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View Article  Ghost of a Chance
Ghost Flyer  A flyer for the novel Ghost of a Chance.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com
View Article  Another View, Saint Louis Cathedral
St Louis Trace  Here is yet another view of the Saint Louis Cathedral in New Orleans.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com
View Article  Mardi Gras in the French Quarter
The remaining hours left in the 150th Mardi Gras are clicking down and tomorrow, Fat Tuesday, is the last day.  I urge you to check out the BourboCam at http://www.nola.com.  You won’t believe your eyes.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com
View Article  150th Mardi Gras, New Orleans
Check out the BourboCam on http://www.nola.com.  Mardi Gras is rocking the French Quarter.  It’s not quite as wild as last year, but at least it is happening.  Thank goodness.  http://www.ericwilder.com
View Article  Oklahoma Burning, An Update

Even after writing about bobcats, wolves and black panthers in east Texas, I wasn't prepared for what I saw in my own front yard at 8 this very night. I was writing at my computer when the din of barking dogs (my own) caused me to go to the front door to see what they why they were causing so much commotion.

I had fed the dogs, and my cats, just after darkness had fallen. Only one of the cats, Duke, had shown up for dinner and he hadn't eaten much. What I saw when I went to the front door, scarfing up the left-overs, was a red fox - a full grown red fox. Needless to say, I was quite surprised.

What must have caused this shy animal to venture forth at an hour so early that he might possibly be seen? I think it is the drought that presently has Oklahoma by the throat. The State has seen no appreciable rain since last Halloween night, some 118 days ago. We are presently suffering from the worst drought in Oklahoma history - yes, and that includes the Dustbowl Era.

Mr. Fox was probably hungry, moreover thirsty, and didn't want to wait until the opossums, skunks and raccoons had eaten the food left for the cats later on when It would be safer to venture forth.

We had an ice storm last week - a small amount of precipitation we are all very thankful for. When I walked outside my house the morning after the storm, I saw what I thought were deer tracks. I'm not a hunter, so I can't say for sure, but that's what they looked like to me. Hey, I live in the city limits of a fairly large town.

Anyway, what next? Maybe we have bobcats among us and I just haven’t seen them yet.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Saint Louis Cathedral, New Orleans
St Louis BW The Saint Louis Cathedral is the oldest cathedral in North America.  The cathedral lies in the heart of the French Quarter, adjacent to Jackson Square and close to Pirate’s Alley.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com
View Article  Leaving New Orleans, Continued

Not only did Hurricane Katrina strike a near-lethal blow to New Orleans, it also flattened many coastal towns and cities in Mississippi and Alabama. Katrina was followed closely by Hurricane Rita, and this storm also compromised the levees in New Orleans. Rita left a swath of destruction in its path that stretched all the way to Houston, Texas.

Global warming is a scientific fact, and the world’s climate is changing rapidly. The worst hurricane season on record is only one example of recent natural disasters that includes the Indonesian tsunami and mud slides in Mexico. What are we do about it? Maybe we should look at the Netherlands as an example.

In 1953, record flooding in that country resulted in extensive property damage and almost 2,000 deaths. They spent three billion dollars to revamp its system of outdated dikes. Today, the Netherlands' system of dikes is a state-of-the-art masterpiece of thought and engineering. Are the Dutch resting on their laurels? Anything but! A rise in sea level - the likely scenario as the glaciers melt - will make their dikes obsolete. They are already thinking of ways to improve their system in order to impede the future encroachment of the sea.

The destruction in New Orleans captured the attention of the nation and the world. Still, the wonderful old city is but a small portion of the Gulf Coast. It will take far more than simply raising the existing levees in New Orleans three feet, or so, to cure its flooding problems. That would be like putting a band aid on a serious gash. Let’s don’t simply treat the symptoms, let’s address the stone cold fact that the problem is endemic to the entire Gulf Coastal Region. There is already an engineering plan on the table that will go a long way to save our barrier islands and marshlands, and mitigate the effects of future storms and hurricanes. This plan is already approved.

