Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: eskimo2 on June 26, 2007, 09:45:24 PM
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My wife and I went kayaking yesterday and found a very shallow spot in the middle of one of the biggest areas of the Mogador Reservoir. We saw swans that appeared to be floating much higher than usual. Figuring that they were standing on a submerged log, I went to investigate and found a shallow area that I have paddled right by dozens of times but never noticed. In the picture below, Joan is standing in about a foot of water.
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/joan_christ.jpg)
I went back to the shallow spot today in hope of making an island. I brought an anchor and gloves. Even though Joan and I visited the place yesterday and I took a picture, it took me a good ten minutes to find it. There was enough of a breeze to make the water highly reflective which made it difficult to find. The water also is murky and the reservoir bed is mostly the same mucky color as the water; I couldn't see it until I was right on top of it. Once I found the place I anchored the boat and scouted the area. The "knee-deep or less" area is perhaps 80 feet by 40 feet. A good portion of that is only about 12 inches deep with several boulder tops much closer to the surface. I waded around for at least an hour moving big rocks onto my pile-island. Three or four of the boulders were too heavy to lift but I was able to roll them through the water to the base of the mound. Most of the rocks I moved are under water, providing a base. I figure I must have moved 1,000 ~ 2,000 pounds of rocks. The biggest boulders that I had to roll must have weighed over 200 lbs each and there were many others that were difficult to carry. I paid no attention to aesthetic appearance, I just went for mass.
I couldn't help but to wonder how many props have been broken on these rocks. Mogador Reservoir is a hand powered and electric motor only lake. It's the largest non gas powered motor lake in Ohio. I'm sure I broke a few laws doing this, but I think boating in this area will be a tiny bit safer because of this island. It provides a good warning of hard to see shallow water. I think the birds may like it too.
I'm not sure how long it will last, someone may decide to level it or storms may knock it down some. If it makes it to winter I think the lake ice will give it a hard time. Wind pushing a few acres of one inch ice can produce a lot of force. Time will tell. I labeled the pictures and Google Earth Placemark "June 26th Island".
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_close.jpg)
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_and_kayak.jpg)
The nearest shore is about 200 feet away.
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_far.jpg)
From the south
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_from_north.jpg)
From the north
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island.jpg)
Approximate location of June 26th Island in Google Earth.
Paste the following lat/long into Google Earth's search window to zoom the approximate spot and see more of Mogadore Reservoir. I hope the island lasts until the next satellite picture!
41 03 54.91 N 81 21 22.81 W
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Gilligan says "thanks". :p
(http://www.sidesconsulting.com/misc/gilligan.jpg)
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You have totally screwed up 3 years of hydrological studies by the US Army Corps of Engineers.:furious
Thanks.
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nice eskimo.
:aok
i love doing things like that. it will be interesting to see how long it lasts.
don't know if you'll find this interesting but here's a dam that i built across the run-off channel from one of the dune lakes on the gulf of mexico.
(when they get full of rainwater they breach the dunes and reconnect with the gulf)
while the normal water flow is only a few inches...this created a pool that was as deep as a few feet behind it that extended up the tributary.
it lasted for about 10 to fifteen minutes.
(http://www.augustradio.com/uploaded_images/aswan5-752310.jpg)
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Originally posted by Holden McGroin
You have totally screwed up 3 years of hydrological studies by the US Army Corps of Engineers.:furious
Thanks.
Not to mention a navigational hazard. Some poor boaties gonna sink and drown now.
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You are messing with mother nature eskimo! :mad:
P.S.. i make little islands every morning that gets covered with paper. I have to destroy them shortly after tho :( (or else the missus gets mad)
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Im standin next to a mountain
Gonna chop it down with the edge of my hand
Gonna raise me an island
Gonna raise a little sand.
Cause I'm a voodoo chile
Lord knows I'm a voodoo chile.
:D
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(http://www.sidesconsulting.com/misc/gilligan.jpg)
Way to go Gilligan, Al Gore loves you.
:huh
Mac
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Around here, when we find a similar isolated shoal in a non-logical spot, we just jam a length of PVC pipe into it as a marker.
But if you like piling rocks, go for it :)
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sweet you can build a house on it.. in say ten thousand years or so..
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Great Eskomo2 soon you'll be wearing Pink Shorts, going to work, living in Burmuda and complaining about Agent Orange and a stolen MoPed.
Right Curval?
Mac
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sir, did you have the permits to erect a structure in a controlled waterway?
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Originally posted by AKIron
Gilligan says "thanks". :p
(http://www.sidesconsulting.com/misc/gilligan.jpg)
LOL
Good one!
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Originally posted by JB88
nice eskimo.
:aok
i love doing things like that. it will be interesting to see how long it lasts.
don't know if you'll find this interesting but here's a dam that i built across the run-off channel from one of the dune lakes on the gulf of mexico.
(when they get full of rainwater they breach the dunes and reconnect with the gulf)
while the normal water flow is only a few inches...this created a pool that was as deep as a few feet behind it that extended up the tributary.
it lasted for about 10 to fifteen minutes.
(http://www.augustradio.com/uploaded_images/aswan5-752310.jpg)
It's amazing that such a long thin band of sand can hold back so much water! Very cool!
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Originally posted by Holden McGroin
You have totally screwed up 3 years of hydrological studies by the US Army Corps of Engineers.:furious
Thanks.
Anything to keep the US Army Corps of Engineers busy!
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Originally posted by Nilsen
You are messing with mother nature eskimo! :mad:
P.S.. i make little islands every morning that gets covered with paper. I have to destroy them shortly after tho :( (or else the missus gets mad)
Must be a lutefisk thing… ?
