Sunday, November 29, 2009

Checking the map









From Chattahoochee Bend

There's a smiling Kevin on the banks of the river holding the new map. He gave me some valuable help by coming out to cast another pair of eyes over the map. We covered a large portion of the northern map visiting most of the problem areas and discussing how best to represent them on the printed page. The many vegetation changes on this part of the map present the biggest challenge for the mapmaker. The weather was great (and dry) and it was fun to walk back over the map and look at places I hadn't seen in months.

I've decided to divide the remainder of the map into two sections instead of one. Flat Rock road will be the dividing line. I'll first work east of the road (where most of the rock features are). There are at least 3 sq. km. there. That should take me into the Spring. Then I will venture east of the road, where all of the park construction is happening. That is the largest section, something around 5 sq. km. With any luck and a lot of hard work I should be done in another year, by Christmas 2010 - but don't hold me to that prediction!

Monday, November 16, 2009

Stats from the north map

The log of my activity is on the Project Time page, but here is a summary:

238 hours and 15 minutes total time, which includes 151 hours of field checking, 45 hours of drafting, and the rest preparing the base map.

A little over 4 sq km mapped. That's almost 60 hours per sq km.

30 trips to the park, at 40 miles per trip, equals 1200 total miles of travel.

I started Feb 28 and ended Nov 15.

Now I will take a break. I will start the southern map (which is bigger) in January.

Week of mapping - Report #2

Hurricane Ida interrupted my week of mapping. Two inches of rain fell in one day.

From Chattahoochee Bend


This put a serious crimp in my field checking. I stayed home the day that it rained. Then went out on the tail-end of the rain the next day only to find it too deep for my boots - and the water was flowing instead of standing still. I took the next day off and went to do trail maintenance on the AT at Hawk Mt. Went out the next day only to discover that the flood crest from Atlanta had just reached the park. You can see the wet areas on the tree trunks where it is falling.

From Chattahoochee Bend


I worked around the edges of the flood as best I could for the next two days. Finally the water went down far enough that I could get back out there, and in one long marathon day I finished the rest of the floodplain.

Here's the river, back within it's banks:
From Chattahoochee Bend


An armadillo that didn't survive the flood:

From Chattahoochee Bend


And an old bus converted into a hunting camp:

From Chattahoochee Bend


Yes, that's a homemade fireplace where the engine should be.

And here is the biggest tree in the northern section of the park - it's probably the biggest tree in the park:

From Chattahoochee Bend


From Chattahoochee Bend


From Chattahoochee Bend


It's on a sandhill just meters from the bank of the river. Too high for Hurricane Ida to reach, but it was flooded in the 500 year flood, and probably many times in the past.

In fact, there was very little real damage from the big flood. Here's a huge raft of trash from Atlanta:

From Chattahoochee Bend


And finally, the early morning fog on the water:
From Chattahoochee Bend

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Week of mapping - report #1

I'm taking a week off from my real job to attempt to finish the map north of the big powerline before Christmas. I've mapped three days so far, and been too tired each night to blog about it. Today it is raining, so here's the first report.








From Chattahoochee Bend

Rubber boots are required footwear. I went to Wal-Mart and bought the cheapest ones I could find. Can you believe there is still standing water after the flood? Here's proof:








From Chattahoochee Bend









From Chattahoochee Bend









From Chattahoochee Bend


You can probably tell that I am finally mapping the floodplain. I was waiting for it to dry out. I think it may take a while yet. Why is it still flooded? The floodplain is not flat. Working back at a right angle from the river, there is first a 10-12 foot bank, then a narrow ridge of sand 2-4 feet tall, then a depression 10-15 meters wide, then a sand hill 4-6 feet tall, steep on the river side, very gradually descending on the other side to a much larger depression that extends all the way to the first contour. This large depression is where the standing water collects. There is no path for it to escape to the river, and the ground is saturated after being under 21 feet of water. So it ends up looking more like the Okeefenokee than the Chattahoochee. In several spots ditches have been dug and channels cut through the sandhill by someone attempting to improve the drainage for farming. It hasn't worked and the ditches are all clogged now.

Once the rain stops I will don my rubber boots and head back out. I am about halfway done with the floodplain at this point - at least another 3 days are needed of field checking, and then hours of drafting...