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Category: Work Posts

Around Island Falls

We lucked out with the weather this week, only the first morning was a little chilly with frost on the car windows and on this dandelion.

The Snow Geese were headed in the right direction.

Our ride for the week was a Jeep Liberty.

The site is located at the Island Falls Hydroelectric Dam, this is the A-Dam Spillway.

On the way out of the site we encountered this guy.

He was just sitting on the road, not in any hurry to move off to the side.

I took some video of the bear as I was slowly driving towards it, eventually it bounded off into the bush.

We were staying at a fishing camp about 20 km’s from the site.

This is our cabin at Slim’s Cabins.

The cabins are located on the Churchill River, only about 8km by boat to the dam. The camp offers fishing, fly-in fishing and hunting. The main catch are Lake Trout, Pike, and Walleye.

The Hydroelectric Generating Station was built in 1928-30 by the Churchill River Power Company, which was a subsidiary of the HBM&S Co. (Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company). It provided power to the Mine and Smelting operations in Flin Flon, Manitoba. Today it is owned by SaskPower.

Up until the late 60’s there was a townsite of company owned houses for staff. Our site is located on the old townsite. Although they have long since torn down the houses, the sidewalks still remain as you can see in this photo.

The only remaining building from the townsite is the Commisary.

The two-storey Comissisary can be seen in the distance along with the old sidewalk.

These two photos show the location of the townsite in relation to the power station.

The Comissary is in the bottom right of this photo.

Another look at the A-Dam Spillway

Some video of from the Spillway.

Had time to visit the Josiah Flintabbatey Flonatin statue in Flin Flon.

The history behind the name of the city. NHL hockey players that were born in Flin Flon include, Bobby Clarke, Al Hamilton, Gerry Hart, Eric Nesterenko and Ken Baumgartner to name the more famous ones.

The flight to and from Winnipeg was with Calm Air. I flew up in a Saab 340B and an ATR 42 300 (below) on the way back. The Winnipeg Airport Terminal is quite nice now, a big step up from the old terminal.


Four Provinces in Four Days

This week found me in northern Saskatchewan again, only this time I’m on the east side in Island Falls. We are up here to finalize the installation of our first Oil Sands Monitoring Site. Since Thursday I have been in Nova Scotia, Ontario, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.

The route to Island Falls is through Winnipeg, then a flight to Flin Flon, follwed by a 2.5 hour drive, the last 100 km on packed gravel. The copper smelter in Flin Flon was shut down in 2010, the mining is still going on with an ore concentrator and zinc production facility.

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The road up to Island Falls.

The last of the sun for today.


Down East

This week marked the start of Single Parent Season for Susan. I was down in Nova Scotia to kick of a busy few weeks of travel. My trip coincided with some heavy rainfalls for the Nova Scotia area. When I picked up my rental car, the girl asked which way I was headed, I said Keji and she said it wasn’t too bad down there.

Up towards Truro, there was heavy flooding due to the 100mm rainfalls and timing with high tide. Here is a picture from the internet of one of the on-ramps to the 102 highway. When we were down in August we drove on this street.

I was working down at Kejimkujik National Park, moving along on our new site within the park. I was down to do the installation of our new instrument field, working with the regional staff and some contractors. The site is located near an old farmstead from the 1920’s, so there are some areas of archeological interest. The guy in the picture with the white hard hat is an archeologist brought in to watch every bucketful of earth dug up. If something turned up all work would have to cease.

Not often you see a bobcat get stuck, but with the 85mm of rain the site received over Sunday-Monday and probably hitting a hole from the de-stumping, it did delay things awhile.

As well as digging and pouring cornet, we were trenching and running power and signal cables.

Things were moving along until the holes/sonotubes started to fill up with water.

We were back at it early Wednesday morning, you can see the dirt steaming in the early morning sun.