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nelson will get drunk and wreck his daddies boat on that.
lazs
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Originally posted by Vulcan
Not to mention a navigational hazard. Some poor boaties gonna sink and drown now.
Seems to be safer for navigation now. Before, boats not realizing they would rip the bottom of their boat in that shallow spot would speed through.
Now they see they've got to go around. Makes sense.
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Originally posted by texasmom
Seems to be safer for navigation now. Before, boats not realizing they would rip the bottom of their boat in that shallow spot would speed through.
Now they see they've got to go around. Makes sense.
That's how I figured it, but in the case of Nilsen I think Lazs is right, he will get drunk and wreck his daddy's boat on it.
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(http://www.augustradio.com/nilsenlaw2.jpg)
(sorry nilsen...i could'nt resist the repost)
:(
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/BIGBOOMINGVOICE
and on this day June 26th the high and mighty Eskimo blessed thy earth with Eskimo island for now and ever. Amen.
/BIGBOOMINGVOICE
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:rofl
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Originally posted by Nilsen
You are messing with mother nature eskimo! :mad:
Or at least messing with the engineers that created the reservoir.
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Hey Eskimo..
When the indigineous life forms of your newly begat island evolve to building little Eskimo shrines and temples, Please.. PLEASE tell them it took you 4 billion years to build that island.
Not an afternoon.
It will save them countless hardships.
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Originally posted by Holden McGroin
You have totally screwed up 3 years of hydrological studies by the US Army Corps of Engineers.:furious
Thanks.
He dident do anything wrong.
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I rate this thread a 5 :rofl and a :aok
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Hmmmmm.......
Originally posted by eskimo2
My wife and I went kayaking yesterday and found a very shallow spot in the middle of one of the biggest areas of the Mogador Reservoir. We saw swans that appeared to be floating much higher than usual. Figuring that they were standing on a submerged log, I went to investigate and found a shallow area that I have paddled right by dozens of times but never noticed. In the picture below, Joan is standing in about a foot of water.
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/joan_christ.jpg)
I went back to the shallow spot today in hope of making an island. I brought an anchor and gloves. Even though Joan and I visited the place yesterday and I took a picture, it took me a good ten minutes to find it. There was enough of a breeze to make the water highly reflective which made it difficult to find. The water also is murky and the reservoir bed is mostly the same mucky color as the water; I couldn't see it until I was right on top of it. Once I found the place I anchored the boat and scouted the area. The "knee-deep or less" area is perhaps 80 feet by 40 feet. A good portion of that is only about 12 inches deep with several boulder tops much closer to the surface. I waded around for at least an hour moving big rocks onto my pile-island. Three or four of the boulders were too heavy to lift but I was able to roll them through the water to the base of the mound. Most of the rocks I moved are under water, providing a base. I figure I must have moved 1,000 ~ 2,000 pounds of rocks. The biggest boulders that I had to roll must have weighed over 200 lbs each and there were many others that were difficult to carry. I paid no attention to aesthetic appearance, I just went for mass.
I couldn't help but to wonder how many props have been broken on these rocks. Mogador Reservoir is a hand powered and electric motor only lake. It's the largest non gas powered motor lake in Ohio. I'm sure I broke a few laws doing this, but I think boating in this area will be a tiny bit safer because of this island. It provides a good warning of hard to see shallow water. I think the birds may like it too.
I'm not sure how long it will last, someone may decide to level it or storms may knock it down some. If it makes it to winter I think the lake ice will give it a hard time. Wind pushing a few acres of one inch ice can produce a lot of force. Time will tell. I labeled the pictures and Google Earth Placemark "June 26th Island".
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_close.jpg)
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_and_kayak.jpg)
The nearest shore is about 200 feet away.
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_far.jpg)
From the south
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island_from_north.jpg)
From the north
(http://hallbuzz.com/images/2007/jun/june_26th_island.jpg)
Approximate location of June 26th Island in Google Earth.
Paste the following lat/long into Google Earth's search window to zoom the approximate spot and see more of Mogadore Reservoir. I hope the island lasts until the next satellite picture!
41 03 54.91 N 81 21 22.81 W
....Seems like a good spot for squeakers :D
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I just looked it up in google earth. U otta name it Coon Island.
(http://i206.photobucket.com/albums/bb146/Forrest76259/Image105.jpg)
:aok
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LOL :)
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Boys and their toys. It's a good thing you and JB88 don't drive bulldozers or we'd have to buy new maps every year.
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Originally posted by Halo
Boys and their toys. It's a good thing you and JB88 don't drive bulldozers or we'd have to buy new maps every year.
we would be standing on the shoulders of giants.
(http://www.hawaii.edu/lruby/art359/IMAGES/SPIRALJ.GIF)
robert smithson, spiral jetty
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Originally posted by JB88
nice eskimo.
:aok
i love doing things like that. it will be interesting to see how long it lasts.
don't know if you'll find this interesting but here's a dam that i built across the run-off channel from one of the dune lakes on the gulf of mexico.
(when they get full of rainwater they breach the dunes and reconnect with the gulf)
while the normal water flow is only a few inches...this created a pool that was as deep as a few feet behind it that extended up the tributary.
it lasted for about 10 to fifteen minutes.
(http://www.augustradio.com/uploaded_images/aswan5-752310.jpg)
You have a job calling in New Orleans... :D
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The best man made islands are in Dubai...
Enhanced photos, but you can see them on Google Earth in 'real' context I believe...
I think they also have some in Florida...
(http://guide.theemiratesnetwork.com/living/dubai/images/the_world/the_world_dubai.jpg)
(http://guide.theemiratesnetwork.com/living/dubai/images/the_palm/palm_location.jpg)
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Nice island
Bet they find a way to tax you for it :)