Posts tagged #Vegetation

Where Chambers Street ends and Rockefeller Park Starts

Big City Life

Rockefeller Park and Bronze Statues

    Today we have been promised really hot temperatures, and they have issued a heat advisory, with temperatures up to 95F, and the so called real feel up above 100 degrees F. I’m pretty sure we had days like this in Madison too, but maybe not as frequent. In Fairbanks and Alaska on the other hand, these things never happened. Instead we could hear about the air quality advisories on the radio while sipping coffee in the morning. Smoke from all wildfires which created this grey to yellow smoke that hovered over Fairbanks, sometimes for weeks, or air quality advisories in the wintertime because of pollutions that stayed atop the city for months. Now that I have lived here for a couple of weeks I am used to this heat (not true) and the heat advisories, or rather I know when to venture out and what to expect versus times when it's probably best to stay at home. One thing about New York that always surprise me when I do venture out, are all these small parks spread across the city, and all the trees and bushes you can see where you least expect it.  The other day I took the train south, to Brooklyn Bridge. I got off, and followed Chambers Street towards the water on the west side of Manhattan. Once there I stumbled upon Rockefeller Park, that joins up with Hudson River Park if you continue north along the water(Hudson). The first thing I noticed was this large bronze statue to the left of the stairs leading down into the park. As I continued towards it, I suddenly saw all of these other bronze statues scattered across the area. Statues of creatures, people, bankers and robbers, laborers and pilgrims, predators and prey. If you ever find yourself in New York City, I would definitely recommend this park, to find some shadow and to relax and enjoy all these sculptures. New York is such a large city with so many tourists, but you can still come across areas like Rockefeller Park that is close to empty. I guess I can compare it to when people visit National Parks. Most people stay on the road, in the car, and hardly anyone actually get off the road, and if they do few people hike more than 1 mile from the road system, or the most popular places. If it is off the beaten path, fewer people go there. 

Urban Parks and Urban Heat Islands

    Did you know that woodlands are cooler than urban areas? And that city parks can be as much as 5 F cooler than surrounding areas during the day, and even cooler during the evening and night time? The concept of buildings being hotter than parks is often referred to as the Urban Heat Island. Dark non-reflective buildings absorb heat, and will re-release the heat throughout the day, making the surrounding area warmer. Vegetation cool the surrounding area through a process called evapotranspiration, and hence a park with moist soil and a lot of vegetation will have a cooling effect. Of course the urban heat island concept is more complex than comparing dark and non-reflective buildings to vegetation, but overall the outcome is cooler parks, compared to surrounding buildings, as you can see in the temperature and vegetation map of New York below, from NASA. So, think about the cooling effect next time you walk in a large city and encounter a park.

Views along Chambers Street, Rockefeller Park, and Hudson River Park:

    Do you have a favorite park in the (any) city you always visit?

Hiking Blue Mound State Park in Wisconsin

I have come up with two new themes for my blog, Adventure Tuesday, and Flashback Friday. I have so many pictures I have yet to share with the rest of the world, so I figured that these two themes could be a nice addon to my blogging. I hope you enjoy. Here is the first Adventure Tuesday post.

Blue Mound State Park

A couple of weeks ago W and I went to one of many many State Parks here i Wisconsin.  To enter a State Park you have to purchase an admission ticket, a sticker you put on the car. Annual admission sticker is 15.50$ compared to the daily which is 8$. Compared to the BLM land in Alaska these trails in the state parks here in Wisconsin (and probably elsewhere too) are highly maintained, and some of them even has asphalt on the actual trail. Going uphill is no problem because there are stairs put in, almost a little bit ridiculous coming from Alaska but it's very pretty. 

The forest here is so green, and lush. It definitely looks like a rainforest. 

At the Blue Mound State Park the main goal for us was to see some views. There are two different towers you can climb up for some views.

Again, showing how green it is here.

As always I love taking macro photos. There are some many plants here. I really need to read up on the vegetation here. Are you familiar with the plants where you live? What State Parks do you have in close proximity to where you live?

Friday Theme, From a different Perspective

Brudsporre (Gymnadenia conopsea)
Fjällspira (Pedicularis hirsuta)

Todays friday theme is a little tricky, but as with all these themes you can interpret it in your own way.I have a lot of pictures that are taken from a different perspective, mostly catching a flowers perspective of the world. I love taking pictures that have blurry backgrounds, focused on one specific thing with the world in the background.

Flowers in the air
The insect and the flower

Another different perspective is the way that insects view the world

The spider and the flower

The plant on the picture below is probably not anything I would recommend to an insects, it's Sundew, an insect eating plant found in the boreal forest.

Sundew
Beautiful plant

Plants are really beautiful, and I love taking closeups

Flower
Flower.
Mushroom
Mushroom2

Sometimes I take pictures and wonder how it would be if I could walk around in the woods as a much smaller creature.

Happy Dogs

Every second year the Yucon Quest starts in Fairbanks, last year was one of those years. Of course I brought my camera. That is the perspective of a bunch of happy dogs doing what they only know.

IceClimbing

Of course I can't leave out climbing, ice climbing, and the different perspectives you get there.

LasVegas

Me and W got a different perspective of life and people when we went through Las Vegas, the town that never sleeps....

Well, with that it's finally time for bed. Less writing and more pictures today, but that is what the friday theme is all about for me.

Since you all know how much I love mountains, here's a picture from last weekend, Hopefully I will se many more this weekend :)

The Mountain

Happy Weekend!