstorms will organize in a line or several line configurations with the potential for damaging winds, hail, and heavy rain.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Musings on a Hot Summer Night

Given the intense heat we’ve been enduring lately, I thought it might be a perfect time to share this out-take from my never-quite-completed novel, Murder on the Whale Watch.

Humpback whale breaching on Stellwagen Bank (Photo by S. Vardatira)
It has been a hot, hot summer. Long interminable heat sliding up from Bermuda, coating Boston and all of New England in a haze of sticky wet. We have been delirious with the heat. We ache. Our joints swell in their sockets and leave us immobile, exhausted. I do not remember heat like this. You hear that wherever you go. People murmur in the streets about the state of the Earth, the drought, climate change. It is like living in purgatory, or hell. The air quality is unhealthful (at the very least). We suspect it is worse, that perhaps they’ve skewed the scale so we will feel grateful it is not worse. We believe they are lying. We feel better when they tell us that the heat and humidity combined make it feel like 105°F. That’s closer to the truth. The cactus that moved east with us from the Chihuahuan Desert is thriving. The other plants wither, curl up, and die. The cats lie sprawled across the table. Only an ear twitch leaves the impression of life. Harvard University closed yesterday.* For the first time in over 350 years, it closed because of heat. It is hot, damned hot.

We can barely remember when “hot” was simply the sizzle of love, a gesture to imply the sound of oil in a hot frying pan. The sizzle of love is almost obscene in such heat. It is reserved for night-time dramas watched by the vibrations of an oscillating fan. Even then, you consider the implications of heat between people. The beads of perspiration, the glaze of sweat under the breasts, slipping between the thighs. You imagine fights in such heat. Small, bickering, headachy fights. Anything more intense would require too much energy. Energy is in short supply. It withers in the hot sun on the pavement. It threatens to leave altogether, taking along air-conditioner and fans alike. We gaze mournfully at the TV weather forecast. We make ridiculous journeys in search of coolness, pitch our tent in the local campground despite the increasing heat, break camp, and drive home. When we can, we leave early for the beach where we submerge for hours by the water’s edge, flip off inflatable boats, dangle over air mattresses.  

In the evenings we venture out to the front stoop and wonder why the humidity hasn’t left with the last light of day. And when we’re not tossing in bed at night, turning over our pillows, and kicking off the top sheet, we dream. We dream of fall, and apple picking, and leaves turning crisp golden reds in the frosty air. We dream of cool, misty fog  . . . and whales and dolphins diving somewhere off shore, beckoning.


* This is, in fact, a bit of fiction. Harvard did not close yesterday to my knowledge. But it could happen – Harvard first closed due to heat in the summer of 1988. 

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Musical Ice on a Hot Saturday

Turn up your volume to capture this symphony of ice 
(Video by Dan Vardamis) 

As we New Englanders continue to swelter in our current heat wave, there may be at least some psychic relief in gazing on these scenes, all taken over the last few days and sent to us by Dan and Elaine Vardamis who live in the mountains of Colorado (check out their blog for more surreal July vistas). Surreal, that is, if you are in Amherst on these dog days of summer.

Skiing on July 4, Photograph by Dan Vardamis
(Elaine is the dark speck skiing downhill just slightly above the center)

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Weather Outlook Good for Amherst Fireworks Tonight

Joshua at the Amherst Firework's Event, July 2000
Photo by S. Vardatira
Sure, the day is expected to be hotter than Hades, with the heat index hitting 100 by afternoon (temperatures in the mid to high 90s, with dewpoint around 70), but it should be tolerable by evening. And what's even better, there are no storms in the forecast for Amherst's annual fireworks show this evening. Festivities start at 5:00 pm, with fireworks show starting at 9:30 pm. With children’s games, carnival rides, a climbing rock wall, pie eating and corn husking contests, live music from the Deerfield River Ensemble and Amherst Community Band, and a truly memorable fireworks display, Amherst is the place to be tonight. For all the details, go to the Town of Amherst website. And wherever you may go today, have a wonderful Independence Day! (And drink plenty of fluids.)

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Video of F1 Tornado Near Windsor Locks, Connecticut (7/1/2013)

Footage of F1 tornado that touched down near Windsor Locks, Connecticut yesterday (7/1/2013, 2:26 PM). Footage taken by Jeff Stanescki, also aired on WGGB Springfield.

Northampton Resolution on Drones Described as "First of Its Kind in Country"

From today's Daily Hampshire Gazette comes this article, which is sure to be of interest to the many Head in the Clouds Amherst readers who were following us last January when we broke news about the "UFO" (or was it possibly a drone?) sighting in Amherst. We think Amherst should seriously consider following Northampton's example. Do you agree?

Northampton City Council resolution targets drones, airspace
By CHAD CAIN
Staff Writer
Monday, July 1, 2013 
(Published in print: Tuesday, July 2, 2013)

NORTHAMPTON — In what supporters believe is the first of its kind in the country, the city of Northampton is calling on the federal government to stop using unmanned drone aircraft to carry out “extrajudicial killing” and to reject proposed regulations that seek to turn private backyards into public airspaces for drones.

In unanimously approving a drone aircraft resolution last week, the City Council became the second municipality in the country — and first in New England — to take an official position in relation to drone use.

“This actually gives me chills,” City Council President William H. Dwight said. “This concerns me a great deal.”

Unlike a resolution approved by the city of Charlotte, N.C., Northampton’s resolution is the first to address the issue by highlighting the Federal Aviation Administration’s desire to change long-standing rules governing “navigable airspace” to accommodate drone flights closer to the ground. If approved, the new rules would seriously infringe on private property rights and make it easier for the government to use drones for surveillance, resolution supporters said.