Then what’s the problem? The answer is funding. No one wants to fund this plan. Like the Dutch, we need to suck it up and spend the money to cure the problem. If we don’t, someday soon the citizens of the United States - and I mean everyone of us - will lose far more than the culture and cuisine of New Orleans.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Leaving New Orleans

We left New Orleans the following day, driving east on I-10 toward Baton Rouge. For many miles, the turnpike rises high above low-lying wetlands. This is part of an area known as the Bonnet Carre Spillway, the emergency run-off for flood waters. Needless to say, the water was higher than normal.

As we spanned the miles of uninhabited marsh, the traffic thinned and I had a chance to think about what I had seen during our trip to New Orleans. The City had received a lethal strike from the worst natural disaster in the history of the United States. Months after Katrina and Rita, the citizens were still reeling from their effects. Reeling, but alive.

Many of my friends in Oklahoma had said, "Don’t rebuild New Orleans. It’s a waste of taxpayer money."

To this I say, "Ridiculous!"

Not just New Orleans, but the entire Gulf Coastal Region was affected by the worst hurricane season on record.. This region, extending from Florida to Texas, is the home of most of the nation’s refining capacity. Knock it out and the entire country grinds quickly to a halt. The Gulf of Mexico supplies 25 % of the nation’s oil and one third of its natural gas. Knock out this region and you may as well turn off the lights in the rest of the country. Houston and New Orleans are two of the largest seaports in the United States. Most of the nation’s coffee, for instance, enters the country through New Orleans.

Shut down the Gulf Coastal Region and America won’t even have a cup of java to sip while it ponders its lack of electricity.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Day Four- A Trip to New Orleans, Continued

A storm named Katrina had visited Chalmette, Arabi, the Lower 9th Ward, the Bywater District, much of Gentilly and the lake front. It had left rubble, empty wooden shells and heartbreak in its wake. Many of the expensive houses along Lakeshore Drive were also vacant, as were most of the mansions on Canal Boulevard. Katrina hadn’t discriminated against the rich.

That night, Marilyn and I had dinner on Bourbon Street at Ralph Brennan’s Red Fish Grill, both of us happy for a momentary return to sanity. We sat at the bar, watching Pittsburgh and Seattle play the last football game of the year. After a wonderful dinner and perhaps the best bread pudding either of us had ever tasted, we returned to the Sheraton and found a seat at the bar to watch the finish of the Super Bowl

I had a long conversation about the City with a personable man seated beside me named Bellamy. He was unsure of the City’s future, but had a positive attitude that things would eventually work out for the best. As Marilyn and I took the elevator to our room, I hoped that he was correct.  http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans, Day Four, Cont

St. Bernard Highway is the old route from New Orleans to Chalmette. We were barely past Elysian Fields when it became readily apparent that this part of town had suffered far more than just a little wind and water damage. For miles we drove through an area that could best be described as a bleak scene from an end-of-the-world movie. There were no living creatures in sight, either human or animal. On both sides of the empty street were ruined shells of houses and businesses, and abandoned vehicles, all coated with layers of mud that made them appear as metallic corpses rendered lifeless on or about the same time. There was no vegetation, and this lack of greenery seemed to drain all color from the empty houses, leaving them painted with only the gray pallor of death. To say that Marilyn and I were stunned is at best a simplistic description of the shock and horror we both felt.

There were signs up on both sides of the street advertising cut-rate gutting and trash hauling. There was no sign of FEMA, or any activity indicating a plan in place to cure the massive problem. What if a home owner did gut and repair his own house? Where would that leave him amid a sea of destruction? Why would restaurants, store and shop owners return to this devastation? I had no answer.

All that was left of Arabi was hundreds of empty houses once filled with living, breathing beings. The town was now totally devoid of life. When I worked in the City many years ago, I had a simple apartment in Arabi, across from a Catholic Convent where its resident nuns lived cloistered and alone their entire lives, spending their existence praying for humanity. I wondered what had happened to them, and where they were now were. I suppose, wherever they are, they are wondering why their prayers failed.

Chalmette, if at all possible, seemed even more devastated than Arabi. This is perhaps because it is flatter and you can see farther. As far as Marilyn and I could see, there was only destruction. The house of my ex-wife's parents lay at the corner of Montesquieu and Casa Calvo. For the life of me, I couldn't find a landmark, and we drove up and down endless, destroyed streets looking for the intersection. What we found was a city once submerged for a week or more beneath a sea of moving water. I felt like a visitor observing the exhumed remains of Pompei, centuries after its volcanic destruction.

