The Drought and Medina Lake – Bandera County Medina Lake Park, Texas – Featuring a Torino Tahiti

On New Year’s Day my brother and his young son and I drove from Helotes, Texas to Medina Lake to see what we could see, having done no research on the Internet prior to going. It was a beautiful drive, passing through Texas Hill country and several small towns. Had we checked on the Internet, we would have found out that Medina Lake is currently suffering greatly from the drought that began in Texas in 2010. According to this article, which has some great pictures and information, as of November 30th the lake was 68.99 feet below “conservation pool,” which I take to be its standard level. The water has not been this low since the 1950s.

And even though Medina Lake was designed with such changes in water level in mind, it was sad to see the long, long boat ramps and pontoon docks sitting in the middle of the lake bed, long past being near the water’s edge. It must be trying times to be a lakeshore property owner there just now. I would love to see Medina Lake back at its full level, as it looks amazing in these photos of the section where we were at Bandera County Medina Lake Park, but the low water level did make for some intriguing photos. Click on any photo to see a slightly larger version.

medina lake in drought 2013-1

medina lake in drought 2013-23

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medina lake in drought 2013-2

Pixels to Start Your Mind, Break Your Heart, Move Your Feet: A Worldmapper Discussion

dollar-a-day

In my work as a librarian I came across this amazing site, which is thought provoking and alternately heartbreaking or amusing, though much too much more the former.

The way it works is a bit like a semi inflated balloon in ones hands. If you compress one part of the balloon another part of the balloon must get larger. If you squeeze several parts, other parts get larger or smaller respective to the amount of the pressure exerted on them. And, many of us know from experience, if one puts too much pressure on any one area, the whole thing simply explodes (but that is a metaphor that deserves consideration in greater depth later).

However, in the brightly colored maps on the site, country sizes balloon or deflate depending upon whatever statistic is being measured, whether that be the amount of a resources consumed by countries respectively or “the proportion of all people living on US$10 purchasing power parity or less a day worldwide,” as the map at the top of this post shows. Worldmapper has a detailed page for each concept being considered and also printable pdf page, which sometimes provides even more information. If you take even a little time to look at the map above, you can begin to see why I included “break your heart” in the title of this post.

But there are many maps which are even more stark in the information they convey.

Here is one one on deaths from drought

drought

…and deaths from malaria

malaria

Are you beginning to get the picture.

Well, I thought it might be an interesting and mutually edifying exercise if we together mined these maps (there are 366 of them) and used them to spark discussion. Very usefully, each map is numbered and has a link which can be incorporated in a comment when one is making a point.

Here is an example (which admittedly is supplemented by the image below which cannot be done in the comments field of this blog):

“Map 58 shows which country seems to be the largest importer of toys…and map 57 shows where they are all coming from!”

toys

Of course, you would not have to make a comparison. You could comment on a single map that got you thinking or weeping or walking, and why it did so.

Worldmapper (which has gotten a lot of press) very conveniently gives you several options in which the maps are categorized.

  • Thumbnails
  • Subject categories
  • A to Z Index (not recommended as it is very slow)
  • And here is information about the site and its methodology
  • And if discussions arise around a country or topic, I will add them to the tag cloud of this post and hopefully attract more participants.

    Finally, this site assumes basic geographical knowledge to appreciate it fully, but I think it would be a great teaching tool for subjects of all sorts, geographic and scientific and social, just to name a few, as were the Earth Lights sites here and here, which tell us a great deal about geography, privilege, and freedom. Not convinced? Just take a gander at North and South Korea.

    Well, I cannot exactly say “happy traveling,” but I do hope it may be profitable, thoughtful traveling.

    P.S. This site and mapping technology was created at the University of Sheffield in England, so it should be reliable.