After replacing some of the sonotubes that had collapsed, the cement truck arrived and then things started moving. After a couple of days of standing around and watching, it was non-stop for most of the afternoon. Despite the tight schedule we completed this step and I didn’t have to reschedule my flight.

I’ll be back down in the near future to mark out our building location and finish up the instrument field.


Saskatchewan Tour

I spent the week in Saskatchewan for work. I flew into Saskatoon (YXE) on Monday morning.

From Saskatoon we drove to Buffalo Narrows, about a 6.5 hour drive. I was staying at the Waterfront Inn on Churchill Lake.

Buffalo Narrows sits between Churchill and Peter Pond Lakes. It is located at 55° north.

Tuesday was spent in the bush just south of the town. Temperatures reached 32°C, not much of a break from southern Ontario temperatures. We were trying to find a location for a new monitoring site. As is often the case, people in the north like to use access roads off the highway as target practice and

dumping grounds.

An old abandoned cabin.

Bark.

Looking up.

Wednesday it was off to Cluff Lake Mine. In the fall of 2010 we had installed one of our precipitation monitoring sites at the decommissioned Uranium mine owned by Areva Resources. The site ran for a few months before they informed us they could no longer support our program with the recent cuts they had undergone. Fast forward a couple of years and word came down that we would have to get our equipment out of there before this fall. We co-ordinated with Sask Environment who also had some equipment running there and went up together in one of their vehicles. Cluff Lake is about 75km south of Lake Athabasca. It is located at 58° N.

We spent the night at the camp. This is Cluff Lake.

Some lichen along the shore.

The water felt pretty warm, they had also gone through a heat wave, temperatures reached 35° C the day before we arrived.

One of the open pits that has since been flooded. The mine was operational for 22 years during which time they produced over 62 million pounds (28,122,700 kgs) of yellowcake. Yellowcake is used in the preparation of uranium fuel for nuclear reactors.

Thursday morning it was time to head back south. We were back to Buffalo Narrows to pick up our rental vehicle and then down to Meadow Lake for the night. It was approximately 600km. There are a couple of water bombers stationed at the Buffalo Narrows airport.

Long desolate stretches of highway 155.

Our stop for the night was in Meadow Lake.

On Friday we departed from Meadow Lake for our site south of Regina to drop off our equipment. Along  Highway 16 there is a sign for the town of Richard, SK. Here I am standing next to the sign. You can see a RCMP cruiser passing to the left. When we stop to take the picture, he slowed down to see if everything was alright.

Saturday morning it was back to our site before flying out of Regina. After a week of heat and sun it was a relief having some cloud cover and showers off and on.

Some wheat in the adjoining fields.

The more typical Saskatchewan roads, when you get further north in the province, the terrain is a little more interesting, not quite as flat.

On the other side of the road were some canola fields.

A canola plant.

The flight back from Regina (YQR) was through Winnipeg, there was a 30 minute delay in the flight leaving Winnipeg (YWG). Probably 75% of the flight was making a connection in Toronto (YYZ). When we landed, a quick look at the departure screen showed a lot of delayed flights, most of them waiting for passengers on our flight.

It was a long week of travel, our tour of Saskatchewan was 2073 km’s of driving. In that distance you could drive from Mississauga to New Orleans, LA or from Rossland, BC to Las Vegas, NV. Of course we did all that without leaving the province. The weather was good, a little hot, and we had a doozy of a lightening/thunderstorm in Buffalo Narrows the first night. The wildlife was abundant on this trip, I saw 3 black bears, 1 wolf, a rabbit, pelicans, hawks,sandhill cranes and 3 deer. I drove the Trans-Canada highway, the Yellowhead highway, the Semchuk Trail, the Lois Riel Trail and the Canam Highway. Below is the route A.Saskatoon, B.Buffalo Narrows, C. Cluff Lake, D. Meadow Lake, E. Bratt’s Lake, F. Regina.


Regina, SK

Spent the week out at our site south of Regina. The weather was good, sunny and no rain.