Near the Chalmette Battlefield, we began seeing activity and signs of human life. Some of the houses were occupied and there were even some workers busily clearing buildings of rubble. We stopped at a lone convenience store to use the restroom and learned that the sewer system still wasn't functioning. We were directed to a long row of porta-potties. When Marilyn open the door to one of these structures, she recoiled in disgust and quickly returned to the car. The porta-potties had remained, perhaps for months, un-emptied and the air was filled with the odor, nay, the stench of governmental neglect.  http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans, February 2006, Day Four

Sunday found Marilyn and me back in the French Quarter.  We had breakfast at a wonderful restaurant on Chartres.  I can't remember the name, but the owner had resorted to standing on the sidewalk outside the restaurant to entice customers inside.  He enticed us, and we were glad that he did.  I had Cajun eggs benedict and a mimosa.  Marilyn had ham and eggs, Cajun-style, and champagne with raspberry liquor.  She claims that it was so good, that she will never drink another mimosa.

Our tour of the French Quarter ended at the Louis Armstrong Park, locked tight and unavailable for a visit.  We followed N. Rampart, almost to the Iberville Project.  Along the way we saw a Red Cross bus passing out meals to a long line of people.  Thank God for the Red Cross.  Nearby was a parking lot filled with FEMA trailers.

We wanted to visit the St. Louis Cemetery #1, but it was already closed and padlocked for the day.  As best as we could tell, the cemetery (famous for the drug and sex scene from the movie Easy Rider) was unharmed by Hurricane Katrina.  For those of you that know about the legend of Marie Laveau, there were many X marks on the wall around the place.

Nearby was the, as-yet, unopened Basin Street Museum.  I can hardly wait to visit it when it finally is ready for visitors.  We even walked on the sidewalk past the infamous Iberville Project.  It was groomed, freshly painted, and looked nothing like the place citizens were afraid to visit in the daylight, much less the night, prior to the hurricane.

"Is this the Iberville Project?" I asked a friendly-looking woman.

"Why yes it is," she answered with a smile.

When we finally reached the Sheraton, we checked our car out of the garage and headed up St. Charles to check out the Garden District.  It was intact with little damage sustained, as far as we could tell.  We stopped at Lafayette Square, a location that plays an intense role in my new book Big Easy.  It was also unscathed.  From there, we drove through the Faubourg Marigny area.  It appeared 3/4's unaffected by the Hurricane.  Heading down St. Bernard Highway, we quickly learned that not all of New Orleans had escaped the wrath of the storm.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans - Day Three, Continued

0006 Marilyn and I had walked several miles by the time we reached the Crescent City Brewery, and we were both ready for a comfortable chair and a cold beer.  The restaurant was jammed so we sat at the bar.  On the way back from a bathroom break, I noticed yet another cartoon of Mayor Ray Nagin that chided his chocolate city remark.  One of the bartenders was a young black woman and I asked her for her opinion on the subject.

"He embarrassed the entire town," she said, bluntly, her nerves obviously raw.  "Someone on his staff should have read the speech before he gave it.  He came across like a buffoon, and now the world thinks we're all buffoons."

Nagin gave his speech at the annual Martin Luther King parade.  What he actually said is, "It's time for us to rebuild a New Orleans, the one that should be a chocolate New Orleans.  And I don't care what people are saying in Uptown or wherever they are. This city will be chocolate at the end of the day."

In response to Nagin's remarks, City Councilman Oliver Thomas, also black, said, "Even if you believe some of that crazy stuff, that is not the type of image we need to present to the nation."

The wait staff at the Crescent City Brewery seemed to agree, and not a single one of them, be they black or white, was smiling.

Leaving the Brewery, Marilyn and I headed for the Sheraton.  Along the way, we stopped at a little hole-in-the-wall Irish Pub and sat at the dark bar for a Guinness and an Irish Coffee.  The pretty bartender was from Scotland, and her dog waited patiently for her at the far end of the bar.  A personable young man also named Eric was flirting with her.  I later learned he has finished a novel and is looking for a publisher.

We were soon joined at the bar by Gill and Tim.  Gill, we learned, is a graphics artist and Tim a poet.  "There isn't a single bookstore left in the City," Gill told me.

