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Late winter has been wet in much of the U.S., certainly the central and upper Midwest.The northern snowpack is beginning to melt. The Mississippi is less than a meter from flood stage at St. Louis and rising. Harry Weber's sculpture of Lewis and Clark landing on our shore is my river gauge. Clark is going blub blub blub in the muddy depths. How long can Meriwether Lewis keep his head above water? Stay tuned.
Late winter has been wet in much of the U.S., certainly the central and upper Midwest.The northern snowpack is beginning to melt. The Mississippi is less than a meter from flood stage at St. Louis and rising. Harry Weber's sculpture of Lewis and Clark landing on our shore is my river gauge. Clark is going blub blub blub in the muddy depths. How long can Meriwether Lewis keep his head above water? Stay tuned.
It's a "funny" and an impressive photo at once. I hope the wonderful sculpture will resist the flood.
ReplyDeleteimpressionnant, on a vraiment l'impression qu'il nous dit adieu et qu'il va se noyer, superbe sculpture.
ReplyDeleteSinon, les règles du Foot Us en France sont les mêmes qu'aux USA, il faut faire 10 Yards pour avoir le droit d'avancer encore
Great composition, the sculpture had a lot of expression, hoping is not a farewell and survive as the casino in the background.
ReplyDeleteExcellent composition, Bob. I hope the 'creek' doesn't rise any higher!
ReplyDeleteAwesome picture! I love how this statue has become iconic in gauging the height of the river. Hope you don't have too much flooding after all the snow melts.
ReplyDeleteHow cool. So is he usually completely out of the water? Oh dear. Roll up your pant legs B!
ReplyDeleteV
Mercy! That river is deep! It looks like the current is quite swift, too.
ReplyDelete"How high's the water, mama?"
ReplyDelete"Ten feet high and risin'."
Johnny Cash
Keep your toes dry.
Ha! That's a GREAT shot. Reminds me of that sculpture (What the heck is its name?) on one of the bridges in Paris that people unofficially judge the flood danger by.
ReplyDeleteHere in Belgrade the rivers are rising, too.
How quirky and fun to look at.
ReplyDelete3/24/2010 ~4PM: River halfway up Lewis' nose.
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