Went into Rouleau for lunch one day. They have turned the old Corner Gas building from the series into a tourist store. It now sells souvenirs, and they have brought some of the set from the Regina sound stage to the store.

It has been relatively dry the last couple of weeks.


Portland, Oregon

I was down in Portland, Oregon this week for a technical meeting. I flew from Toronto to Vancouver and then down to Portland. Waiting in Vancouver for my puddle jumper connection.

Flying over Mount St. Helens.

Downtown Portland from my hotel room.

Went for lunch to Milos Cafe, there was a mini protest at the recruiting center next door. I think they were protesting Private Manning’s arrest. He was the one who passed along classified material to Wikileaks.

All around downtown Portland they have these food vendors, kind of like chip trucks, but you can get anything from sushi, indian, mexican and on and on.

The Zoobomb pile of bikes. Zoobomb is a weekly event where participants carry their bikes on the Max Light Rail to a station near the Oregon Zoo. From there, participants take the elevator to the surface and then ride their bikes down the hills in the vicinity. This process is often repeated several times throughout the night. This pile of bikes is the local meeting place.

The mall near the hotel had an ice rink in it. The other thing it had was carpet throughout the mall.

Outside one of the entrances.

A closer look at the sign.

The Max is Portland’s light rail transit. There is an area in the downtown core where it is free to ride. The cost from the airport to downtown is about $2.50.

Had the chance to go and see the Portland Winterhawks play the Tri-City Americans in game 3 of their WHL western semi-finals. The game was at the Rose Garden, the same place the NBA Portland Trailblzers play.

The announced attendance was about 7,750 people for a major junior hockey game, the atmosphere was crazy.

Portland won the game 3-1 to take a 3-0 series lead. They would go on to win the series the next night.

They went on to the WHL finals against the Edmonton Oil Kings. They lost the series 4-3 and a chance at the Memorial Cup. Derrick Puoliot went 8th overall in this years NHL entry draft to the Pittsburgh Penguins. He was part of the trade that sent Jordan Staal to the Carolina Hurricanes.


Kinghurst

I was out to the Owen Sound area for a couple of days, should be my last time for awhile. With a hiring of new techs back in February, some of my travel should decrease. Not necessarily the number of days, but the number of sites. There were a lot of garter snakes around the site.

A rusted out gas can, it continues to sit in the grass as it provides a habitat for the snakes.

We had a good day of weather.


Down at Penn State

This week I was down in State College, PA for work. It was my annual site inspection trip to our site at Penn State. This will probably be my last trip here for awhile, as I have turned it over to one of my new guys. On the way down, I saw this burglar alarm sign on a building in Ridgway, PA. Not sure what it is for or does?

We are having problems with some local porcupines who have take a fondness to chewing on the building.

A close-up of some of the damage they have caused.

My dinner at Red Lobster, that’s lobster mac n’ cheese.

On the way back I spotted this vending machine and made us turn back so I could take a photo. It is a live bait vending machine.

You have a choice of night crawlers, meal worms, wax worms, minnows, butter worms and maggots.


Kejimkujik 2

What was suppose to be one trip down to Nova Scotia to mark out a new site, turned into two trips a week apart. The first week I rented a Mazda CX7 cross-over.

The new site has been cleared, not an easy feat inside a National Park.

Due to some mis-calculations of the original marking done by our counter-parts in the Regional office, we were off 5-10m in the clearing of the trees. Back on a plane, I returned the next week to straighten out the marking of the trees. One of the difficulties is the site encompasses part of an old farmstead within the park, therefore there is the possibility that during de-stumping or construction it may disturb some artifacts from when it was a farm back at the turn of the century.

Logs stacked along the access road.


Nova Scotia Bound

Work has me heading down to Kejimkujik National Park in Nova Scotia this week to do some work on our new site in the park. I’m flying down Wednesday and back on Thursday night. Between this site, a new one up near Longlac, ON and three new ones out west, it will be a busy year ahead.