Under no time constraints - and on foot - Marilyn and I remained at the bar for several more beers and coffees - happy to learn that the Quarter was still filled with eclectics, artists, poets and people of vision.  Not a single person was happy with the Government's response to the City's needs.

Tomorrow, we check out the destruction in Chalmette.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com  http://ghostofachance.blogspot.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans - Day Three, Continued

There were six or more mule-drawn carriages operating on Decatur Street, the southeast boundary of Jackson Square.  Mules and drivers were lined up, along with artists displaying their wares on the wrought iron fence around the square.  Marilyn and I decided to take a carriage ride with a delightful young woman named Diane Hintz.  Diane told us she had lived in New Orleans for five years, but knew as much about the venerable old city as anyone I know.  Throughout the carriage ride, she kept our interest with interesting history and vignettes of practically every building and square we passed.

After the carriage ride, Diane gave us carrots to feed to Dolly the mule, whose personality and disposition was just as delightful as Diane's.  I took a picture of Dolly taking a carrot from Diane's mouth.  I'll put it up on the site as soon as I have the roll of film developed.

Diane was less than complimentary to FEMA and other agencies supposedly assisting the City and State in recovery.  The Quarter was obviously up and running, but who was driving the recovery, and was the rest of the City, and Louisiana, also recovering?  We stopped for a beer at the Crescent City Brewery, determined to find out.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Crawfish Etouffee

Perhaps one of the quintessential dishes served in the Big Easy is Etouffee. It can be made with either shrimp or crawfish, and there are as many variations of this dish as there are cooks that prepare it. Here is my favorite variation:

  • ½ cup cooking oil
  • 2 cups finely chopped white onion
  • 1 large bell pepper, medium diced
  • 1 stalk celery, medium diced
  • 2 cups whole tomatoes, mashed
  • 2 cups tomato juice
  • 1/4 cup lemon juice
  • 6 tablespoons roux
  • 2 tablespoons Worcestershire
  • 1/4 cup minced parsley
  • ½ cup chopped garlic leaf, or green onion tops
  • 2 cloves of minced garlic
  • 1/4 tablespoon of red pepper
  • 1/4 tablespoon of salt, or to taste
  • 1/4 tablespoon of pepper, or to taste
  • 1 pound of cleaned and de-veined crawfish

Pour oil into a heavy skillet and saute onions, bell pepper, and celery until limp. Do not overcook. Add tomatoes, tomato juice, lemon juice, roux and Worcestershire. Bring to a boil, then reduce to medium hat and add parsley, garlic leaf, garlic cloves, red pepper, and salt and pepper. Cook for about five minutes, then add crawfish and cook for fifteen more minutes. Simmer until ready to serve. This dish serves four over rice.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans, Day Three, Continued

0006  0011  0005  Little had changed on Canal Street.  We found the same liquor stores, camera and tee shirt shops.  When we looked at some of the tee shirts for sale, we realized the citizens of the Big Easy had not lost their sense of humor.  One shirt had a picture of Mayor Nagin that said, "Willy Nagin and the Chocolate City," an irreverent reference to the Mayor's verbal faux pas.  Another said, "FEMA - Fix Everything My Ass!".  My favorite was, "FEMA Evacuation Plan, Run motherfucker run!!"

We soon found that Bourbon Street was up and running, and we were far from the only tourists.  Hungry, we stopped for lunch at the Desire Oyster Bar.  My gumbo and bread pudding were delicious and I helped Marilyn eat a dozen raw oysters (also outstanding).  By the time I had finished my second Abita, I was starting to feel better about the venerable old city.

The Quarter teemed with tourists, and every restaurant and shop seemed open.  As I remembered things before Hurricane Katrina, artists, musicians and mimes abounded in Jackson Square.  We decided to take a buggy ride through the Quarter.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans - Day Three

0006 Marilyn and I awoke Saturday morning to a cold, blustery wind, but clear skies.  We had spent the night in Metairie and everything seemed fairly normal.  We returned to downtown New Orleans to see what it looked like in the light of day.

We took a wrong turn after exiting at the Super Dome and soon learned we were in a long line of cars waiting to park so they could pick up mail.  The grim thought that the USPS wasn't yet fully up and running after more than four months was disconcerting and added to our growing doubt that maybe we should be visiting someplace else.  After checking many hotels for a room, we were almost sure of it.