Others condemn the government’s use of the military drones to carry out targeted attacks overseas that have killed innocent people and turned public opinion against the U.S. government in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and Afghanistan.

“Whether we like it or not, literally, the air around us is being changed to accommodate the type of drones that conduct surveillance and, yes, the ones that are armed,” said Jeff Napolitano, program coordinator for the western Massachusetts chapter of the American Friends Service Committee.

‘Navigable airspace’

Resolution backers are alarmed that Congress and the FAA are considering an expansion of the so-called navigable airspace — the public space higher than 500 feet off the ground that gives aircraft, including drones, the “right of transit.”

The proposal would extend that airspace from its current level down to just above the ground. This change, under consideration in order to accommodate low-flying drones, threatens long-standing property rights, expectations of privacy and state and local sovereignty, the resolution states.

Such an expansion of navigable airspaces would give the FAA authority to restrict any landowner activity that could potentially interfere with low-flying drone aircraft, according to the resolution.

“The FAA is now telling us what we can and can’t do in our own backyards one inch above the grass,” said Paul Voss, a Smith College engineering professor who uses unmanned aircraft for research. “The drone industry is salivating over all our backyards.”

Unlike military drones, Voss and other scientists in academia and at private businesses often use unmanned aircraft in their research. He said the federal government has instituted so many airspace restrictions on these aircraft, which in some cases can be as small as a balloon, that research is being severely hampered.

Aaron Cantrell, a recent Hampshire College graduate who has launched a small product and mechanical design company, said the certification process is prohibitive for small institutions and businesses who are trying to develop technologies for positive uses in a variety of fields.

“The regulations as outlined push out smaller players in the field,” Cantrell said.

The resolution, approved unanimously last week by the council on its first required vote, demands that the navigable airspace for drone aircraft within Northampton’s city limits shall not be expanded below the long-established airspace for manned aircraft. The council is scheduled to take its second required vote on the measure July 11.

The resolution also states that landowners in the city have exclusive control of the “immediate reaches of the airspace and that no drone aircraft shall have the ‘public right of transit’ through this private property.” Once the navigable airspace become public, local jurisdictions do not have authority to regulate its use.

“There are a lot of very serious restrictions that come with the pubic airspace,” Voss said. “Our backyards are being defined away from us.”

In its resolution, the council calls on Congress, the FAA, and state legislators on Beacon Hill to respect legal precedent and constitutional guarantees of privacy, property rights and local sovereignty in all matters pertaining to drone aircraft and navigable space.

A long history

Hundreds of years ago, common law stated that property owners owned the air space directly above their property to the heavens, said Voss, who has studied the history of airspace.

That changed in 1926, when then-president and Northampton’s former mayor, Calvin Coolidge, signed into law the Air Commerce Act that established the national airspace system. That act declared that airspace above the minimum safe altitudes for flight, generally understood as about 500 feet, was navigable airspace for public use.

The lower airspace remained a bone of contention until 1946, when the Supreme Court ruled that a landowner has exclusive control over the “immediate reaches of the enveloping atmosphere.”

The FAA’s plan to reverse that ruling is contrary to hundreds of years of precedent, Voss said.

“Now, FAA regulations are working as if landowners own nothing,” Voss said. “It’s obscured by highfalutin terms like ‘minimum safe altitudes’ and ‘navigable airspace,’ but it would change our personal property rights in a very scary way.”

Areas of concern

The resolution also takes the government to task for the “extrajudicial” use of weaponized drones overseas that have killed many innocent people.

“If our federal government won’t stop using them, at least we, at a grassroots level, have an obligation to decry their use,” Napolitano said.

He said the use of drones is not reserved for far-off places, but instead is increasing in popularity among law enforcement agencies within the United States. That fact came to light late last month when FBI Director Robert Mueller admitted during a hearing before Congress that the government is using drones in this country on a limited basis.

“The FBI has and continues to use drones for surveillance, without actually having guidelines to protect our civil liberties or safety,” Napolitano said. “And I hope that alarms and concerns you as much as it did members of Congress.”

Should Congress change the rules for navigable space, the resolution states that drone aircraft are “poised to gain unprecedented access to private property at any altitude and for any purpose.” Some examples include advertising, news reporting, environmental monitoring and private investigations.

Napolitano said defense contractors have already produced more drones than the military needs, and the excess supply is being marketed at local police departments, which are beginning to use them without clear guidance from lawmakers. Some of these drones are designed to carry weapons including tear gas, firearms and rubber buckshot, the resolution states.

The council expressed universal concern about the changes under consideration.

“I’m really troubled by the policy moves of the FAA,” said Maureen T. Carney, who represents Ward 1. “I’m also troubled by drones to not only spy on Americans, but to kill women and children all over the world.”

In addition to privacy concerns, Ward 7’s Eugene A. Tacy said the potential changes will be detrimental to the economy because of the way they would limit the use of unmanned aircraft for technology and research purposes.

“I think it’s really overreaching,” Tacy said.

Dwight is hopeful Northampton’s action will be repeated elsewhere.

“It’s unprecedented,” Dwight said. “There is no other resolution pending in the state. We are asking the government to give this a lot more scrutiny than it seems to have been given. We hope the resolution catches on.”

Napolitano said his organization has reached out to Amherst and Holyoke, with the latter community currently discussing an ordinance that would forbid its police department from buying and using drones.
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For our past postings on the Amherst "UFO" sighting, go to our entries for January 8 and January 9 and January 10 - we also continued to add updates to the "comments" section following the main entries.