We were finally directed to the 41 story Sheraton Hotel on Canal Street where we managed to secure a room.  A friendly bellhop named Daniel kept us entertained with his non-stop patois as we went to our 22nd story room overlooking Canal.

"My cousin Hollis Price played ball for Oklahoma State," he informed us.

The view from our room's window was stunning and we began to feel better about our stay after seeing the amount of traffic, both vehicular and pedestrian, along the wide, historical thoroughfare.  The French Quarter, only a block away, beckoned, so we hoisted our cameras, steeled our hearts and headed for it.  http://www.ericwilder.com   http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Trip to New Orleans - Day Two

0002  After leaving Vivian, Marilyn and I drove south on Interstate 49, stopping along the way in Breaux Bridge. Breaux Bridge is in the heart of the region known as the Acadian Triangle.  A popular restaurant there is Mulate's, and we stopped for Abita and gumbo.

It was dark when we reached Lafayette and the intersection with Interstate 10.  After leaving Baton Rouge and heading toward New Orleans, both of us expected few cars on the road.  We quickly found the opposite to be true.

We encountered bumper-to-bumper traffic all the way to New Orleans, and there was a steady stream of vehicles exiting the city.  Louisiana drivers are horrible!  As I maintained a steady 70 mph, car after car sped past me.  My nerves were shot as we drove into town, and I wasn't expecting to see the well-lit skyline.  The opposite became true as we exited Jefferson Parish and entered Orleans.  We found the off-ramp to the French Quarter just as dark and uninviting.

We exited by the Super Dome, and soon became confused and lost.  Unable to gain our bearings, we drove in what was likely a large circle.  A dark circle.  It was then the horror slapped us both smartly in the face.  Everything was empty and abandoned.  Row after row of storm-damaged buildings lined the dark streets.  There was not even a single soul or vehicle in sight.

Spooked by the desolation and destruction so close to the heart of New Orleans, we took Interstate 10 back to Metairie where we found a Hampton Inn that was open for business.  All the carpets and base boards were gone but our fifth-floor room was clean, dry and comfortable.

The hotel had no restaurant.  The night clerk directed us across the street to a biker bar where a small crowd of mostly unfriendly people smoked and listened to loud, unappealing music.  Worried about being mugged, Marilyn and I had several bourbons before returning to our room.  Exhausted, we finally fell asleep with nervous visions of a destroyed city waiting for our visit the following morning.  http://www.ericwilder.com   http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Mac's Barber Shop, Vivian, Louisiana

0002  0005  Last Friday I visited Mac Rive’s Barber Shop in Vivian, Louisiana.  As you can see by the pictures on the wall, his shop is filled with memories.  Mac is the resident expert when it comes to knowledge about east Texas, north Louisiana and the Caddo Lake area.  “Yes,” he told me, “I’ve never seen them myself but a man I know has two black panthers on his property.”  Mac had pictures of bobcats, giant gars and feral pigs so I believe him.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Update on Oklahoma Burning

Drought Map  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Faubourg Marigny District

Marker Esplanade and St. Claude Avenues, and Press Street and the Mississippi River are the boundaries of the Faubourg Marigny District.  Faubourg Marigny is one of the original extenstions of New Orleans.

Directly downriver from the French Quarter, Faubourg Marigny had become a vibrant neighborhood known for its distinctive architecture and great music and restaurants before Hurricane Katrina.

Named for Marquis Bernard De Marigny who subdivided his plantation to create the Faubourg Marigny, refusing to sell to anyone that could not speak French.  Marigny inherited seven million dollars when his father died making him perhaps the richest man in the new world.

Marigny is infamous for introducing craps, the gambling game, to America.  Le crapaud is French for frog, and craps was initially called Le crapaud to describe the players position in playing the game.  Burgundy, one of the streets in Faubourg Marigny, was originally called Craps because of Bernard de Marigny’s addiction to the game.

I’ve checked numerous blogs to get an idea of what is left of Faubourg Marigny and the Big Easy in general.  Information is scarce and I plan to travel there and see for myself.  Stay tuned.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com  http://ghostofachance.blogspot.com  http://ericwilder.blogspot.com

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View Article  Noble County, Oklahoma

IM000177  Acid trucks on location in Noble County, Oklahoma preparing to acidize a shallow, Herington gas well.  These little gas wells are only about 600 feet deep.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com  http://ghostofachance.blogspot.com  http://ericwilder.blogspot.com

View Article  Storm Clouds Over Edmond

0002  I awakened this Saturday morning to a dull day with lazy droplets of rain drizzling from Edmond’s gray sky.  The sight made me smile.  While the 1/4 inch or so of rain will do little to break the back of Oklahoma’s continuing drought, it is at least a reminder that better days are on the horizon.  Grinning as I collected my morning paper, I thought to myself no fires todayhttp://www.ericwilder.com   http://energyissues.blogharbor.com   http://ghostofachance.blogspot.com  http://ericwilder.blogspot.com

View Article  Book Cover, Ghost of a Chance
Ghost_AuthorHere is both the front and back cover of Eric Wilder’s novel Ghost of a Chance.  The book is available on the web at both Amazon.com and Barnesandnoble.com.   You can learn more about the book and author Eric Wilder at his website, http://www.ericwilder.com
View Article  Map of Sabine Uplift

Sabine UpliftSabine Uplift is a deep-seated subsurface structural feature that lies beneath parts of Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas.  Oil and gas production in this region is directly related to this major structural feature.  The crest of this subsurface feature lies near the center of Caddo Lake in Caddo Parish, Louisiana.

http://www.ericwilder.com   http://energyissues.blogharbor.com   http://ghostofachance.blogspot.com   http://ericwilder.blogspot.com

View Article  More Oklahoma Burning

I drove north on I-35 last week and was amazed at the extent of charred property that I saw.  We are so dry and windy right now that any spark will touch off a rapidly spreading fire.  Edmond got a little rain yesterday and there was actually a rainbow in the sky, so there’s hope that we'll survive.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com  http://ghostofachance.blogspot.com  http://ericwilder.blogspot.com

View Article  Map of New Orleans, 1870

New_orleans_1770 map Here is a map of New Orleans, circa 1870, as drawn by an officer in the British army.

http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Opals and Quartz

0007  Opals and quartz are both comprised of SiO2.  The difference is that opal is hydrated, or contains water as a component of its molecular structure.  Quartz has a definite crystalline structure while opal is amorphous.  Opal and quartz are found in many parts of the world.  Monster-sized quartz crystal are found in parts of Arkansas.  Hugh Miser, one of the world’s most famous geologists, had perhaps the best collection of Arkansas quartz.  Some of the crystals are taller than a man and weigh hundreds of pounds.  Miser gave half of his collection to the University of Oklahoma and half to the University of Arkansas.  If you’re ever in Norman, Oklahoma or Fayetteville, Arkansas, I strongly advise stopping for a look.  You won’t be disappointed.

http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Round Barn, Arcadia, Oklahoma

0001  0010   0012  0014  Arcadia is located about 10 miles east of Edmond, Oklahoma on historical Route 66.  Marilyn and I stopped at the Round Barn today to take a few flics and soak up a little local culture.  Tour guide Butch provided all we needed.  He kept us laughing during our entire visit to the museum inside the barn.  The little town of Arcadia is near the eastern boundary of the Run of ‘89.  It is also along the route where Washington Irving, that’s right, Beau Brummels and the Headless Horseman, stopped on his travels to Oklahoma.  Arcadia and the area around it are wonderful – yes, there is even a grape vineyard – and you may want to stay for awhile.  http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Rodessa's Frog Level
101_0950  Historical sign in Rodessa, Louisiana telling about the discovery of the Rodessa Field located in northwest Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas.  Today, Rodessa is but a small rural town about three miles from the Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas boundaries.  Once it was a major boomtown.  The sign speaks of past glory but so many stories remain forgotten and untold.  http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com
View Article  Cimarron City

Cimarron River 1  Cimarron Plant  Cimarron City is a small community about 25 miles north of Oklahoma City.  It lies just north of the Cimarron River.  South of the river is the Kerr-McGee plutonium plant made famous by the movie Silkwood.  The plant has been closed since 1975.  There are no signs on the building but it has a high fence around it and cars in the parking lot that indicates it is still being monitored.

Karen Silkwood worked at the plant and died in a one car accident a few miles south of the Cimarron River.  It is a little known fact that Silkwood, her roommate Sherri Ellis and her boyfriend Drew Stephens had all been tested for plutonium exposure at Los Alamos in New Mexico only two days before her death.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  The World's Second Deepest Hole

Oklahoma holds the record for the deepest well ever drilled in the United States.  The GHK Co. 1–27 Bertha Rogers located in Washita County, Oklahoma was the former world’s deepest hole.  This well reached a depth of 31,441 feet where it encountered molten sulfur that melted the drill pipe and forced the end of drilling.

It took GHK two years to reach 31,441 feet, a depth of almost six miles.  During drilling, the well encountered enormous pressure – almost 25,000 psi.  No commercial hydrocarbons were found and the well was plugged and abandoned.

The Soviets began drilling a well in Russia in 1970 that is now over 40,000 feet deep.  The well is the deepest hole on earth though the Bertha Rogers remains the second deepest.

http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Eric's Garden Angels

101_1179  101_1180  101_1181  101_1182  Some angels in Eric Wilder’s garden.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Excerpt from the Eric Wilder novel Ghost of a Chance

"Here I am!"

The boat's approaching wail sounded vaguely familiar to Buck but it was too late to worry about it. As it streaked past, it's wake lifted his boat almost out of the water. The little craft remained afloat but rocked dangerously. Then he heard the other boat turning for another pass.

Buck held on, waiting for the swell to subside. The wake had swamped the motor, stalling it. When the boat stopped rocking he yanked the starter cord but the motor only sputtered and died with a sick sounding thump. He had little time to worry about the stalled engine.

The marauding boat's headlight blazed through the fog, powering directly toward him. With little time to react he abandoned ship, diving overboard before the speeding boat plowed into his own craft with a tremendous crash and an ensuing explosion of wood. The wake of the collision sucked him to the bottom of the shallow lake, pinioning him in the murky ooze for a long, terrifying moment. When the wake passed, releasing the suction, he tried to kick toward the surface, his arms flailing against swirling muck and slimy vegetation. But something had his foot in it's clammy grasp and refused to let go.

The crooked branch of a submerged tree, part of the rotting mass of vegetation at the bottom of the lake, had trapped Buck's foot. He struggled but his futile attempt served only to deplete what little oxygen was left in his lungs. Despite his efforts, he gained no leverage against the algae-covered stump.

Buck's eyes bulged, his head threatening to explode, his lungs desperate to gasp something, even blood-warm water, into them. Just before losing consciousness he felt icy fingers encircle his ankle. Ephemeral hands freed his ankle from the sunken tree and pushed him toward the lake’s surface. Stroking upward in near panic, he belched foul liquid from his lungs as he burst from the black water.

http://www.ericwilder.com

View Article  Triskaidekaphobia

Triskaidekaphobia is defined as an abnormal fear of the number 13.  Hope no one has that fear today.  Happy Friday the 13th.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Top Ten New Orleans Books

Thousands of books have been written about the Big Easy including many excellent works of fiction, food and travel.  Here is my top 10 list of required reading for those seeking a better understanding of the city famous the world over for its literature, art and cuisine.

10 – The French Quarter by Herbert Asbury

9 – Life on the Mississippi by Mark Twain

8 – A Walk on the Wild Side by Nelson Algren

7 – Awakening by Kate Chopin

6 – Inventing New Orleans by Lafcadio Hearn

5 – Mardi Gras by Robert Tallant

4 – A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams

3 – Fabulous New Orleans by Lyle Saxon

2 – The Moviegoer by Walker Percy

1 – Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole

http://www.ericwilder.com   http://energyissues.blogharbor.com

View Article  Eagle Spotting, Day Two

101_1168  101_1167  Marilyn and I returned to Lake Arcadia today in search of bald eagles.  We took a different trail this time and it was soon apparent that we were too far from the lake to do any significant eagle sighting.  Still, the weather was awesome.  You can see from the pictures just how dry Central Oklahoma is.  On a trip up I-35 toward Kansas Friday, I saw many charred acres that had already fallen prey to dry weather, high winds and errant cigarettes.

http://www.ericwilder.com  http://energyissues.blogharbor.com